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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997 November 25; 94(24): 13227–13232.
PMCID: PMC24291
Medical Sciences
An epidemic of tuberculosis with a high rate of tuberculin anergy among a population previously unexposed to tuberculosis, the Yanomami Indians of the Brazilian Amazon
Alexandra O. Sousa,* Julia I. Salem,§ Francis K. Lee, Maria C. Verçosa,§ Philippe Cruaud,* Barry R. Bloom, Philippe H. Lagrange, and Hugo L. David***
*Unité de la Tuberculose et des Mycobactéries, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Docteur, Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France; §Laboratório de Micobactérias, Instituto Nacional de Pesquizas da Amazonia, CP 478, 69011 Manaus, Amazonia, Brazil; Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, 69 Butler Street, Atlanta, GA, 30303; Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461; and Service de Microbiologie, Hôpital Saint-Louis, 1 av. Claude Vellefaux 75475 Paris Cedex 10, France
To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: sousa/at/aecom.yu.edu.
**Present address: Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, rua da 96-, Junqueira, no. 96-100, Lisbon 1300, Portugal.
Contributed by Barry R. Bloom
Accepted September 16, 1997.
Abstract
A survey of an emerging tuberculosis epidemic among the Yanomami Indians of the Amazonian rain forest provided a unique opportunity to study the impact of tuberculosis on a population isolated from contact with the tubercle bacillus for millennia until the mid-1960s. Within the Yanomami population, an extraordinary high prevalence of active tuberculosis (6.4% of 625 individuals clinically examined) was observed, indicating a high susceptibility to disease, even among bacille Calmette–Guérin-vaccinated individuals. Observational studies on cell-mediated and humoral immune responses of the Yanomami Indians compared with contemporary residents of the region suggest profound differences in immunological responsiveness to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. Among the Yanomami, a very high prevalence of tuberculin skin test anergy was found. Of patients with active tuberculosis, 46% had purified protein derivative of tuberculosis reactions <10 mm; similarly 58% of recent bacillus Calmette–Guérin vaccines exhibited skin test reactions <5 mm. The Yanomami also had higher titers of antibodies against M. tuberculosis glycolipid antigens (>70%) than the control subjects comprised of Brazilians of European descent (14%). The antibodies were mostly of the IgM isotype. Among the tuberculosis patients who also produced IgG antibodies, the titers of IgG4 were significantly higher among the Yanomami than in the control population. Although it was not possible to analyze T-cell responses or patterns of lymphokine production in vitro because of the remoteness of the villages from laboratory facilities, the results suggest that the first encounter of the Yanomami Indian population with tuberculosis engenders a diminished cell-mediated immune response and an increased production antibody responses, relative to other populations with extensive previous contact with the pathogen. These findings suggest that tuberculosis may represent a powerful selective pressure on human evolution that over centuries has shaped the nature of human immune responses to infection.
Keywords: antimycobacterial antibodies, tuberculin skin test, genetic selection, cell-mediated immunity