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Apoptosis is a major cause of so-called “caseous necrosis” in mycobacterial granulomas in HIV-infected patients
  1. A S-Y Leong1,
  2. P Wannakrairot2,
  3. T Y-M Leong3
  1. 1
    Division of Anatomical Pathology, Hunter Area Pathology Service and University of Newcastle, Australia 2310
  2. 2
    Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand
  3. 3
    Victorian Cytology Service, Melbourne, Australia 3001
  1. Professor Anthony S-Y Leong, Hunter Area Pathology Service, Locked Bag 1, HRMC, Newcastle, Australia 2310; aleong{at}mail.newcastle.edu.au

Abstract

Aim: To demonstrate that so-called “caseous necrosis” is the result of apoptosis and investigate the association of B and T cells, and macrophages with the granulomas and their relationship to some apoptosis-related proteins.

Methods: Cervical lymph node biopsy specimens from 55 HIV-infected Thai patients with caseating granulomas, confluent caseating granulomas, sarcoid-like granulomas, foamy macrophage response, pseudo-inflammatory tumour response or non-specific lymphoid hyperplasia were examined histologically and for apoptosis by immunostaining for caspase 3 and TUNEL. Classic tuberculoid caseating granulomas in cervical lymph node and lungs from non-HIV-infected patients were also stained with caspase 3.

Results: All areas of caseous necrosis frequently displayed extensive apoptosis that readily accounted for the so-called “necrosis”. Small foci of apoptosis were present in the other reaction patterns and fibrotic granulomas often showed residual apoptosis. The extent of apoptosis was inversely related to the numbers of identifiable acid-fast bacilli; all epithelioid macrophages revealed strong immunoexpression of the pro-apoptotic proteins Bax and Fas, whereas the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2 was not present. Apoptosis occurred in CD68+ macrophages and CD3+ CD8+ T cells; all nodes were deficient of CD4+ cells. CD8+ T cells were intimately related to the apoptotic foci, suggesting a role in the process, particularly in the absence of CD4+ cells. In non-HIV-infected cases, similar extensive apoptosis was confirmed with caspase 3.

Conclusions: So-called “caseous necrosis” is shown for the first time to be the result of apoptosis. In the absence of CD4+ cells the findings negate many of the postulated mechanisms of apoptosis in the murine model and have implications for the treatment of mycobacterial infections.

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests: None.