Immune responses in the treatment of drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis with phenylbutyrate and vitamin D3 as host directed therapy

Background We have previously shown that 8 weeks’ treatment with phenylbutyrate (PBA) (500mgx2/day) with or without vitamin D3 (vitD3) (5000 IU/day) as host-directed therapy (HDT) accelerated clinical recovery, sputum culture conversion and increased expression of cathelicidin LL-37 by immune cells in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial in adults with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). In this study we further aimed to examine whether HDT with PBA and vitD3 promoted clinically beneficial immunomodulation to improve treatment outcomes in TB patients. Methods Cytokine concentration was measured in supernatants of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients (n = 31/group). Endoplasmic reticulum stress-related genes (GADD34 and XBP1spl) and human beta-defensin-1 (HBD1) gene expression were studied in monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDM) (n = 18/group) from PBMC of patients. Autophagy in MDM (n = 6/group) was evaluated using LC3 expression by confocal microscopy. Results A significant decline in the concentration of cytokines/chemokines was noted from week 0 to 8 in the PBA-group [TNF-α (β = − 0.34, 95% CI = − 0.68, − 0.003; p = 0.04), CCL11 (β = − 0.19, 95% CI = − 0.36, − 0.03; p = 0.02) and CCL5 (β = − 0.08, 95% CI = − 0.16, 0.002; p = 0.05)] and vitD3-group [(CCL11 (β = − 0.17, 95% CI = − 0.34, − 0.001; p = 0.04), CXCL10 (β = − 0.38, 95% CI = − 0.77, 0.003; p = 0.05) and PDGF-β (β = − 0.16, 95% CI = − 0.31, 0.002; p = 0.05)] compared to placebo. Both PBA- and vitD3-groups showed a decline in XBP1spl mRNA on week 8 (p < 0.03). All treatment groups demonstrated increased LC3 expression in MDM compared to placebo over time (p < 0.037). Conclusion The use of PBA and vitD3 as adjunct therapy to standard TB treatment promoted favorable immunomodulation to improve treatment outcomes. Trials registration This trial was retrospectively registered in clinicaltrials.gov, under identifier NCT01580007. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12879-018-3203-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Background
Tuberculosis remains among the top 10 leading causes of death with global estimates of 10.4 million new cases and 1.4 million deaths in 2015 [1]. Control or exacerbation of TB is dependent on host immune responses generated to combat Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection [2][3][4]. Several studies have unravelled immunological pathways that influence the outcome of Mtb infection which include cytokine-mediated signalling among T cells, macrophages and neutrophils, and phagocytes-mediated antimicrobial processes [4][5][6][7][8][9]. Studying cytokine profiles in TB patients has demonstrated its potential for use in diagnostic purposes, monitoring of treatment efficacy and development of novel treatment strategies [10][11][12][13][14]. Autophagy in macrophages and intracellular lysosomal degradation are important for killing of pathogens although Mtb has evolved to escape elimination by blocking phagosomal acidification and phagosome-lysosomal fusion [15][16][17]. Endoplasmic-reticulum (ER) stress response is triggered by mycobacterial infection and plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of TB [18].
The rise in antibiotic resistance among Mtb in the last decade rekindled attention towards alternative chemotherapies. Host-directed therapies (HDT) have emerged as a promising avenue for adjunctive treatment with the aim to modulate immune responses against the pathogen by targeting clinically relevant host biological pathways. This strategy would be beneficial in reducing the course of antibiotic treatment, preventing the spread of drug-resistant Mtb, and reducing inflammation in the lung (reviewed in [19,20]). Phenylbutyrate (PBA) is a licensed drug indicated for the management of urea cycle disorders [21]. Vitamin D 3 (vitD 3 ), a dietary supplement, has diverse immune-modulatory properties. Our group has shown that PBA and vitD 3 have a strong synergistic effect on induction of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) in lung epithelial cell lines, macrophages, and in healthy human immune cells [22][23][24]. In a randomized clinical trial, we have shown that PBA alone or combined with vitD 3 is a promising candidate for HDT in the treatment of drug sensitive pulmonary TB by speeding up clinical recovery [25]. Treatment with vitD 3 or the combination with PBA accelerated sputum culture conversion and enhanced expression of LL-37, the human AMP of the cathelicidin family, by immune cells. Moreover, PBA adjunctive therapy increased macrophage-mediated killing of Mtb ex vivo compared to placebo. Our in vitro study further showed that PBA can induce autophagy in a LL-37 dependent pathway and promotes intracellular killing of Mtb in human macrophages [23]. PBA is known to reduce ER stress in cells and thereby reduce inflammatory responses [26,27]. We hypothesized that the beneficial effects imparted by HDT of PBA and vitD 3 in TB patients may be mediated through regulating expression of cytokines, chemokines and AMPs by immune cells, augmentation of autophagic responses of macrophages and reduction of chronic ER stress. Thus, in a sub-group of TB patients, we evaluated the effect of HDT on dynamics of cytokines and chemokines in culture supernatants of PBMC, HBD1 and ER stress genes and expression of LC3, an autophagy marker, in macrophages from TB patients in response to the disease and clinical improvement.

