首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
Despite many efforts to develop AIDS vaccines eliciting virus-specific T-cell responses, whether induction of these memory T cells by vaccination before human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) exposure can actually contribute to effective T-cell responses postinfection remains unclear. In particular, induction of HIV-specific memory CD4+ T cells may increase the target cell pool for HIV infection because the virus preferentially infects HIV-specific CD4+ T cells. However, virus-specific CD4+ helper T-cell responses are thought to be important for functional CD8+ cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte (CTL) induction in HIV infection, and it has remained unknown whether HIV-specific memory CD8+ T cells induced by vaccination without HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell help can exert effective responses after virus exposure. Here we show the impact of CD8+ T-cell memory induction without virus-specific CD4+ T-cell help on the control of a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) challenge in rhesus macaques. We developed a prophylactic vaccine by using a Sendai virus (SeV) vector expressing a single SIV Gag241-249 CTL epitope fused with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). Vaccination resulted in induction of SeV-EGFP-specific CD4+ T-cell and Gag241-249-specific CD8+ T-cell responses. After a SIV challenge, the vaccinees showed dominant Gag241-249-specific CD8+ T-cell responses with higher effector memory frequencies in the acute phase and exhibited significantly reduced viral loads. These results demonstrate that virus-specific memory CD8+ T cells induced by vaccination without virus-specific CD4+ T-cell help could indeed facilitate SIV control after virus exposure, indicating the benefit of prophylactic vaccination eliciting virus-specific CTL memory with non-virus-specific CD4+ T-cell responses for HIV control.Virus-specific T-cell responses are crucial for controlling human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) replication (3, 4, 12, 20, 28, 36, 37). Therefore, a great deal of effort has been exerted to develop AIDS vaccines eliciting virus-specific T-cell responses (23, 27, 30, 47), but whether this approach actually results in HIV control remains unclear (1, 6). It is important to determine which T-cell responses need to be induced by prophylactic vaccination for HIV control after virus exposure.Because HIV preferentially infects HIV-specific CD4+ T cells (5), induction of HIV-specific memory CD4+ T cells by vaccination may increase the target cell pool for HIV infection and could enhance viral replication (42). However, CD4+ helper T-cell responses are important for functional CD8+ cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte (CTL) induction (11, 40, 43, 46), and it has remained unknown whether HIV-specific memory CD8+ T cells induced by vaccination with non-virus-specific CD4+ T-cell help (but without HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell help) can exert effective responses after virus exposure. Indeed, the real impact of prophylactic induction of CTL memory itself on HIV replication has not been well documented thus far.We previously developed a prophylactic AIDS vaccine consisting of DNA priming followed by boosting with a recombinant Sendai virus (SeV) vector expressing SIVmac239 Gag (26). Evaluation of this vaccine''s efficacy against a SIVmac239 challenge in Burmese rhesus macaques showed that some vaccinees contained SIV replication whereas unvaccinated animals developed AIDS (15, 27). In particular, vaccination consistently resulted in control of SIV replication in those animals possessing the major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) haplotype 90-120-Ia. Gag206-216 (IINEEAADWDL) and Gag241-249 (SSVDEQIQW) epitope-specific CD8+ T-cell responses were shown to be involved in SIV control in these vaccinated macaques (14, 16).In the present study, focusing on CD8+ T-cell responses directed against one of these epitopes, we have evaluated the efficacy of a vaccine expressing the Gag241-249 epitope fused with enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) against a SIVmac239 challenge in 90-120-Ia-positive rhesus macaques. The animals exhibited this single-epitope-specific CD8+ T-cell response and SeV-EGFP-specific CD4+ T-cell responses after vaccination and showed rapid, dominant induction of potent secondary Gag241-249-specific CD8+ T-cell responses after a SIV challenge. Plasma viral loads in these vaccinees were significantly reduced compared to those of naive controls. These results indicate that induction of CD8+ T-cell memory without virus-specific CD4+ T-cell help by prophylactic vaccination can result in effective CD8+ T-cell responses after virus exposure.