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1.
Alasdair Leslie Philippa C. Matthews Jennifer Listgarten Jonathan M. Carlson Carl Kadie Thumbi Ndung'u Christian Brander Hoosen Coovadia Bruce D. Walker David Heckerman Philip J. R. Goulder 《Journal of virology》2010,84(19):9879-9888
Previous studies have identified a central role for HLA-B alleles in influencing control of HIV infection. An alternative possibility is that a small number of HLA-B alleles may have a very strong impact on HIV disease outcome, dominating the contribution of other HLA alleles. Here, we find that even following the exclusion of subjects expressing any of the HLA-B class I alleles (B*57, B*58, and B*18) identified to have the strongest influence on control, the dominant impact of HLA-B alleles on virus set point and absolute CD4 count variation remains significant. However, we also find that the influence of HLA on HIV control in this C-clade-infected cohort from South Africa extends beyond HLA-B as HLA-Cw type remains a significant predictor of virus and CD4 count following exclusion of the strongest HLA-B associations. Furthermore, there is evidence of interdependent protective effects of the HLA-Cw*0401-B*8101, HLA-Cw*1203-B*3910, and HLA-A*7401-B*5703 haplotypes that cannot be explained solely by linkage to a protective HLA-B allele. Analysis of individuals expressing both protective and detrimental alleles shows that even the strongest HLA alleles appear to have an additive rather than dominant effect on HIV control at the individual level. Finally, weak but significant frequency-dependent effects in this cohort can be detected only by looking at an individual''s combined HLA allele frequencies. Taken together, these data suggest that although individual HLA alleles, particularly HLA-B, can have a strong impact, HIV control overall is likely to be influenced by the additive effect of some or all of the other HLA alleles present.HIV-specific CD8+ T cells play a central role in resolution of primary viremia and the long-term suppression of viral replication (13). Supporting this notion is the observed correlation between possession of particular human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I alleles and control of HIV, measured both directly by time-to-AIDS (5, 6) and indirectly via clinical markers of disease progression (viral load [VL] and CD4 count) (15, 26, 28). Specific HLA class I alleles have been associated with relatively successful control of viral replication and slow disease progression, most notably, alleles HLA-B*57 and HLA-B*27 (1, 7, 12, 15, 21, 23), and also with relatively ineffective control of viral replication and rapid disease progression [B*35(Px), B*5802, and B*18] (5, 15, 17, 23). In addition, general trends suggesting an HLA class I heterozygote advantage (5) and rare allele advantage (28) and, most recently, a correlation between levels of surface expression linked to certain HLA-Cw alleles (11, 27) and HIV control has also been described.Among the different HLA class I loci, the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses restricted by HLA-B alleles are thought to play the central role in determining disease outcome: the majority of detectable HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses are restricted by HLA-B alleles (3, 15, 16), HLA-B-restricted responses typically express a more effective “polyfunctional” phenotype (14), the strongest HLA-associations with either slow or rapid progression are with HLA-B alleles (5, 10, 11, 15), and HLA-B-restricted CD8+ T cells exert the strongest selection pressure on the virus (15, 19, 24). However, whether this apparent association between HIV immune control and HLA-B is a general and causal trend or, rather, is biased by the coincidence that the strongest HLA associations with either extreme of disease control happen, by chance, to involve HLA-B alleles remains uncertain.In order to further investigate the correlation between HLA type and HIV infection control, we here examine a cohort now comprising >1,200 chronically HIV C-clade-infected, treatment-naïve subjects from Durban, South Africa, in an extended analysis following from our previous studies of a smaller cohort (15). We first address the question of whether the dominant role of HLA-B in this population compared to the roles of HLA-A or HLA-C results from the influence of HLA-B alleles in general or is dependent on a few known strong associations, such as that between HLA-B*57 alleles and low viremia. Second, in light of recent data (11, 27), we assess the impact of HLA-C alleles on HIV disease outcome and examine the effect of HLA haplotypes on observed HLA associations with disease control. Third, we investigate the question of whether the impact of certain HLA-B alleles on HIV outcome dominates that of other HLA-B alleles to negate the contribution of the latter or whether the impact of individual HLA alleles can be additive. Finally, we compare the impact of individual HLA alleles on HIV on immune control to the impact of heterozygote and rare allele advantage in this cohort. 相似文献
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3.