Patients, study design and interventions
For this study, we used materials collected during our previously published clinical trial [25]. Briefly, 288 adult patients with newly diagnosed sputum smear-positive TB (18-55 years of age) were recruited from the National Institute of the Diseases of the Chest and Hospital (NIDCH) in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The study was approved by the Research and Ethical Review Committees at icddr,b, an international health research institute based in Bangladesh. The study was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in which patients were randomized to the following adjunct therapy arms (72 × 4) receiving oral doses of either: (1) placebo PBA and placebo vitD 3 ; or (2) 500 mg twice daily of PBA and placebo vitD 3 ; or (3) placebo PBA and 5000 IU of vitD 3 (Cholecalciferol) once daily; or (4) PBA combined with vitD 3 (PBA + vitD 3 ). In parallel, standard care of directly observed therapy short-course (DOTS) regimen consisting of isoniazid (INH), rifampicin (RIF), pyrazinamide, and ethambutol was given to all patients for 2 months followed by INH and RIF for 4 months. Clinical evaluation, sputum microscopy, sputum culture and chest radiography were performed [25]. A total of 249 patients (modified intention-to-treat) completed the week 12 follow-up and 219 completed week 24 follow-up visit.
In the published TB trial, clinical assessments were performed by the study doctor and were used to calculate numerical clinical scores which was defined as a TB score [25]. The TB score is an evaluation tool developed by clinicians to quantify/determine changes in clinical symptoms of the TB patients in an impartial and objective manner. The TB score allocated points for self-reported symptoms (cough, shortness of breath/dyspnea, chest pain, haemoptysis, anorexia), and clinical signs assessed by study doctors (fever, anemia (< 11 g/dl), tachycardia, auscultatory findings). The TB score was determined at week 0-4, 6, 8, 10, 12 and 24.
For the present study, a sub-sample of 127 patients (32/ group) was selected for studying cytokine and chemokine responses of PBMC for which adequate volume and complete set of PBMC culture supernatants at 2 time points (week 0 and 8) were available. In the vitD 3 group, a complete set of 31 patients were only available. ER stress (18/group) and HBD1 (18/group) genes were studied using cDNA synthesized from monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDM) of the TB patients at week 0, 4 and 8. For studying autophagy marker, MDM from 24 patients (6/group) were selected with adequate number of cells available at 4 time points (week 0, 4, 8 and 12).

Samples and cell culture supernatant
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and plasma were separated from whole blood by Ficoll-PaqueTM PLUS (GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden) density gradient centrifugation. PBMC were used directly following isolation and were not stored in liquid nitrogen for future use. After washing, PBMCs were suspended in culture medium and cultured for 2 days. Intracellular fluid was collected after adding 0.1% saponin (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany) and stored in ultra-low freezer for analyses of cytokines ( Fig. 1). Forty-eight hours of incubation of PBMC without any stimulation allows partial maturation of monocytes in the mixed cell culture (T and B lymphocytes, NK cells, plasma cells and monocytes). There is spontaneous and active release of cytokines or antibodies directly from the immune cells into the culture fluid (extracellular cytokines); reversible permeabilization of PBMC by saponin additionally allows excretion of intra-cellular cytokines into the supernatant.
Five million PBMC were plated in 4-well culture plates (NUNC, Roskilde, Denmark) for three days, after removing nonadherant cells the adherent MDMs were harvested using a cell scraper, treated with RNAlater (Qiagen GmbH, Hilden, Germany). Total RNA was isolated from MDM using the RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen GmbH). mRNA was reverse-transcribed and corresponding cDNA was synthesized using the SuperScript III First-Strand Synthesis System (Invitrogen Life Technologies, CA) with CFX96 real-time PCR detection System (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA). The cDNA was Fig. 1 The flow chart illustrates collection, processing and storage of different cell types from freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), the time periods of cell culture and the various signature immune markers evaluated in these patients used for analysis of ER stress-related genes and HBD1 (Fig. 1).

