Mannose-binding protein B allele confers protection against tuberculous meningitis. Hoal van Helden, E. G., Epstein, J., Victor, T. C., Hon, D., Lewis, L. A., Beyers, N., Zurakowski, D., Ezekowitz, A. B., & Van Helden, P. D. Pediatric Research, 45(4 Pt 1):459–464, April, 1999. doi abstract bibtex Inhalation is the principal mode of entry for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans. Primary infection is usually restricted to the lungs and contiguous lymph nodes. In a subset of infected individuals, predominantly children, the infection is spread hematogenously to the meninges. The host factors that influence the development of tuberculous meningitis have not been well elucidated. The mannose-binding protein (MBP), a serum protein, is considered as an "ante-antibody." MBP has been shown to bind mycobacteria and acts as an opsonin in vitro. Although MBP plays a role in first-line host defense, it may under certain circumstances be deleterious to the host. In tuberculosis (TB), MBP may assist the spread of this intracellular pathogen. Therefore, we hypothesized that MBP genotypes that result in a phenotype of low MBP levels might be protective. We studied a well-defined South African population in which TB has reached epidemic levels. We found that the MBP B allele (G54D), which disrupts the collagen region of the protein and results in low MBP levels, was found in 22 of 79 (28%) of the TB-negative controls from the same community, compared with 12 of 91 (13%) of the patients with pulmonary TB (p \textless 0.017), and 5 of 64 (8%) of patients with tuberculous meningitis (p \textless 0.002). In addition, we found significantly lower serum MBP concentrations in TB-negative controls compared with postacute phase, fully recovered TB patients (p \textless 0.004). These findings suggest that the MBP B allele affords protection against tuberculous meningitis.
@article{hoal_van_helden_mannose-binding_1999,
title = {Mannose-binding protein {B} allele confers protection against tuberculous meningitis},
volume = {45},
issn = {0031-3998},
doi = {10.1203/00006450-199904010-00002},
abstract = {Inhalation is the principal mode of entry for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans. Primary infection is usually restricted to the lungs and contiguous lymph nodes. In a subset of infected individuals, predominantly children, the infection is spread hematogenously to the meninges. The host factors that influence the development of tuberculous meningitis have not been well elucidated. The mannose-binding protein (MBP), a serum protein, is considered as an "ante-antibody." MBP has been shown to bind mycobacteria and acts as an opsonin in vitro. Although MBP plays a role in first-line host defense, it may under certain circumstances be deleterious to the host. In tuberculosis (TB), MBP may assist the spread of this intracellular pathogen. Therefore, we hypothesized that MBP genotypes that result in a phenotype of low MBP levels might be protective. We studied a well-defined South African population in which TB has reached epidemic levels. We found that the MBP B allele (G54D), which disrupts the collagen region of the protein and results in low MBP levels, was found in 22 of 79 (28\%) of the TB-negative controls from the same community, compared with 12 of 91 (13\%) of the patients with pulmonary TB (p {\textless} 0.017), and 5 of 64 (8\%) of patients with tuberculous meningitis (p {\textless} 0.002). In addition, we found significantly lower serum MBP concentrations in TB-negative controls compared with postacute phase, fully recovered TB patients (p {\textless} 0.004). These findings suggest that the MBP B allele affords protection against tuberculous meningitis.},
language = {eng},
number = {4 Pt 1},
journal = {Pediatric Research},
author = {Hoal van Helden, E. G. and Epstein, J. and Victor, T. C. and Hon, D. and Lewis, L. A. and Beyers, N. and Zurakowski, D. and Ezekowitz, A. B. and Van Helden, P. D.},
month = apr,
year = {1999},
pmid = {10203135},
keywords = {Adult, African Continental Ancestry Group, Alleles, Carrier Proteins, Child, Ethnic Groups, Female, Humans, Immunity, Innate, Incidence, Male, Mannose-Binding Lectins, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, South Africa, Tuberculosis, Meningeal},
pages = {459--464},
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"nTTiTEdHpqFLxxDJy","bibbaseid":"hoalvanhelden-epstein-victor-hon-lewis-beyers-zurakowski-ezekowitz-etal-mannosebindingproteinballeleconfersprotectionagainsttuberculousmeningitis-1999","author_short":["Hoal van Helden, E. G.","Epstein, J.","Victor, T. C.","Hon, D.","Lewis, L. A.","Beyers, N.","Zurakowski, D.","Ezekowitz, A. B.","Van Helden, P. D."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"article","type":"article","title":"Mannose-binding protein B allele confers protection against tuberculous meningitis","volume":"45","issn":"0031-3998","doi":"10.1203/00006450-199904010-00002","abstract":"Inhalation is the principal mode of entry for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans. Primary infection is usually restricted to the lungs and contiguous lymph nodes. In a subset of infected individuals, predominantly children, the infection is spread hematogenously to the meninges. The host factors that influence the development of tuberculous meningitis have not been well elucidated. The mannose-binding protein (MBP), a serum protein, is considered as an \"ante-antibody.