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Cytotoxicity and proliferation capacity are key functions of antiviral CD8 T cells. In the present study, we investigated a series of markers to define these functions in virus-specific CD8 T cells. We provide evidence that there is a lack of coexpression of perforin and CD127 in human CD8 T cells. CD127 expression on virus-specific CD8 T cells correlated positively with proliferation capacity and negatively with perforin expression and cytotoxicity. Influenza virus-, cytomegalovirus-, and Epstein-Barr virus/human immunodeficiency virus type 1-specific CD8 T cells were predominantly composed of CD127+ perforin/CD127 perforin+, and CD127/perforin CD8 T cells, respectively. CD127/perforin and CD127/perforin+ cells expressed significantly more PD-1 and CD57, respectively. Consistently, intracellular cytokine (gamma interferon, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and interleukin-2 [IL-2]) responses combined to perforin detection confirmed that virus-specific CD8 T cells were mostly composed of either perforin+/IL-2 or perforin/IL-2+ cells. In addition, perforin expression and IL-2 secretion were negatively correlated in virus-specific CD8 T cells (P < 0.01). As previously shown for perforin, changes in antigen exposure modulated also CD127 expression. Based on the above results, proliferating (CD127+/IL-2-secreting) and cytotoxic (perforin+) CD8 T cells were contained within phenotypically distinct T-cell populations at different stages of activation or differentiation and showed different levels of exhaustion and senescence. Furthermore, the composition of proliferating and cytotoxic CD8 T cells for a given antiviral CD8 T-cell population appeared to be influenced by antigen exposure. These results advance our understanding of the relationship between cytotoxicity, proliferation capacity, the levels of senescence and exhaustion, and antigen exposure of antiviral memory CD8 T cells.Cytotoxic CD8 T cells are a fundamental component of the immune response against viral infections and mediate an important role in immunosurveillance (7, 10, 55), and the induction of vigorous CD8 T-cell responses after vaccination is thought to be a key component of protective immunity (37, 41, 49, 50, 58, 60, 69). Cytotoxic CD8 T cells exert their antiviral and antitumor activity primarily through the secretion of cytotoxic granules containing perforin (pore-forming protein) and several granule-associated proteases, including granzymes (Grms) (5, 15, 20, 44). Several studies have recently advanced the characterization of the mechanism of granule-dependent cytotoxic activity and performed a comprehensive investigation of the content of cytotoxic granules in human virus-specific CD8 T cells (2, 19, 29, 44, 53).Heterogeneous profiles of cytotoxic granules have been identified in different virus-specific memory CD8 T cells and associated with distinct differentiation stages of memory CD8 T cells (2, 19, 29, 44). Furthermore, we have observed a hierarchy among the cytotoxic granules in setting the efficiency of cytotoxic activity and demonstrated that perforin (and to a lesser extent GrmB) but not GrmA or GrmK were associated with cytotoxic activity (29). Recently, a novel mechanism of perforin-dependent granule-independent CTL cytotoxicity has also been demonstrated (45).Major advances in the characterization of antigen (Ag)-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells have been made recently and have aimed at identifying functional profiles that may correlate with protective CD8 T-cell responses (1, 3, 4, 12, 13, 24, 28, 36-38, 40, 41, 49, 50, 56-58, 60, 64, 68). In particular, the functional characterization of antigen-specific T cells was mainly performed on the basis of (i) the pattern of cytokines secreted (i.e., gamma interferon [IFN-γ], tumor necrosis factor alpha [TNF-α], interleukin-2 [IL-2], or macrophage inflammatory protein 1β [MIP-1β]), (ii) the proliferation capacity, and (iii) the cytotoxic capacity (13, 28, 59). Of note, degranulation activity (i.e., CD107a mobilization following specific stimulation) has been used as a surrogate marker of cytotoxic activity (11, 13).The term “polyfunctional” has been used to define T-cell immune responses that, in addition to typical effector functions such as secretion of IFN-γ, TNF-α, or MIP-1β and cytotoxic activity (measured by the degranulation capacity), comprise distinct T-cell populations able to secrete IL-2 and retain proliferation capacity (13, 28, 49, 50). Some evidence indicates that a hallmark of protective immune responses is the presence of polyfunctional T-cell responses (59). Furthermore, the ability to secrete IL-2 was shown to be linked to proliferation capacity, and both factors have been associated with protective antiviral immunity (13, 28, 49, 50). Although a lack of correlation between degranulation activity and GrmB expression was reported in mice (65), the relationship between degranulation activity and perforin expression has never been comprehensively investigated in mice and in humans.The private α chain of the IL-7 receptor (IL-7Rα, also called CD127) has been suggested to selectively identify CD8 T cells that will become long-lived memory cells (6, 34, 36). Moreover, it was shown in mice (34, 36) and humans (14, 48, 63) that the CD127high memory-precursor CD8 T cells produced IL-2 in contrast to CD127low effector CD8 T cells. Of interest, CD127 expression has also been shown to correlate with Ag-specific proliferation capacity in mice (34, 36). A similar correlation was observed in humans, although only for polyclonal stimulations (48). With the exception of studies performed in HIV-1 infection, where an association between CD127 expression and HIV-1 viremia has been shown (21, 22, 42, 48, 54), very limited information is available on the CD127 expression in human virus-specific CD8 T cells other that HIV-1.Although cytotoxic activity and proliferation capacity are key components of