Cytokines and chemokines
Multiplex kits (Bio-Rad) were used to analyze cytokines and chemokines in the cell supernatants of PBMC following manufacturer's instructions in the

Autophagy marker in macrophages
Autophagy is a physiological process; it is applied by macrophages to control growth or elimination of intracellular pathogens. LC3 is a classical marker and most widely used for assessing the autophagy process LC3-I is the cytosolic form of this protein. Upon activation of autophagy, LC3-I is subsequently conjugated with phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) to generate LC3-II by a ubiquitination-like enzymatic reaction. In contrast to the cytoplasmic localization of LC3-I, LC3-II associates with both the outer and inner membranes of the autophagosome. This LC3-II protein looks like dots and is known as 'Puncta'. In a previous study, we have shown that treatment of MDM with PBA increased the expression of LC3 with simultaneous decrease in p62 protein expression compared to untreated MDM [23]. Due to the availability of limited number of cells from patients at each time point, simultaneous staining of both LC3 and p62 was not feasible.
Freshly isolated PBMCs from TB patients [25] (above) were cultured in culture medium for 3 days in 8-well chamber slides (Nunc® Lab-Tek® Chamber Slide™ system). After removal of non-adherent cells, adherent MDM were infected with virulent Mtb strain, H37Rv (Tuberculosis Research Center, Chennai, India) at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1:5 (1 macrophage to 5 bacilli (Mtb)) in culture media for 2 h without antibiotics in the BSL-3 facility. After washing to remove the extracellular bacteria, the infected cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (Sigma-Aldrich) in phosphate buffered saline and stored in − 80°C until shipped to the Laboratory in Karolinska Institute. The frozen slides were brought to room temperature, and staining was performed as mentioned earlier [23]. Quantification of autophagy was performed based on the percentage of the cells with LC3 punctate dots by ImageJ software (National Institutes of Health, US).

Statistical analysis
Distribution of different adjunct treatments (Placebo, PBA, vitD 3 and PBA + vitD 3 ) were calculated based on demographic characteristics (age, gender, history of contact, body weight, vitamin D status). Cytokine and chemokine data was log transformed due to non-normal distribution, and a simple interpretation of the beta-coefficient (average changes in outcome (concentration of cytokines, chemokines, number (%) of autophagy marker LC3 etc.) associated with change in treatment group with respect to placebo). Cytokine and chemokine responses of each of the 127 patients were studied at 2 time points, at week 0 and week 8. Wilcoxon Signed Ranks test was performed to evaluate the changes in cytokine and chemokine concentrations within each treatment group. To assess the treatment effects on changes in outcome variables (cytokine/ chemokine concentrations and autophagy marker LC3 + cell counts) over time, generalized estimating equation (GEE) model was performed considering exchangeable correlation matrix. Each cytokine, chemokine and LC3 + cell counts (autophagy marker) was individually analyzed using the GEE model allowing repeated measures per patient to reduce longitudinal multicollinearity. The treatment effects were adjusted by covariates that influence the model by at least 5% (age, sex, duration of symptoms, history of contact with active TB cases and time at week 0 and week 8 (week 4 and 12 were considered where applicable)). The interaction between the treatment groups and time were also minimized. An ANCOVA model was applied to see the mean difference of gadd34, xbp1spl and HBD1 among different treatment groups. In both cases of GEE and ANCOVA, a p-value of < 0.05 was considered significant. All the data were analyzed by using the Statistical package for the Social Science (SPSS) for Windows (version 20; Armonk, NY: IBM SPSS corp.; 2011) and Stata/IC, version13 (Stata Corp, Texas, USA).

Patients and clinical scores
Of total 249 patients, samples from 127 patients were included in the present study where mean age of the patients was 27.25 ± 8.37 years and female male ratio was 1:1.86 (35:65). The patient groups in the present study did not differ significantly in demographic and baseline characteristics amongst themselves (Table 1) or from the primary patient cohort who were not included in the present study (Additional file 1: Table S1).
Longitudinal change in TB scores as analyzed by GEE showed a significant decline over time (week 0, 4, 8 and 12) in the PBA group compared to placebo (Additional file 1: Table S2) in the present cohort (n = 127). A similar reduction in TB scores was obtained in the PBA group compared to placebo in the parent cohort of 249 patients [25]. Significantly higher percentages of patients in the PBA + vitD 3 and vitD 3 groups became sputum culture negative at week 4 compared to placebo though no difference was obtained with sputum smear conversion.