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecules are critical components of the cell-mediated immune system that bind and present intracellular antigenic peptides to CD8+ T cell receptors. To understand the interaction mechanism underlying human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I specificity in detail, we studied the structural interaction characteristics of 16,393 nonameric peptides binding to 58 HLA-A and -B molecules. Our analysis showed for the first time that HLA-peptide intermolecular bonding patterns vary among different alleles and may be grouped in a superfamily dependent manner. Through the use of these HLA class I ‘fingerprints’, a high resolution HLA class I superfamily classification schema was developed. This classification is capable of separating HLA alleles into well resolved, non-overlapping clusters, which is consistent with known HLA superfamily definitions. Such structural interaction approach serves as an excellent alternative to the traditional methods of HLA superfamily definitions that use peptide binding motifs or receptor information, and will help identify appropriate antigens suitable for broad-based subunit vaccine design. 相似文献
4.
Aleksandr Lazaryan Wei Song Elena Lobashevsky Jianming Tang Sadeep Shrestha Kui Zhang Lytt I. Gardner Janet M. McNicholl Craig M. Wilson Robert S. Klein Anne Rompalo Kenneth Mayer Jack Sobel Richard A. Kaslow for the HIV Epidemiology Research Study Reaching for Excellence in Adolescent Care Health Study 《Journal of virology》2010,84(5):2610-2617
The role of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I supertypes in controlling human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in African Americans has not been established. We examined the effects of the HLA-A and HLA-B alleles and supertypes on the outcomes of HIV-1 clade B infection among 338 African American women and adolescents. HLA-B58 and -B62 supertypes (B58s and B62s) were associated with favorable HIV-1 disease control (proportional odds ratio [POR] of 0.33 and 95% confidence interval [95% CI] of 0.21 to 0.52 for the former and POR of 0.26 and 95% CI of 0.09 to 0.73 for the latter); B7s and B44s were associated with unfavorable disease control (POR of 2.39 and 95% CI of 1.54 to 3.73 for the former and POR of 1.63 and 95% CI of 1.08 to 2.47 for the latter). In general, individual alleles within specific B supertypes exerted relatively homogeneous effects. A notable exception was B27s, whose protective influence (POR, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.35 to 0.94) was masked by the opposing effect of its member allele B*1510. The associations of most B supertypes (e.g., B58s and B7s) were largely explained either by well-known effects of constituent B alleles or by effects of previously unimplicated B alleles aggregated into a particular supertype (e.g., B44s and B62s). A higher frequency of HLA-B genotypic supertypes correlated with a higher mean viral load (VL) and lower mean CD4 count (Pearson''s r = 0.63 and 0.62, respectively; P = 0.03). Among the genotypic supertypes, B58s and its member allele B*57 contributed disproportionately to the explainable VL variation. The study demonstrated the dominant role of HLA-B supertypes in HIV-1 clade B-infected African Americans and further dissected the contributions of individual class I alleles and their population frequencies to the supertype effects.African Americans in the United States have been affected disproportionately by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) epidemic. They accounted for only 13% of the U.S. population but for 47% of AIDS cases diagnosed in the United States in 2006 (14, 17). An HIV-1 vaccine would be of enormous benefit to this subpopulation. One strategy for HIV-1 vaccine development seeks to capitalize on the recognition and destruction of HIV-1-infected cells by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) (32, 33, 35).CTL recognition is critically dependent on binding, presentation, and cell surface display of a variety of antigenic peptides (epitopes) by extremely polymorphic human leukocyte antigen (HLA) molecules. As the relative importance of increasing numbers of HIV-1 epitopes for individual HLA class I molecules has been recognized (9, 16), the feasibility