\" MBP has been shown to bind mycobacteria and acts as an opsonin in vitro. Although MBP plays a role in first-line host defense, it may under certain circumstances be deleterious to the host. In tuberculosis (TB), MBP may assist the spread of this intracellular pathogen. Therefore, we hypothesized that MBP genotypes that result in a phenotype of low MBP levels might be protective. We studied a well-defined South African population in which TB has reached epidemic levels. We found that the MBP B allele (G54D), which disrupts the collagen region of the protein and results in low MBP levels, was found in 22 of 79 (28%) of the TB-negative controls from the same community, compared with 12 of 91 (13%) of the patients with pulmonary TB (p \\textless 0.017), and 5 of 64 (8%) of patients with tuberculous meningitis (p \\textless 0.002). In addition, we found significantly lower serum MBP concentrations in TB-negative controls compared with postacute phase, fully recovered TB patients (p \\textless 0.004). These findings suggest that the MBP B allele affords protection against tuberculous meningitis.","language":"eng","number":"4 Pt 1","journal":"Pediatric Research","author":[{"propositions":["Hoal","van"],"lastnames":["Helden"],"firstnames":["E.","G."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Epstein"],"firstnames":["J."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Victor"],"firstnames":["T.","C."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Hon"],"firstnames":["D."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Lewis"],"firstnames":["L.","A."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Beyers"],"firstnames":["N."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Zurakowski"],"firstnames":["D."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Ezekowitz"],"firstnames":["A.","B."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Van","Helden"],"firstnames":["P.","D."],"suffixes":[]}],"month":"April","year":"1999","pmid":"10203135","keywords":"Adult, African Continental Ancestry Group, Alleles, Carrier Proteins, Child, Ethnic Groups, Female, Humans, Immunity, Innate, Incidence, Male, Mannose-Binding Lectins, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, South Africa, Tuberculosis, Meningeal","pages":"459–464","bibtex":"@article{hoal_van_helden_mannose-binding_1999,\n\ttitle = {Mannose-binding protein {B} allele confers protection against tuberculous meningitis},\n\tvolume = {45},\n\tissn = {0031-3998},\n\tdoi = {10.1203/00006450-199904010-00002},\n\tabstract = {Inhalation is the principal mode of entry for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in humans. Primary infection is usually restricted to the lungs and contiguous lymph nodes. In a subset of infected individuals, predominantly children, the infection is spread hematogenously to the meninges. The host factors that influence the development of tuberculous meningitis have not been well elucidated. The mannose-binding protein (MBP), a serum protein, is considered as an \"ante-antibody.\" MBP has been shown to bind mycobacteria and acts as an opsonin in vitro. Although MBP plays a role in first-line host defense, it may under certain circumstances be deleterious to the host. In tuberculosis (TB), MBP may assist the spread of this intracellular pathogen. Therefore, we hypothesized that MBP genotypes that result in a phenotype of low MBP levels might be protective. We studied a well-defined South African population in which TB has reached epidemic levels. We found that the MBP B allele (G54D), which disrupts the collagen region of the protein and results in low MBP levels, was found in 22 of 79 (28\\%) of the TB-negative controls from the same community, compared with 12 of 91 (13\\%) of the patients with pulmonary TB (p {\\textless} 0.017), and 5 of 64 (8\\%) of patients with tuberculous meningitis (p {\\textless} 0.002). In addition, we found significantly lower serum MBP concentrations in TB-negative controls compared with postacute phase, fully recovered TB patients (p {\\textless} 0.004). These findings suggest that the MBP B allele affords protection against tuberculous meningitis.},\n\tlanguage = {eng},\n\tnumber = {4 Pt 1},\n\tjournal = {Pediatric Research},\n\tauthor = {Hoal van Helden, E. G. and Epstein, J. and Victor, T. C. and Hon, D. and Lewis, L. A. and Beyers, N. and Zurakowski, D. and Ezekowitz, A. B. and Van Helden, P. D.},\n\tmonth = apr,\n\tyear = {1999},\n\tpmid = {10203135},\n\tkeywords = {Adult, African Continental Ancestry Group, Alleles, Carrier Proteins, Child, Ethnic Groups, Female, Humans, Immunity, Innate, Incidence, Male, Mannose-Binding Lectins, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, South Africa, Tuberculosis, Meningeal},\n\tpages = {459--464},\n}\n\n\n\n","author_short":["Hoal van Helden, E. G.","Epstein, J.","Victor, T. C.","Hon, D.","Lewis, L. A.","Beyers, N.","Zurakowski, D.","Ezekowitz, A. B.","Van Helden, P. D."],"key":"hoal_van_helden_mannose-binding_1999","id":"hoal_van_helden_mannose-binding_1999","bibbaseid":"hoalvanhelden-epstein-victor-hon-lewis-beyers-zurakowski-ezekowitz-etal-mannosebindingproteinballeleconfersprotectionagainsttuberculousmeningitis-1999","role":"author","urls":{},"keyword":["Adult","African Continental Ancestry Group","Alleles","Carrier Proteins","Child","Ethnic Groups","Female","Humans","Immunity","Innate","Incidence","Male","Mannose-Binding Lectins","Mycobacterium tuberculosis","South Africa","Tuberculosis","Meningeal"],"metadata":{"authorlinks":{}},"downloads":0,"html":""},"bibtype":"article","biburl":"http://bibbase.org/zotero/TBHostGen","dataSources":["csPxbBZ9RG8CqYnrf"],"keywords":["adult","african continental ancestry group","alleles","carrier proteins","child","ethnic groups","female","humans","immunity","innate","incidence","male","mannose-binding lectins","mycobacterium tuberculosis","south africa","tuberculosis","meningeal"],"search_terms":["mannose","binding","protein","allele","confers","protection","against","tuberculous","meningitis","hoal van helden","epstein","victor","hon","lewis","beyers","zurakowski","ezekowitz","van helden"],"title":"Mannose-binding protein B allele confers protection against tuberculous meningitis","year":1999}