Cytokines and chemokines
Concentrations of cytokines IL-2, IL-5, IL-13 and IL-15 in PBMC supernatants were low or below detection limit in most patients. The other cytokines and chemokines showed a wide range of concentrations in all the supernatants measured. Concentrations of TNF-α, IL-17 (p = 0.05) and CCL11 (eotaxin) (p = 0.01) declined significantly from week 0 to week 8 in the PBA group. In the PBA + vitD 3 group, FGF-basic and PDGF-β reduced in concentrations after 8 weeks from week 0 (p = 0.01) (Additional file 1: Table S3). Other groups did not show any significant reduction in cytokine/chemokine concentrations with time.
Analysis by GEE method exhibited a significant decline in TNF-α (β = − 0.34, 95% CI = − 0.68, − 0.003, p = 0.04) concentrations from week 0 to week-8 in the PBA group compared to placebo ( Table 2) (Table 2). However, no differences in chemokine concentrations were noted in the PBA + vitD 3 group compared to placebo. The results demonstrated that 8 weeks' adjunct therapy with oral PBA or vitD 3 effectively decreased expression of mononuclear cell-derived inflammatory cytokines and chemokines thereby reflecting reduced inflammatory responses in TB patients.

Autophagy marker in ex vivo infected macrophages
Confocal microscopic analysis revealed the activation of autophagy process in macrophages measured by the presence of LC3 positive puncta in MDM. LC3 puncta structures in ex vivo infected MDM showed highest  Data is presented as beta coefficient with 95% confidence intervals in parentheses Abbreviations: CI confidence interval, PBA phenylbutyrate, vitD 3 vitamin D 3 , TNF-α tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IL interleukin, GM-CSF granulocyte-macrophagecolony stimulating factor, PDGF-BB platelet-derived growth factor-BB a Adjusted for age, sex, duration of treatment, history of contact with active TB cases. Statistical analysis was performed using generalized estimating equation (GEE) model. P-value of < 0.05 is significant percentage of cells with LC3-positive puncta in PBA + vitD 3 group at week 8 (Fig. 2a).
There was a basal number of LC3 expressing cells (4.3 ± 2.4) among the uninfected MDM in all the treatment arms of patients that did not change with different therapies or over the duration of the study period (Fig. 2b). In all groups a gradual increase in percentage of LC3-expressing H37Rv-infected MDM from week 0 up to week 12 was noted, indicating that the capacity of MDM to undergo autophagy increased with time during clinical recovery ( Fig. 2a and b). Analysis by GEE model showed that mean changes of LC3-expressing macrophage percentage in PBA (β = 8.26, 95% CI = 3.61, 12.9, p < 0.001), vitD 3 (β = 4.73, 95% CI = 0. 28, 9.19, p = 0.037) and PBA+ vitD 3 (β = 10.47, 95% CI = 5.33, 15.6, p < 0.001) were significantly higher compared to placebo (Fig. 3). Hence, oral adjunct therapy with PBA, vitD 3 and the combined dose had a positive impact on priming for induction of autophagy in ex vivo-infected macrophages from TB patients that persisted up to additional 4 weeks after the adjunct therapy was completed.

Endoplasmic reticulum stress markers and HBD1 in macrophages
When MDM from TB patients were examined for ER stress genes, there were few time points where gene Fig. 2 a Expression of LC3 + macrophages in TB patients after adjunct therapy with PBA and/or vitD 3 and simultaneously under treatment with anti-TB drugs. MDMs derived from the patients were infected with the virulent strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv for 2 h. The cells were fixed and stained with DAPI to visualize the nuclei (blue), and with anti-LC3, followed by the addition of Alexafluor 488-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (green color). One representative immunofluorescence image out of 6 independent replicates are shown; scale bars: 10 μm. b Percentage of LC3 expressing cells among uninfected and Mtb-infected monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDM) in the four treatment arms expression was below detection limit for GADD34 or XBP1spl. These were considered as missing values in ANCOVA. All groups revealed a decline in expression of GADD34 transcripts from week 0 to week 8. However, sex and age-adjusted ANCOVA analysis did not reveal any significant difference in the expression of GADD34 transcripts between the treatment groups and placebo (Fig. 4a). Interestingly, a significant reduction in the expression of XBP1spl transcripts was found at week 8 in PBA (p = 0.036) and vitD 3 (p = 0.008) groups compared to placebo but not in PBA + vitD 3 (p = 0.12) group (Fig. 4b).
Both PBA and vitamin D 3 are known for their role in reducing ER stress in cells (26 or 27) [30]. Host directed therapy with PBA or vitamin D 3 could individually dampen the ER stress in MDM, although the combined intervention did not reach a statistically significant level.
In addition to studying expression of cathelicidin LL-37 in MDM in the original study [25], we further assessed effect of PBA and/or vitD 3 on induction of HBD1 in MDMs. The expression of HBD1 transcripts (2 -ΔΔC T) in different intervention groups did not change significantly with time. Furthermore, the fold change in HBD1 transcripts did not exhibit any difference over time in any of the intervention groups compared to placebo (Table 3).