the antiviral cellular immune response, the relationship between these functions has been only investigated in nonprogressive HIV-1 infection (46), where these two functions were shown to be related. However, it still remains to be determined whether these functions are mediated by the same or by different T-cell populations.In the present study, we performed a comprehensive characterization of virus-specific CD8 T-cell responses against HIV-1, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein Barr virus (EBV), and influenza virus (Flu) in order to (i) analyze the degree of concordance between degranulation activity and perforin/Grm expression; (ii) identify the relevance of CD127 in identifying virus-specific CD8 T cells endowed with proliferation capacity; (iii) delineate the relationship between proliferation capacity, cytotoxic activity, activation/differentiation stage, and level of exhaustion of CD8 T cells; and (iv) determine the influence of antigen exposure in shaping the functional composition of virus-specific CD8 T cells.Our data indicate that cytotoxic (as defined by perforin expression) and proliferating (as defined by CD127 expression or IL-2 secretion) virus-specific CD8 T cells are contained within distinct CD8 T-cell populations. Furthermore, the proportion of proliferating and cytotoxic T cells within a given virus-specific CD8 T-cell population appears to be influenced by antigen exposure. These results advance our understanding of the relationship between cytotoxicity, proliferative capacity, differentiation stage, and Ag exposure of memory CD8 T cells.  相似文献   

5.
Identifying the functions of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific CD8+ T cells that are not merely modulated by the level of virus but clearly distinguish patients with immune control from those without such control is of paramount importance. Features of the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell response in antiretroviral-treated patients (designated Rx <50) and untreated patients (long-term nonprogressors [LTNP]) matched for very low HIV RNA levels were comprehensively examined. The proliferative capacity of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells was not restored in Rx <50 to the level observed in LTNP, even though HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell proliferation in the two patient groups was comparable. This diminished HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell proliferation in Rx <50 was primarily due to a smaller fraction of antigen-specific cells recruited to divide and not to the numbers of divisions that proliferating cells had undergone. Exogenous interleukin-2 (IL-2) induced proliferating cells to divide further but did not rescue the majority of antigen-specific cells with defective proliferation. In addition, differences in HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell proliferation could not be attributed to differences in cellular subsets bearing a memory phenotype, IL-2 production, or PD-1 expression. Although polyfunctionality of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells in Rx <50 was not restored to the levels observed in LTNP despite prolonged suppression of HIV RNA levels, per-cell cytotoxic capacity was the functional feature that most clearly distinguished the cells of LTNP from those of Rx <50. Taken together, these data suggest that there are selective qualitative abnormalities within the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell compartment that persist under conditions of low levels of antigen.Understanding the features of an effective immune response to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is among the most important goals for the design of HIV vaccines and immunotherapies. Most HIV-infected patients develop persistent viremia and CD4+ T-cell decline in the absence of antiviral therapy. However, evidence that immunologic control of HIV is possible can be drawn from a small group of rare patients who maintain normal CD4+ T-cell counts and restrict HIV replication to below 50 copies/ml plasma for up to 25 years without antiretroviral therapy (ART) (4, 22, 31, 40). Historically, these unique individuals were included within heterogeneous cohorts referred to as long-term survivors or long-term nonprogressors (LTNP), categorized solely based on their disease-free survival exceeding 7 to 10 years and their stable CD4+ T-cell counts (21). Over time, it became apparent that only a small subset of individuals within these cohorts had truly nonprogressive infection, maintaining good health with nondeclining CD4+ T-cell counts, and these true nonprogressors tended to have HIV type 1 (HIV-1) RNA levels below the lower detection limits of the newly available assays (23, 31). Some investigators have adopted other designations more recently, including elite controllers, elite suppressors, or HIV controllers. These designations vary by institution and, in some cases, rely only upon viral load measurements without a requirement for stable CD4+ T-cell counts (4, 22, 40). However, for our designation of true LTNP, we employ the inclusion criteria of stable health, nondeclining CD4+ T-cell counts, and maintenance of plasma viral RNA levels below 50 copies/ml without ART (29-31).Several lines of evidence strongly suggest that CD8+ T cells mediate this control of HIV in LTNP. HLA B*5701 is highly overrepresented in