%0 Journal Article %A Andrew R. DiNardo %A Tanmay Gandhi %A Jan Heyckendorf %A Sandra L. Grimm %A Kimal Rajapakshe %A Tomoki Nishiguchi %A Maja Reimann %A H. Lester Kirchner %A Jaqueline Kahari %A Qiniso Dlamini %A Christoph Lange %A Torsten Goldmann %A Sebastian Marwitz %A DZIF-TB cohort study group %A Abhimanyu %A Jeffrey D. Cirillo %A Stefan HE Kaufmann %A Mihai G. Netea %A Reinout van Crevel %A Anna M. Mandalakas %A Cristian Coarfa %T Gene expression signatures identify biologically and clinically distinct tuberculosis endotypes %D 2022 %R 10.1183/13993003.02263-2021 %J European Respiratory Journal %P 2102263 %X Background In vitro, animal model, and clinical evidence suggests that tuberculosis is not a monomorphic disease, and that host response to tuberculosis is protean with multiple distinct molecular pathways and pathologies (endotypes). We applied unbiased clustering to identify separate tuberculosis endotypes with classifiable gene expression patterns and clinical outcomes.Methods A cohort comprised of microarray gene expression data from microbiologically confirmed tuberculosis patients were used to identify putative endotypes. One microarray cohort with longitudinal clinical outcomes was reserved for validation, as was two RNA-seq cohorts. Finally, a separate cohort of tuberculosis patients with functional immune responses was evaluated to clarify stimulated from unstimulated immune responses.Results A discovery cohort, including 435 tuberculosis patients and 533 asymptomatic controls, identified two tuberculosis endotypes. Endotype A is characterised by increased expression of genes related to inflammation and immunity and decreased metabolism and proliferation; in contrast, endotype B has increased activity of metabolism and proliferation pathways. An independent RNA-seq validation cohort, including 118 tuberculosis patients and 179 controls, validated the discovery results. Gene expression signatures for treatment failure were elevated in endotype A in the discovery cohort, and a separate validation cohort confirmed that endotype A patients had slower time to culture conversion, and a reduced cure rate. These observations suggest that endotypes reflect functional immunity, supported by the observation that tuberculosis patients with a hyperinflammatory endotype have less responsive cytokine production upon stimulation.Conclusion These findings provide evidence that metabolic and immune profiling could inform optimisation of endotype-specific host-directed therapies for tuberculosis.FootnotesThis manuscript has recently been accepted for publication in the European Respiratory Journal. It is published here in its accepted form prior to copyediting and typesetting by our production team. After these production processes are complete and the authors have approved the resulting proofs, the article will move to the latest issue of the ERJ online. Please open or download the PDF to view this article.The authors have declared that no conflict of interest exists. %U https://erj.ersjournals.com/content/erj/early/2022/02/03/13993003.02263-2021.full.pdf