Discussion
It is important to evaluate the role of immune-modulatory agents as host directed therapy in the treatment of TB that can improve efficacy of therapy, reduce or prevent detrimental outcomes of toxic drugs and improve patient compliance. Our interest in using PBA and/or vitD 3 as HDT in the treatment of TB was based on their diverse roles in modifying the host defense system. Our findings showed that adjunctive treatment with PBA or vitD 3 over 8 weeks' time reduced concentration of cytokines/chemokines and endoplasmic reticulum stress in parallel to clinical recovery. All three adjunctive therapies increased frequency of autophagy in macrophages compared to placebo.
TB is a chronic infectious disease with a spectrum of symptoms and presentations, wherein cytokines and chemokines play important roles in manipulation of the immune responses, containment of Mtb, pathogenesis and disease manifestations. Various studies have compared serum cytokine/chemokine profiles of patients with different clinical presentations of TB, to establish the expression levels as early surrogate biomarkers of therapeutic responses, bacteriological confirmation of TB and sputum culture conversion [31][32][33]. We measured cytokines and chemokines in culture supernatants of PBMC instead of serum or plasma, and the findings were similar to previous studies, showing marked decline of serum cytokine/chemokine concentrations at different treatment stages [14,[33][34][35][36][37]. Particularly we found that compared to conventional anti-TB treatment in the placebo group, cytokine/chemokine reduction was greater in the PBA or vitD 3 groups that occurred in parallel to clinical recovery [25] (reduced TB score), suggesting a role of PBA and vitD 3 in dampening of inflammatory responses.
Mycobacterial infection has been shown to induce ER stress and damage ER. Cells deal with ER stress by activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR), but chronic activation of these pathways can eventually result in apoptosis and lung injury [18,[38][39][40]. Several biomarkers of ER stress have been used in various studies by assessing activation of the UPR; spliced X-box binding protein-1 (XBP1spl) mRNA has been shown to be a reliable marker in revealing dose-dependent changes in the transcript level of this gene [28]. Mycobacterial secreted antigens such as ESAT-6 has been shown to increase XBP1spl as well as other ER stress genes in epithelial cell lines [38]. Toll-like receptor activation was also shown to increase splicing of the transcription factor XBP1 in the absence of other signs of activation of the UPR, and this was found to regulate innate immune responses in macrophages [41]. PBA is a classic ER stress inhibitor; it is a chemical chaperone that improves ER folding capacity and trafficking of mutant proteins out of the ER, stabilization of protein conformation and thereby reduces accumulation of misfolded proteins in ER lumen. In cell lines, experimental models and tissue samples, PBA has been shown to reduce expression of GRP-78, CHOP and other UPR-related markers such as ATF6, XBP1 and phosphorylation of eIF2α [27,[42][43][44]. Vitamin D is also considered a natural ER stress reliever [30,45]. Down-regulation of GADD34 transcripts after 8 weeks of therapy was evident in all 4 arms, however down-regulation of spliced XBP1 was evident only in PBA and vitD 3 arms compared to placebo. Thus, in vivo effect of PBA and vitD 3 adjunct treatments was demonstrated in diminishing ER stress in MDM during TB infection that may have a role in improving clinical  outcome. Moreover, diminished inflammatory cytokine responses as we have shown here may be linked to suppression of ER stress [46,47]. Autophagy is an important physiological process that is applied by macrophages to control and eliminate intracellular pathogens. We have earlier demonstrated in a mechanistic study that PBA, active vitD 3 separately and in combination induced autophagy in macrophages from healthy donors when infected in vitro with Mtb [23], increased the intracellular killing of Mtb compared to untreated MDM and induced LL-37 in cell supernatants of macrophages and lymphocytes after oral ingestion by healthy adults [22]. The novel activity of PBA as an inducer of autophagy was LL-37-dependent. We further showed in the present study that, all three adjunctive therapies (PBA, vitD 3 and PBA + vitD 3 ) in the clinical trial [25] promoted autophagy in ex vivo infected macrophages from the patients, indicating that the