of developing a vaccine tailored to every epitope and HLA specificity has come to seem more remote. Conceptualization of epitope specificity in terms of broad groupings (supertypes) of HLA molecules may provide a rational but simpler approach to this challenge.Several efforts have succeeded at consolidating the huge spectrum of individual HLA class I alleles into four HLA-A and five HLA-B supertype categories (37-39), based on the ability of different HLA class I molecules to present similar epitopes. Unlike individual allele frequencies, which vary greatly across ethnic groups, all nine supertypes (comprising most, but not all, HLA-A and HLA-B alleles) are present in all human populations. This more uniform representation of allele groups may confer an advantage in the form of balancing selection (38).HLA alleles within one supertype that share epitope binding specificities might be expected to demonstrate similar associations with HIV-1 outcomes or vaccine response; conversely, alleles within a supertype that differ substantially in function might be expected to show differential responses to natural infection or vaccines designed on the basis of supertype (2). Functional heterogeneity of alleles within the supertypes could be due to differences in the class I alleles themselves (e.g., variable epitope avidity or tolerance to viral mutations), in host background (genetic epistasis), or in the virus (e.g., clade-related epitope specificities or viral escape).Previous work has detected associations between the HLA class I supertypes and HIV-1 outcomes for Caucasians with clade B infections (34, 44) and for native Africans with clade A or C infections (23, 28). We are unaware of studies among African Americans in the context of clade B HIV-1 infection or of any systematic attempt to tease apart the independent contributions of supertypes and their individual class I alleles to HIV-1 outcomes. Here we document the frequencies of the HLA class I alleles and supertypes in the Reaching for Excellence in Adolescent Care and Health (REACH) and HIV Epidemiologic Research Study (HERS) cohorts, and we report the relative effects of those alleles and supertypes on the degree of HIV-1 disease control. 相似文献
5.
Arumugam Balamurugan Ayub Ali Julie Boucau Sylvie Le Gall Hwee L. Ng Otto O. Yang 《Journal of virology》2013,87(15):8726-8734
Although CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are protective in HIV-1 infection, the factors determining their antiviral efficiency are poorly defined. It is proposed that Gag targeting is superior because of very early Gag epitope presentation, allowing early killing of infected cells before Nef-mediated downregulation of human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I). To study Gag epitope presentation kinetics, three epitopes (SL977-85, KF11162-172, and TW10240-249) were genetically translocated from their endogenous location in the Rev-dependent (late) gag gene into the Rev-independent (early) nef gene with concomitant mutation of the corresponding endogenous epitopes to nonrecognized sequences. These viruses were compared to the index virus for CTL-mediated suppression of replication and the susceptibility of this antiviral activity to Nef-mediated HLA-I downregulation. SL9-specific CTLs gained activity after SL9 translocation to Nef, going from Nef sensitive to Nef insensitive, indicating that translocation accelerated infected cell recognition from after to before HLA-I downregulation. KF11-specific CTL antiviral activity was unchanged and insensitive to HLA-I downregulation before and after KF11 translocation, suggesting that already rapid recognition of infected cells was not accelerated. However, TW10-specific CTLs that were insensitive to Nef at the baseline became sensitive with reduced antiviral activity after translocation, indicating that translocation retarded epitope expression. Cytosolic peptide processing assays suggested that TW10 was inefficiently generated after translocation to Nef, compared to SL9 and KF11. As a whole, these data demonstrate that epitope presentation kinetics play an important role in CTL antiviral efficiency, that Gag epitopes are not uniformly presented early, and that the epitope context can play a major role in presentation kinetics. 相似文献
6.