these patients, and in B*5701+ patients, the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell response is largely focused on peptides restricted by the B57 protein (15, 31). In addition, similar control of simian immunodeficiency virus replication has been described in rhesus macaques carrying the Mamu B*08 or B*17 allele (25, 49). In these macaques, CD8+ T-cell depletion studies have strongly suggested that control of viral replication is mediated by CD8+ T cells (14). Although these results support the idea that CD8+ T cells are responsible for immunologic control, the mechanism remains incompletely understood.Several lines of evidence suggest that immunologic control in LTNP is not simply due to differences in autologous virus recognition by CD8+ T cells. The frequencies of CD8+ T cells specific for HIV or individual HIV-encoded gene products in the peripheral blood are not different in LTNP and untreated progressors (reviewed in reference 32). Putative “escape” mutations are found in viruses of both HLAB*57+ LTNP and HLA-matched progressors (4, 6, 28, 33, 34). In addition, comparable frequencies of CD8+ T cells of LTNP and progressors recognize autologous CD4+ T cells infected with the autologous virus (12, 28). Similar observations have recently been made in the rhesus macaque model (26). Collectively, these observations strongly suggest that features of the CD8+ T-cell response associated with immunologic control are not due to quantitative differences in the numbers of HIV-specific cells or to differential abilities of the autologous virus gene products to be recognized between patient groups.Several qualitative features in the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell response have been associated with immunologic control in LTNP. LTNP have been found to have higher frequencies of “polyfunctional” CD8+ T cells, named for their ability to degranulate and produce multiple cytokines, including interleukin-2 (IL-2) (2, 5, 51). However, these cells comprise an extremely small proportion of the HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell response. In addition, there is considerable overlap between patient groups, and many LTNP have few or no such cells. Compared to those of progressors, HIV-specific CD8+ T cells of LTNP have a dramatically higher proliferative capacity, a greater ability to upregulate granzyme B (GrB) and perforin production, and a greater cytolytic capacity against autologous HIV-infected CD4+ T cells (3, 17, 24, 29, 30). Increased HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell proliferative capacity in LTNP compared to progressors has also been associated with lower PD-1 expression or IL-2 production by HIV-specific CD4+ or CD8+ T cells (11, 24, 48, 51).Considerable controversy exists over the cause-and-effect relationships between these qualitative differences in the CD8+ T-cell response and HIV viremia between patient groups. High levels of antigen can have potent effects on diverse cell types in humans and in animal models. For HIV, lowering the level of viremia through ART has been observed to increase the function of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, NK cells, monocytes, and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (16, 18, 20, 37, 41, 45-47, 50). However, the vast majority of treated progressors will not control HIV replication when ART is interrupted (7, 9, 35), suggesting that many of the qualitative differences in the CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell response between LTNP and untreated progressors are not the cause of control over HIV but rather are likely an effect of viremia. In some but not all studies, ART was sufficient to restore the proliferative capacity, phenotype, and cytokine production by CD4+ T cells to levels similar to responses to other viruses or to the HIV-specific response of LTNP (13, 16, 18, 20, 37, 46, 50). Because better IL-2 production or function of HIV-specific CD4+ T cells has been associated with increased CD8+ T-cell proliferative capacity (24), it has also been suggested that diminished proliferative capacity of progressor CD8+ T cells may be an effect of viremia during the chronic phase of infection. In some studies, ART is sufficient to increase the frequency of polyfunctional HIV-specific CD8+ T cells or to decrease PD-1 expression (30, 41). However, the interpretations of the observations within these studies have relied on extrapolations between studies based upon cohorts with differing levels and durations of viral suppression or on examination of a limited number of functions or subsets in either CD4+ or CD8+ T cells.In the present study, we extended our earlier work and comprehensively examined a broad array of functions of HIV-specific T cells derived from two large patient groups, LTNP and progressors on ART, who possess comparable levels of HIV viremia as determined by a sensitive single-copy assay. In response to autologous HIV-infected CD4+ T cells, HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell proliferative capacity, IL-2 responsiveness, surface phenotype, PD-1 expression, polyfunctionality, and cytotoxic capacity were measured in considerable detail. We observe that although ART results in restoration of many of these functions, HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell polyfunctionality and proliferative and killing capacities are not restored to levels observed in LTNP.