inducers can prime the macrophages for autophagy response. Moreover, the autophagy process occurred in parallel to induction of LL-37 in macrophage/PBMC [25], continuing up to an additional week after the adjunct therapy was completed. MDM-mediated elimination of Mtb in the vitamin D and PBA + vitamin D 3 arms in the trial thus strongly suggest a role of the autophagy process in the eradication. Autophagy also plays a housekeeping role in removing misfolded, unfolded or aggregated proteins and clearing damaged organelles, such as ER and mitochondria. In view of the involvement of the UPR in activating autophagy, it is interesting to note that whereas treatment increased autophagy, it appeared to decrease activation of the UPR to ER stress. This suggests that mechanisms distinct from the UPR are involved in the observed treatment-induced autophagy.
Human beta defensin-1 (HBD1) is produced constitutively by all human epithelia and some immune cells. Monocyte-derived-macrophages and -dendritic cells both express HBD1 mRNA, showing increased expression after activation with IFN-γ and/or lipopolysaccharide in a dose-and time-dependent fashion [48]. When expression of HBD1 transcripts was studied in MDMs from the patients we did not observe any increase or down-regulation of the peptide in the treatment groups compared to placebo during the course of TB disease. Thus, PBA or vitD 3 did not seem to have any modulating effect on HBD1 expression in peripheral MDM as seen with LL-37 [25].
One of the limitations of this study was the small size used per treatment group for evaluation of ER stress genes and HBD1 genes. The expression of transcripts was studied only in macrophages, not other cells in PBMC. This was done because of unavailability of adequate number of matched/paired samples from different time points and suboptimum concentrations of specimens remaining from the clinical trial. Our analysis of activation of the UPR was restricted to measurement of GADD34 and XBP1spl because of limitations in the availability of RNA, and therefore other UPR markers (including protein markers) should be assessed in future studies. Only one autophagy marker LC3 was used instead of a combination of markers such as ATG 5 and Beclin-1; however, our earlier studies showed the LC3 marker as reliable for assessment of autophagy in macrophages [23]. The combined adjunct therapy of PBA and vitD 3 did not exhibit any effect on cytokines/chemokines or ER stress reduction in TB patients and require further investigations. Notably, the combined treatment with PBA and vitD 3 of the patients exhibited the fastest sputum culture conversion [25]. Another limitation was that we measured cytokines and chemokines in saponin-treated cell culture fluid instead of serum or plasma as traditionally done [10][11][12][13][14][31][32][33]. Measurement of cytokines in the serum does not accurately reflect active secretion of cytokines due to an ongoing infection; moreover it is affected by clearance from the circulation. Our hypothesis is that the PBMC from TB patients are in vivo activated and they do not require ex-vivo stimulation; release of cytokines/chemokines from unstimulated cells into the culture supernatant indicate active secretion and thus are more relevant to the ongoing disease process. However, use of saponin allowed excretion of intra-cellular cytokines into the culture supernatant which was not a spontaneous release of cytokines.
Conclusions demonstration of clinically beneficial immunomodulation that occur in parallel to improved treatment outcomes suggest that use of repurposed agents such as Phenylbutyrate and vitamin D 3 can be a valuable strategy in HDT against drug-sensitive TB. The toxicities and poor treatment outcomes of current therapies against MDR-TB necessitate newer approaches to improve the management and control of MDR-TB. Development of host-directed therapies integrated with Mtb-targeted chemotherapy provides a complicated challenge because temporal events of infection and host immunity may play a critical role in determining HDT efficacy. Thus, the therapeutic potential of PBA and vitD 3 HDT against multidrug resistant TB warrants urgent clinical evaluation in well-designed multi-center clinical trials in endemic settings.

Additional file
Additional file 1: Table S1. Descriptive statistics of the current studied patients and the patients who were not studied. Table S2. Longitudinal change (week 0, 4, 8 and 12) in TB score in the intervention groups compared to placebo. Table S3