Louis-Marie Yindom Aleksandra Leligdowicz Maureen P. Martin Xiaojiang Gao Ying Qi Syed M. A. Zaman Maarten Schim van der Loeff Carla van Tienen Assan Jaye Akum Aveika Archibald Worwui Mathurin Diatta Tim Vincent Hilton C. Whittle Sarah L. Rowland-Jones Robert Walton Mary Carrington 《Journal of virology》2010,84(16):8202-8208
Overall, the time to AIDS after HIV-2 infection is longer than with HIV-1, and many individuals infected with HIV-2 virus remain healthy throughout their lives. Multiple HLA and KIR gene products have been implicated in the control of HIV-1, but the effect of variation at these loci on HIV-2 disease is unknown. We show here for the first time that HLA-B*1503 is associated significantly with poor prognosis after HIV-2 infection and that HLA-B*0801 is associated with susceptibility to infection. Interestingly, previous data indicate that HLA-B*1503 is associated with low viral loads in HIV-1 clade B infection but has no significant effect on viral load in clade C infection. In general, alleles strongly associated with HIV-1 disease showed no effect in HIV-2 disease. These data emphasize the unique nature of the effects of HLA and HLA/KIR combinations on HIV-2 immune responses relative to HIV-1, which could be related to their distinct clinical course.Since the first report of this virus in 1986, HIV-2 remains largely confined to West Africa (11). It shares between 30 and 60% nucleotide and amino acid homology with HIV-1 but differs greatly in pathogenicity and transmissibility (20). Studies on HIV-2 patients across West Africa have shown that some people remain uninfected despite repeated exposure (36), and a substantial proportion of infected people remain relatively healthy for a very long time with low plasma viral load and normal CD4+ T-cell counts, a characteristic of long-term nonprogressors (LTNPs) infected with HIV-1 (37). This is perhaps a reflection of an effective immune response mounted against the virus, including a vigorous CD8+ T-cell response (28), maintenance of HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell function (15), and the presence of a strong neutralizing antibody response in many subjects (4), features that are highly desirable for a successful HIV-1 vaccine. Thus, HIV-2 disease course provides a natural model for investigating mechanisms that control HIV infection, and a better understanding of these mechanisms might inform new strategies for HIV prevention and treatment.HLA class I molecules present antigenic epitopes to cytotoxic T cells and are central to the acquired immune response. A number of associations between HLA class I alleles and HIV disease outcomes have been reported (10), the most consistent being B*57 and B*27, which show strong protection across studies, and certain subtypes of B*35, which associate with more rapid progression (19). While several mother-infant studies have implicated sharing of certain HLA alleles in transmission of the virus from mother to infant (29, 30), there is no convincing data that particular HLA class I alleles protect against HIV infection in general.HLA class I allotypes also serve as ligands for killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs), which modulate natural killer (NK) cell function. KIRs are structurally similar to one another and can be divided into activating and inhibitory receptors. NK cells are key components of the innate immune system and constantly survey host cell surfaces for appropriate levels of HLA class I molecules through a network of NK cell receptors, including KIRs (26). Upon engagement with their ligand, inhibitory KIR suppress NK cell activity, but if the ligand is missing or has been downregulated on target cells, the threshold for NK cell activation is lowered, thus allowing for activation signals to dominate (23).HLA and KIR genes are found on chromosomes 6 and 19, respectively, so they segregate independently. As such, the genes/alleles for the corresponding receptor-ligand pair must be present to confer functionality, whereas presence of one without the other results in a null phenotype. A number of HLA and KIR gene products either individually or collectively has been implicated in the control of HIV-1 (9), but nothing is known of their role in HIV-2.Epidemiological data from Caio and other cohorts in West Africa (3, 39) indicate that HIV-2 infection in a substantial proportion of infected individuals is compatible with normal survival and without signs of immunodeficiency, suggesting distinct viral pathogenic mechanisms and protective host factors against HIV-2 relative to HIV-1. Here, we determined the HLA class I and KIR gene profiles of the Caio population (>95% Manjako) from Guinea-Bissau and investigated their effects on susceptibility to HIV-2 infection and disease progression. 相似文献
7.