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The immune correlates of human/simian immunodeficiency virus control remain elusive. While CD8+ T lymphocytes likely play a major role in reducing peak viremia and maintaining viral control in the chronic phase, the relative antiviral efficacy of individual virus-specific effector populations is unknown. Conventional assays measure cytokine secretion of virus-specific CD8+ T cells after cognate peptide recognition. Cytokine secretion, however, does not always directly translate into antiviral efficacy. Recently developed suppression assays assess the efficiency of virus-specific CD8+ T cells to control viral replication, but these assays often use cell lines or clones. We therefore designed a novel virus production assay to test the ability of freshly ex vivo-sorted simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-specific CD8+ T cells to suppress viral replication from SIVmac239-infected CD4+ T cells. Using this assay, we established an antiviral hierarchy when we compared CD8+ T cells specific for 12 different epitopes. Antiviral efficacy was unrelated to the disease status of each animal, the protein from which the tested epitopes were derived, or the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I restriction of the tested epitopes. Additionally, there was no correlation with the ability to suppress viral replication and epitope avidity, epitope affinity, CD8+ T-cell cytokine multifunctionality, the percentage of central and effector memory cell populations, or the expression of PD-1. The ability of virus-specific CD8+ T cells to suppress viral replication therefore cannot be determined using conventional assays. Our results suggest that a single definitive correlate of immune control may not exist; rather, a successful CD8+ T-cell response may be comprised of several factors.CD8+ T cells may play a critical role in blunting peak viremia and controlling human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) replication. The transient depletion of CD8+ cells in SIV-infected macaques results in increased viral replication (26, 31, 51, 70). The emergence of virus-specific CD8+ T cells coincides with the reduction of peak viremia (12, 39, 42, 63), and CD8+ T-cell pressure selects for escape mutants (6, 9, 13, 28, 29, 38, 60, 61, 85). Furthermore, particular major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I alleles are overrepresented in SIV- and HIV-infected elite controllers (15, 29, 33, 34, 46, 56, 88).Because it has been difficult to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (Abs), the AIDS vaccine field is currently focused on developing a vaccine designed to elicit HIV-specific CD8+ T cells (8, 52, 53, 82). Investigators have tried to define the immune correlates of HIV control. Neither the magnitude nor the breadth of epitopes recognized by virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses correlates with the control of viral replication (1). The quality of the immune response may, however, contribute to the antiviral efficacy of the effector cells. It has been suggested that the number of cytokines that virus-specific CD8+ T cells secrete may correlate with viral control, since HIV-infected nonprogressors appear to maintain CD8+ T cells that secrete several cytokines, compared to HIV-infected progressors (11, 27). An increased amount of perforin secretion may also be related to the proliferation of HIV-specific CD8+ T cells in HIV-infected nonprogressors (55). While those studies offer insight into the different immune systems of progressors and nonprogressors, they did not address the mechanism of viral control. Previously, we found no association between the ability of SIV-specific CD8+ T-cell clones to suppress viral replication in vitro and their ability to secrete gamma interferon (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), or interleukin-2 (IL-2) (18).Evidence suggests that some HIV/SIV proteins may be better vaccine targets than others. CD8+ T cells recognize epitopes derived from Gag as early as 2 h postinfection, whereas CD8+ T cells specific for epitopes in Env recognize infected cells only at 18 h postinfection (68). Additionally, a previously reported study of HIV-infected individuals showed that an increased breadth of Gag-specific responses was associated with lower viral loads (35, 59, 65, 66). CD8+ T-cell responses specific for Env, Rev, Tat, Vif, Vpr, Vpu, and Nef were associated with higher viral loads, with increased breadth of Env in particular being significantly associated with a higher chronic-phase viral set point.None of the many sophisticated methods employed for analyzing the characteristics of HIV- or SIV-specific immune responses clearly demarcate the critical qualities of an effective antiviral response. In an attempt to address these questions, we developed a new assay to measure the antiviral efficacy of individual SIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses sorted directly from fresh peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Using MHC class I tetramers specific for the epitope of interest, we sorted freshly isolated virus-specific CD8+ T cells and determined their ability to suppress virus production from SIV-infected CD4+ T cells. We then looked for a common characteristic of efficacious epitope-specific CD8+ T cells using traditional methods.  相似文献   

8.
