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Summary
November 2007, Vol. 7, No. 11, Pages 1665-1677
, DOI 10.1517/14712598.7.11.1665
How a different look at latency can help to develop novel diagnostics and vaccines against tuberculosisCamille Locht1INSERM U629, Lille, France 2Institut Pasteur de Lille, 1, rue du Prof. Calmette, F-59019 Lille Cedex, France +33 3 20 87 11 51; +33 3 20 87 11; camille.locht@pasteur-lille.fr 3Université Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.), Laboratory of Vaccinology and Mucosal Immunity, Belgium 4Hôpital Erasme, Immunobiology Clinic, Brussels, Belgium Mycobacterium tuberculosis is one of the most successful human pathogens. It kills every year Forward Links to Citing ArticlesS. Ehlers. (2009) Lazy, Dynamic or Minimally Recrudescent? On the Elusive Nature and Location of the Mycobacterium Responsible for Latent Tuberculosis. Infection 37:2, 87-95 Online publication date: 1-May-2009. CrossRef Lynn G Dover, Apoorva Bhatt, Veemal Bhowruth, Benjamin E Willcox, Gurdyal S Besra. (2008) New drugs and vaccines for drug-resistant
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
infections. Expert Review of Vaccines 7:4, 481-497 Online publication date: 1-Jun-2008. CrossRef |
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1.5 – 2 million people, and at present a third of the human population is estimated to be infected. Fortunately, only a relatively small proportion of the infected individuals will progress to active disease, and most will maintain a latent infection. Although a latent infection is clinically silent and not contagious, it can reactivate to cause highly contagious pulmonary tuberculosis, the most prevalent form of the disease in adults. Therefore, a thorough understanding of latency and reactivation may help to develop novel control strategies against tuberculosis. The most widely held view is that the mycobacteria are imprisoned in granulomatous structures during latency, where they can survive in a non-replicating, dormant form until reactivation occurs. However, there is no hard data to sustain that the reactivating mycobacteria are indeed those that laid dormant within the granulomas. In this review an alternative model, based on evidence from early studies, as well as recent reports is presented, in which the latent mycobacteria reside outside granulomas, within non-macrophage cell types throughout the infected body. Potential implications for new diagnostic and vaccine design are discussed.
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