Raghavan Sampathkumar Harold O. Peters Lillian Mendoza Thomas Bielawny Elizabeth Ngugi Joshua Kimani Charles Wachihi Francis A. Plummer Ma Luo 《PloS one》2014,9(7)
We examined the effect of HLA class I haplotypes on HIV-1 seroconversion and disease progression in the Pumwani sex worker cohort. This study included 595 HIV-1 positive patients and 176 HIV negative individuals. HLA-A, -B, and -C were typed to 4-digit resolution using sequence-based typing method. HLA class I haplotype frequencies were estimated using PyPop 32-0.6.0. The influence of haplotypes on time to seroconversion and CD4+ T cell decline to <200 cells/mm3 were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier analysis using SPSS 13.0. Before corrections for multiple comparisons, three 2-loci haplotypes were significantly associated with faster seroconversion, including A*23∶01-C*02∶02 (p = 0.014, log rank(LR) = 6.06, false-discovery rate (FDR) = 0.056), B*42∶01-C*17∶01 (p = 0.01, LR = 6.60, FDR = 0.08) and B*07∶02-C*07∶02 (p = 0.013, LR = 6.14, FDR = 0.069). Two A*74∶01 containing haplotypes, A*74∶01-B*15∶03 (p = 0.047, LR = 3.942, FDR = 0.068) and A*74∶01-B*15∶03-C*02∶02 (p = 0.045, LR = 4.01, FDR = 0.072) and B*14∶02-C*08∶02 (p = 0.021, LR = 5.36, FDR = 0.056) were associated with slower disease progression. Five haplotypes, including A*30∶02-B*45∶01 (p = 0.0008, LR = 11.183, FDR = 0.013), A*30∶02-C*16∶01 (p = 0.015, LR = 5.97, FDR = 0.048), B*53∶01-C*04∶01 (p = 0.010, LR = 6.61, FDR = 0.08), B*15∶10-C*03∶04 (p = 0.031, LR = 4.65, FDR = 0.062), and B*58∶01-C*03∶02 (p = 0.037, LR = 4.35, FDR = 0.066) were associated with faster progression to AIDS. After FDR corrections, only the associations of A*30∶02-B*45∶01 and A*30∶02-C*16∶01 with faster disease progression remained significant. Cox regression and deconstructed Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed that the associations of haplotypes of A*23∶01-C*02∶02, B*07∶02-C*07∶02, A*74∶01-B*15∶03, A*74∶01-B*15∶03-C*02∶02, B*14∶02-C*08∶02 and B*58∶01-C*03∶02 with differential seroconversion or disease progression are due to the dominant effect of a single allele within the haplotypes. The true haplotype effect was observed with A*30∶02-B*45∶01, A*30∶02-C*16∶02, B*53∶01-C*04∶01 B*15∶10-C*03∶04, and B*42∶01-C*17∶01. In these cases, the presence of both alleles accelerated the disease progression or seroconversion than any of the single allele within the haplotypes. Our study showed that the true effects of HLA class I haplotypes on HIV seroconversion and disease progression exist and the associations of HLA class I haplotype can also be due to the dominant effect of a single allele within the haplotype. 相似文献
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Bizhan Romani Nima Shaykh Baygloo Mojtaba Hamidi-Fard Mohammad Reza Aghasadeghi Elham Allahbakhshi 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2016,291(6):2696-2711
Mechanisms underlying HIV-1 latency remain among the most crucial questions that need to be answered to adopt strategies for purging the latent viral reservoirs. Here we show that HIV-1 accessory protein Vpr induces depletion of class I HDACs, including HDAC1, 2, 3, and 8, to overcome latency in macrophages. We found that Vpr binds and depletes chromatin-associated class I HDACs through a VprBP-dependent mechanism, with HDAC3 as the most affected class I HDAC. De novo expression of Vpr in infected macrophages induced depletion of HDAC1 and 3 on the HIV-1 LTR that was associated with hyperacetylation of histones on the HIV-1 LTR. As a result of hyperacetylation of histones on HIV-1 promotor, the virus established an active promotor and this contributed to the acute infection of macrophages. Collectively, HIV-1 Vpr down-regulates class I HDACs on chromatin to counteract latent infections of macrophages. 相似文献
9.
Philippa C. Matthews Jennifer Listgarten Jonathan M. Carlson Rebecca Payne Kuan-Hsiang Gary Huang John Frater Dominique Goedhals Dewald Steyn Cloete van Vuuren Paolo Paioni Pieter Jooste Anthony Ogwu Roger Shapiro Zenele Mncube Thumbi Ndung'u Bruce D. Walker David Heckerman Philip J. R. Goulder 《PloS one》2012,7(10)
Background
HLA class I genotype is a major determinant of the outcome of HIV infection, and the impact of certain alleles on HIV disease outcome is well studied. Recent studies have demonstrated that certain HLA class I alleles that are in linkage disequilibrium, such as HLA-A*74 and HLA-B*57, appear to function co-operatively to result in greater immune control of HIV than mediated by either single allele alone. We here investigate the extent to which HLA alleles - irrespective of linkage disequilibrium - function co-operatively.Methodology/Principal Findings
We here refined a computational approach to the analysis of >2000 subjects infected with C-clade HIV first to discern the individual effect of each allele on disease control, and second to identify pairs of alleles that mediate ‘co-operative additive’ effects, either to improve disease suppression or to contribute to immunological failure. We identified six pairs of HLA class I alleles that have a co-operative additive effect in mediating HIV disease control and four hazardous pairs of alleles that, occurring together, are predictive of worse disease outcomes (q<0.05 in each case). We developed a novel ‘sharing score’ to quantify the breadth of CD8+ T cell responses made by pairs of HLA alleles across the HIV proteome, and used this to demonstrate that successful viraemic suppression correlates with breadth of unique CD8+ T cell responses (p = 0.03).Conclusions/Significance
These results identify co-operative effects between HLA Class I alleles in the control of HIV-1 in an extended Southern African cohort, and underline complementarity and breadth of the CD8+ T cell targeting as one potential mechanism for this effect. 相似文献10.