We previously reported that CD4C/human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Nef transgenic (Tg) mice, expressing Nef in CD4+ T cells and cells of the macrophage/dendritic cell (DC) lineage, develop a severe AIDS-like disease, characterized by depletion of CD4+ T cells, as well as lung, heart, and kidney diseases. In order to determine the contribution of distinct populations of hematopoietic cells to the development of this AIDS-like disease, five additional Tg strains expressing Nef through restricted cell-specific regulatory elements were generated. These Tg strains express Nef in CD4+ T cells, DCs, and macrophages (CD4E/HIVNef); in CD4+ T cells and DCs (mCD4/HIVNef and CD4F/HIVNef); in macrophages and DCs (CD68/HIVNef); or mainly in DCs (CD11c/HIVNef). None of these Tg strains developed significant lung and kidney diseases, suggesting the existence of as-yet-unidentified Nef-expressing cell subset(s) that are responsible for inducing organ disease in CD4C/HIVNef Tg mice. Mice from all five strains developed persistent oral carriage of Candida albicans, suggesting an impaired immune function. Only strains expressing Nef in CD4+ T cells showed CD4+ T-cell depletion, activation, and apoptosis. These results demonstrate that expression of Nef in CD4+ T cells is the primary determinant of their depletion. Therefore, the pattern of Nef expression in specific cell population(s) largely determines the nature of the resulting pathological changes.The major cell targets and reservoirs for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)/simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in vivo are CD4+ T lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells (macrophages and dendritic cells [DC]) (21, 24, 51). The cell specificity of these viruses is largely dependent on the expression of CD4 and of its coreceptors, CCR5 and CXCR-4, at the cell surface (29, 66). Infection of these immune cells leads to the severe disease, AIDS, showing widespread manifestations, including progressive immunodeficiency, immune activation, CD4+ T-cell depletion, wasting, dementia, nephropathy, heart and lung diseases, and susceptibility to opportunistic pathogens, such as Candida albicans (1, 27, 31, 37, 41, 82, 93, 109). It is reasonable to assume that the various pathological changes in AIDS result from the expression of one or many HIV-1/SIV proteins in these immune target cells. However, assigning the contribution of each infected cell subset to each phenotype has been remarkably difficult, despite evidence that AIDS T-cell phenotypes can present very differently depending on the strains of infecting HIV-1 or SIV or on the cells targeted by the virus (4, 39, 49, 52, 72). For example, the T-cell-tropic X4 HIV strains have long been associated with late events and severe CD4+ T-cell depletion (22, 85, 96). However, there are a number of target cell subsets expressing CD4 and CXCR-4, and identifying which one is responsible for this enhanced virulence has not been achieved in vivo. Similarly, the replication of SIV in specific regions of the thymus (cortical versus medullary areas), has been associated with very different outcomes but, unfortunately, the critical target cells of the viruses were not identified either in these studies (60, 80). The task is even more complex, because HIV-1 or SIV can infect several cell subsets within a single cell population. In the thymus, double (CD4 CD8)-negative (DN) or triple (CD3 CD4 CD8)-negative (TN) T cells, as well as double-positive (CD4+ CD8+) (DP) T cells, are infectible by HIV-1 in vitro (9, 28, 74, 84, 98, 99, 110) and in SCID-hu mice (2, 5, 91, 94). In peripheral organs, gut memory CCR5+ CD4+ T cells are primarily infected with R5 SIV, SHIV, or HIV, while circulating CD4+ T cells can be infected by X4 viruses (13, 42, 49, 69, 70, 100, 101, 104). Moreover, some detrimental effects on CD4+ T cells have been postulated to originate from HIV-1/SIV gene expression in bystander cells, such as macrophages or DC, suggesting that other infected target cells may contribute to the loss of CD4+ T cells (6, 7, 32, 36, 64, 90).Similarly, the infected cell population(s) required and sufficient to induce the organ diseases associated with HIV-1/SIV expression (brain, heart, and kidney) have not yet all been identified. For lung or kidney disease, HIV-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (1, 75) or infected podocytes (50, 95), respectively, have been implicated. Activated macrophages have been postulated to play an important role in heart disease (108) and in AIDS dementia (35), although other target cells could be infected by macrophage-tropic viruses and may contribute significantly to the decrease of central nervous system functions (11, 86, 97), as previously pointed out (25).Therefore, because of the widespread nature of HIV-1 infection and the