The study of immunological markers in tuberculosis across animal models and its translation to human research.

Díaz-Fernández, Sergio, Matilde Aleluia, Margarida Saraiva, Pablo Soldevilla, Jordi B Torrelles, Riti Sharan, Frank A W Verreck, et al. 2026. “The Study of Immunological Markers in Tuberculosis across Animal Models and Its Translation to Human Research.”. Lab Animal.

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB), a disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, remains one of the major causes of death from infection worldwide, with over a million associated deaths each year. The study of biomarkers for TB is critical for advancing our understanding and management of the disease. Biomarkers, defined as measurable indicators of biological states or conditions, are invaluable for the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment monitoring of TB. Clinical studies have provided critical knowledge on the matter but are also notoriously constrained by economical, ethical and sampling limitations. The use of animal models provides a simpler, more controllable, cost-effective setting with great potential for translation to humans. They also allow the evaluation of biomarkers within the respiratory compartment, when available, which is of particular interest due to the nature of TB pathogenesis. This Review focuses on the current landscape of TB biomarker discovery in several animal models, from invertebrates to large mammals. Here we summarize the basics of host-pathogen immune interaction, describe the main methodological approaches used and highlight the most substantial findings for each animal model studied. Furthermore, we discuss the advantages, challenges and limitations associated with species-specific differences in animal models. We conclude that integrating the data obtained from animal models and human studies is absolutely required to advance the TB field to accelerate the management of this disease.

Last updated on 06/05/2026
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