Eva Zilian Hendry Saragih Vijith Vijayan Oliver Hiller Constanca Figueiredo Abid Aljabri Rainer Blasczyk Gregor Theilmeier Jan Ulrich Becker Jan Larmann Stephan Immenschuh 《PloS one》2015,10(12)
Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) is a key limiting factor for long-term graft survival in solid organ transplantation. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I (HLA I) antibodies (Abs) play a major role in the pathogenesis of AMR via their interactions with HLA molecules on vascular endothelial cells (ECs). The antioxidant enzyme heme oxygenase (HO)-1 has anti-inflammatory functions in the endothelium. As complement-independent effects of HLA I Abs can activate ECs, it was the goal of the current study to investigate the role of HO-1 on activation of human ECs by HLA I Abs. In cell cultures of various primary human macro- and microvascular ECs treatment with monoclonal pan- and allele-specific HLA I Abs up-regulated the expression of inducible proinflammatory adhesion molecules and chemokines (vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 [VCAM-1], intercellular cell adhesion molecule-1 [ICAM-1], interleukin-8 [IL-8] and monocyte chemotactic protein 1 [MCP-1]). Pharmacological induction of HO-1 with cobalt-protoporphyrin IX reduced, whereas inhibition of HO-1 with either zinc-protoporphyrin IX or siRNA-mediated knockdown increased HLA I Ab-dependent up-regulation of VCAM-1. Treatment with two carbon monoxide (CO)-releasing molecules, which liberate the gaseous HO product CO, blocked HLA I Ab-dependent EC activation. Finally, in an in vitro adhesion assay exposure of ECs to HLA I Abs led to increased monocyte binding, which was counteracted by up-regulation of HO-1. In conclusion, HLA I Ab-dependent EC activation is modulated by endothelial HO-1 and targeted induction of this enzyme may be a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of AMR in solid organ transplantation. 相似文献
11.
Saghar Kaabinejadian Paolo A. Piazza Curtis P. McMurtrey Stephen R. Vernon Steven J. Cate Wilfried Bardet Fredda B. Schafer Kenneth W. Jackson Diana M. Campbell Rico Buchli Charles R. Rinaldo William H. Hildebrand 《PloS one》2013,8(6)
The recent West Nile virus (WNV) outbreak in the United States underscores the importance of understanding human immune responses to this pathogen. Via the presentation of viral peptide ligands at the cell surface, class I HLA mediate the T cell recognition and killing of WNV infected cells. At this time, there are two key unknowns in regards to understanding protective T cell immunity: 1) the number of viral ligands presented by the HLA of infected cells, and 2) the distribution of T cell responses to these available HLA/viral complexes. Here, comparative mass spectroscopy was applied to determine the number of WNV peptides presented by the HLA-A*11:01 of infected cells after which T cell responses to these HLA/WNV complexes were assessed. Six viral peptides derived from capsid, NS3, NS4b, and NS5 were presented. When T cells from infected individuals were tested for reactivity to these six viral ligands, polyfunctional T cells were focused on the GTL9 WNV capsid peptide, ligands from NS3, NS4b, and NS5 were less immunogenic, and two ligands were largely inert, demonstrating that class I HLA reduce the WNV polyprotein to a handful of immune targets and that polyfunctional T cells recognize infections by zeroing in on particular HLA/WNV epitopes. Such dominant HLA/peptide epitopes are poised to drive the development of WNV vaccines that elicit protective T cells as well as providing key antigens for immunoassays that establish correlates of viral immunity. 相似文献
12.