difficulty in extrapolating tropism of HIV-1/SIV in vitro to their cell targeting in vivo (8, 10, 71), alternative approaches are needed to establish the contribution of individual infected cell populations to the multiorgan phenotypes observed in AIDS. To this end, we developed a transgenic (Tg) mouse model of AIDS using a nonreplicating HIV-1 genome expressed through the regulatory sequences of the human CD4 gene (CD4C), in the same murine cells as those targeted by HIV-1 in humans, namely, in immature and mature CD4+ T cells, as well as in cells of the macrophage/DC lineages (47, 48, 77; unpublished data). These CD4C/HIV Tg mice develop a multitude of pathologies closely mimicking those of AIDS patients. These include a gradual destruction of the immune system, characterized among other things by thymic and lymphoid organ atrophy, depletion of mature and immature CD4+ T lymphocytes, activation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, susceptibility to mucosal candidiasis, HIV-associated nephropathy, and pulmonary and cardiac complications (26, 43, 44, 57, 76, 77, 79, 106). We demonstrated that Nef is the major determinant of the HIV-1 pathogenicity in CD4C/HIV Tg mice (44). The similarities of the AIDS-like phenotypes of these Tg mice to those in human AIDS strongly suggest that such a Tg mouse approach can be used to investigate the contribution of distinct HIV-1-expressing cell populations to their development.In the present study, we constructed and characterized five additional mouse Tg strains expressing Nef, through distinct regulatory elements, in cell populations more restricted than in CD4C/HIV Tg mice. The aim of this effort was to assess whether, and to what extent, the targeting of Nef in distinct immune cell populations affects disease development and progression.  相似文献   

9.
Rapid depletion of memory CD4+ T cells and delayed induction of neutralizing antibody (NAb) responses are characteristics of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections. Although it was speculated that postinfection NAb induction could have only a limited suppressive effect on primary HIV replication, a recent study has shown that a single passive NAb immunization of rhesus macaques 1 week after SIV challenge can result in reduction of viral loads at the set point, indicating a possible contribution of postinfection NAb responses to virus control. However, the mechanism accounting for this NAb-triggered SIV control has remained unclear. Here, we report rapid induction of virus-specific polyfunctional T-cell responses after the passive NAb immunization postinfection. Analysis of SIV Gag-specific responses of gamma interferon, tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-2, macrophage inflammatory protein 1β, and CD107a revealed that the polyfunctionality of Gag-specific CD4+ T cells, as defined by the multiplicity of these responses, was markedly elevated in the acute phase in NAb-immunized animals. In the chronic phase, despite the absence of detectable NAbs, virus control was maintained, accompanied by polyfunctional Gag-specific T-cell responses. These results implicate virus-specific polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses in this NAb-triggered virus control, suggesting possible synergism between NAbs and T cells for control of HIV/SIV replication.Virus-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses are crucial for the control of pathogenic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infections (5, 6, 20, 23, 30, 39, 40). However, CD4+ T cells, especially CCR5+ memory CD4+ T cells, are themselves targets for these viruses, which may be an obstacle to potent virus-specific CD4+ T-cell induction (10, 47, 52). Indeed, HIV-1/SIV infection causes rapid, massive depletion of memory CD4+ T cells (26, 31), and host immune responses fail to contain viral replication and allow persistent chronic infection, although virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses exert suppressive pressure on viral replication (15).Recently, the importance of T-cell quality in virus containment has been high-lighted, and T-cell polyfunctionality, which is defined by their multiplicity of antigen-specific cytokine production, has been analyzed as an indicator of T-cell quality (4, 8, 11, 41). However, there has been no evidence indicating an association of polyfunctional T-cell responses in the acute phase with HIV-1/SIV control. Even in the chronic phase, whether polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses may be associated with virus control has been unclear, although an inverse correlation between polyfunctional CD8+ T-cell responses and viral loads has been shown in HIV-1-infected individuals (4).Another characteristic of HIV-1/SIV infections is the absence of potent neutralizing antibody (NAb) induction during the acute phase (7). This