Do chance encounters between heterogeneous cells shape the outcome of tuberculosis infections?
The sum of all of the interactions between single bacteria and host cells determines if an infection is cleared, controlled, or progresses at the whole host-organism level. These individual interactions have independent trajectories defined by diverse and dynamic host-cell and bacterial responses. Focusing on Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, we discuss how advances in single-cell technologies allow investigation of heterogeneity in host-pathogen interactions and how different layers of heterogeneity in the host affect disease outcome. At late stages of infection, many single interactions co-exist and different outcomes depend on inter-granuloma and intra-granuloma heterogeneity. However, during bottleneck events involving small numbers of bacteria, random events, such as chance interactions with more or less permissive host cells, play a decisive role and may explain why some exposed individuals never develop the disease.
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