Jose?Luis?Elechiguerra Justin?L?Burt Jose?R?Morones Alejandra?Camacho-Bragado Xiaoxia?Gao Humberto?H?Lara Miguel?Jose?Yacaman
The interaction of nanoparticles with biomolecules and microorganisms is an expanding field of research. Within this field,
an area that has been largely unexplored is the interaction of metal nanoparticles with viruses. In this work, we demonstrate
that silver nanoparticles undergo a size-dependent interaction with HIV-1, with nanoparticles exclusively in the range of
1–10 nm attached to the virus. The regular spatial arrangement of the attached nanoparticles, the center-to-center distance
between nanoparticles, and the fact that the exposed sulfur-bearing residues of the glycoprotein knobs would be attractive
sites for nanoparticle interaction suggest that silver nanoparticles interact with the HIV-1 virus via preferential binding
to the gp120 glycoprotein knobs. Due to this interaction, silver nanoparticles inhibit the virus from binding to host cells,
as demonstrated in vitro. 相似文献
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Ma Luo Joanne Embree Suzie Ramdahin Thomas Bielawny Tyler Laycock Jeffrey Tuff Darren Haber Mariel Plummer Francis A. Plummer 《PloS one》2015,10(5)
HLA class II antigens are central in initiating antigen-specific CD4+ T cell responses to HIV-1. Specific alleles have been associated with differential responses to HIV-1 infection and disease among adults. This study aims to determine the influence of HLA class II genes and their interactive effect on mother-child perinatal transmission in a drug naïve, Mother-Child HIV transmission cohort established in Kenya, Africa in 1986. Our study showed that DRB concordance between mother and child increased risk of perinatal HIV transmission by three fold (P = 0.00035/Pc = 0.0014, OR: 3.09, 95%CI, 1.64-5.83). Whereas, DPA1, DPB1 and DQB1 concordance between mother and child had no significant influence on perinatal HIV transmission. In addition, stratified analysis showed that DRB1*15:03+ phenotype (mother or child) significantly increases the risk of perinatal HIV-1 transmission. Without DRB1*15:03, DRB1 discordance between mother and child provided 5 fold protection (P = 0.00008, OR: 0.186, 95%CI: 0.081-0.427). However, the protective effect of DRB discordance was diminished if either the mother or the child was DRB1*15:03+ phenotype (P = 0.49-0.98, OR: 0.7-0.99, 95%CI: 0.246-2.956). DRB3+ children were less likely to be infected perinatally (P = 0.0006, Pc = 0.014; OR:0.343, 95%CI:0.183-0.642). However, there is a 4 fold increase in risk of being infected at birth if DRB3+ children were born to DRB1*15:03+ mother compared to those with DRB1*15:03- mother. Our study showed that DRB concordance/discordance, DRB1*15:03, children’s DRB3 phenotype and their interactions play an important role in perinatal HIV transmission. Identification of genetic factors associated with protection or increased risk in perinatal transmission will help develop alternative prevention and treatment methods in the event of increases in drug resistance of ARV. 相似文献
15.
Background
Chronic renal failure (CRF) leads in the majority of instances to end stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring renal replacement therapy. Our interest was to evaluate the possible associations of HLA class I and class II antigens with ESRD independent of other factors, in Saudi Arabia population.Methodology
A retrospective study to determine the HLA class I and class II polymorphisms and their association with ESRD, was performed on 350 patients with ESRD, and 105 healthy unrelated control. Patients and control groups were typed by SSOP lumenix techniques. The alleles positively associated to the ESRD were: HLA-B*15, B*18, B*49 - DRB1*03, negatively associated alleles were A*26, HLA-B*39, B*50. The haplotypes positively associated with ESRD were: HLA-A*01-DRB1*13 and HLA-A*30-DRBI*03. The negatively associated haplotypes were: HLA-A*02-B*39, A*02-B*50, A*24-B*35, A*24-B*58, A*24-DRB1*16, A*68-DRB1*04, A*02-DQB1*03, A*29-DQB1*02, A*29-DOB1*05 and B*27-DRB1*07 and the last one is the most significant protective haplotypes.Conclusion
The high Relative Risk (RR) observed and its statistical correlation reflect the strength of the described association between HLA antigens and ESRD. 相似文献16.
