Single-cell transcriptomic profiles reveal changes associated with BCG-induced trained immunity and protective effects in circulating monocytes.
Kong. Lingjia L; Moorlag. Simone J C F M SJCFM; Lefkovith. Ariel A; Li. Bihua B; Matzaraki. Vasiliki V; van Emst. Liesbeth L; Kang. Heather A HA; Latorre. Isabel I; Jaeger. Martin M; Joosten. Leo A B LAB; Netea. Mihai G MG; Xavier. Ramnik J RJ
Key Findings
- BCG vaccination reduces systemic inflammation and alters monocyte responses to LPS
- 75 genes show changed activity after BCG, including heightened CCL3 and CCL4 responses
- Humanin nuclear isoforms become more coordinated after BCG and can induce trained immunity in vitro
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin may become a supplement to enhance trained immunity, offering a nonâvaccine way to boost immune readiness. However, optimal dosing, safety, and realâworld effectiveness are not yet known, so biohackers should watch for further clinical data before adopting it.
Summary
The study shows that the BCG vaccine reshapes immune cells, lowering overall inflammation and changing how they react to bacterial signals. It highlights a group of humanin variants that, when tested in the lab, can trigger a similar âtrained immunityâ effect. While this points to humanin as a potential immuneâboosting tool, the findings are still earlyâstage and havenât been tested in people yet.
Abstract
Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine is one of the most widely used vaccines worldwide. In addition to protection against tuberculosis, BCG confers a degree of non-specific protection against other infections by enhancing secondary immune responses to heterologous pathogens, termed "trained immunity." To better understand BCG-induced immune reprogramming, we perform single-cell transcriptomic measurements before and after BCG vaccination using secondary immune stimulation with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We find that BCG reduces systemic inflammation and identify 75 genes with altered LPS responses, including inflammatory mediators such as CCL3 and CCL4 that have a heightened response. Co-expression analysis reveals that gene modules containing these cytokines lose coordination after BCG. Other modules exhibit increased coordination, including several humanin nuclear isoforms that we confirm induce trained immunity in vitro. Our results link in vivo BCG administration to single-cell transcriptomic changes, validated in human genetics experiments, and highlight genes that are putatively responsible for non-specific protective effects of BCG.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-11-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110028
50
38