Wolfgang St?hr Sarah Fidler Myra McClure Jonathan Weber David Cooper Gita Ramjee Pontiano Kaleebu Giuseppe Tambussi Mauro Schechter Abdel Babiker Rodney E. Phillips Kholoud Porter John Frater 《PloS one》2013,8(10)
Objective
A minority of HIV-1 positive individuals treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) in primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) maintain viral suppression on stopping. Whether this is related to ART duration has not been explored.Design
And Methods: Using SPARTAC trial data from individuals recruited within 6 months of seroconversion, we present an observational analysis investigating whether duration of ART was associated with post-treatment viraemic control. Kaplan-Meier estimates, logistic regression and Cox models were used.Results
165 participants reached plasma viral loads (VL) <400 copies/ml at the time of stopping therapy (ART stop). After ART stop, 159 experienced confirmed VL ≥400 copies/ml during median (IQR) follow-up of 167 (108,199) weeks.Most participants experienced VL rebound within 12 weeks from ART stop, however, there was a suggestion of a higher probability of remaining <400 copies/ml for those on ART >12 weeks compared to ≤12 weeks (p=0.061). Cumulative probabilities of remaining <400 copies/ml at 12, 52 and 104 weeks after ART stop were 21% (95%CI=13,30), 4% (1,9), and 4% (1,9) for ≤12 weeks ART, and 32% (22,42), 14% (7,22), and 5% (2,11) for >12 weeks.In multivariable regression, ART for >12 weeks was independently associated with a lower probability of being ≥400 copies/ml within 12 weeks of ART stop (OR=0.11 (95%CI=0.03,0.34), p<0.001)). In Cox models of time to VL ≥400 after 12 weeks, we only found an association with female sex (OR=0.2, p=0.001).Conclusion
Longer ART duration in PHI was associated with a higher probability of viral control after ART stop.Trial Registration
Controlled-Trials.com 76742797 http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN76742797. 相似文献17.
18.
《American journal of human genetics》2015,96(1):136-146
Type 1 narcolepsy, a disorder caused by a lack of hypocretin (orexin), is so strongly associated with human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II HLA-DQA1∗01:02-DQB1∗06:02 (DQ0602) that very few non-DQ0602 cases have been reported. A known triggering factor for narcolepsy is pandemic 2009 influenza H1N1, suggesting autoimmunity triggered by upper-airway infections. Additional effects of other HLA-DQ alleles have been reported consistently across multiple ethnic groups. Using over 3,000 case and 10,000 control individuals of European and Chinese background, we examined the effects of other HLA loci. After careful matching of HLA-DR and HLA-DQ in case and control individuals, we found strong protective effects of HLA-DPA1∗01:03-DPB1∗04:02 (DP0402; odds ratio [OR] = 0.51 [0.38–0.67], p = 1.01 × 10−6) and HLA-DPA1∗01:03-DPB1∗04:01 (DP0401; OR = 0.61 [0.47–0.80], p = 2.07 × 10−4) and predisposing effects of HLA-DPB1∗05:01 in Asians (OR = 1.76 [1.34–2.31], p = 4.71 × 10−05). Similar effects were found by conditional analysis controlling for HLA-DR and HLA-DQ with DP0402 (OR = 0.45 [0.38–0.55] p = 8.99 × 10−17) and DP0501 (OR = 1.38 [1.18–1.61], p = 7.11 × 10−5). HLA-class-II-independent associations with HLA-A∗11:01 (OR = 1.32 [1.13–1.54], p = 4.92 × 10−4), HLA-B∗35:03 (OR = 1.96 [1.41–2.70], p = 5.14 × 10−5), and HLA-B∗51:01 (OR = 1.49 [1.25–1.78], p = 1.09 × 10−5) were also seen across ethnic groups in the HLA class I region. These effects might reflect modulation of autoimmunity or indirect effects of HLA class I and HLA-DP alleles on response to viral infections such as that of influenza. 相似文献
19.
Yanhou Liu Zhongfang Zhao Tianyi Li Qi Liao Nicholas Kushner Neal Y. Touzjian Yiming Shao Yongtao Sun Amie J. Strong Yichen Lu 《PloS one》2012,7(12)