is mainly due to the unusually neutralization-resistant nature of the virus, such as masking of target epitopes in viral envelope proteins (24). Whether this lack of effective NAb response contributes to the failure to control the virus, and whether NAb induction in the acute phase can contribute to virus control, remains unclear. Previous studies documenting virus escape from NAb recognition suggested that NAbs can also exert selective pressure on viral replication to a certain extent (38, 45, 49), but it was speculated that postinfection NAb induction could have only a limited suppressive effect on primary HIV-1/SIV replication (34, 37).By passive NAb immunization of rhesus macaques after SIV challenge, we recently provided evidence indicating that the presence of NAbs during the acute phase can result in SIV control (50). In that study, passive NAb immunization 1 week after SIVmac239 challenge resulted in transient detectable NAb responses followed by reduction in set point viral loads compared to unimmunized macaques. However, the mechanism of this virus control has remained unclear. In the present study, we found rapid appearance of polyfunctional Gag-specific CD4+ T-cell responses after such passive NAb immunization postinfection. These animals maintained virus control for more than 1 year in the absence of detectable plasma NAbs, which was accompanied by potent Gag-specific T-cell responses. These results implicate virus-specific polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses in this NAb-triggered primary and long-term SIV control.  相似文献   

10.
Hepatits B virus (HBV)-specific T cells play a key role both in the control of HBV replication and in the pathogenesis of liver disease. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) coinfection and the presence or absence of HBV e (precore) antigen (HBeAg) significantly alter the natural history of chronic HBV infection. We examined the HBV-specific T-cell responses in treatment-naïve HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative HIV-1-HBV-coinfected (n = 24) and HBV-monoinfected (n = 39) Asian patients. Peripheral blood was stimulated with an overlapping peptide library for the whole HBV genome, and tumor necrosis factor alpha and gamma interferon cytokine expression in CD8+ T cells was measured by intracellular cytokine staining and flow cytometry. There was no difference in the overall magnitude of the HBV-specific T-cell responses, but the quality of the response was significantly impaired in HIV-1-HBV-coinfected patients compared with monoinfected patients. In coinfected patients, HBV-specific T cells rarely produced more than one cytokine and responded to fewer HBV proteins than in monoinfected patients. Overall, the frequency and quality of the HBV-specific T-cell responses increased with a higher CD4+ T-cell count (P = 0.018 and 0.032, respectively). There was no relationship between circulating HBV-specific T cells and liver damage as measured by activity and fibrosis scores, and the HBV-specific T-cell responses were not significantly different in patients with either HBeAg-positive or HBeAg-negative disease. The quality of the HBV-specific T-cell response is impaired in the setting of HIV-1-HBV coinfection and is related to the CD4+ T-cell count.There are 40 million people worldwide infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), and 6 to 15% of HIV-1-infected patients are also chronically infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV) (13, 20, 35, 38, 40-42, 47, 50, 61, 69). The highest rates of coinfection with HIV-1 and HBV are in Asia and Africa, where HBV is endemic (33, 68). Following the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), liver disease is now the major cause of non-AIDS-related deaths in HIV-1-infected patients (12, 13, 38, 59, 65).Coinfection of HBV with HIV-1 alters the natural history of HBV infection. Individuals with HIV-1-HBV coinfection seroconvert from HBV e (precore) antigen (HBeAg) to HBV e antibody less frequently and have higher HBV DNA levels but lower levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and milder necroinflammatory activity on histology than those infected with HBV alone (18, 26, 49). Progression to cirrhosis, however, seems to be more rapid and more common, and liver-related mortality is higher, in HIV-1-HBV coinfection than with either infection alone (47, 59). HBeAg is an accessory protein of HBV and is not required for viral replication or infection; however, chronic HBV infection typically is divided into two distinct phases: HBeAg positive and HBeAg negative (reviewed in reference 15). Most natural history studies of HIV-1-HBV coinfection to date have primarily focused on HBeAg-positive patients from non-Asian countries (23, 44, 46).We previously developed an overlapping peptide library for the HBV genome to detect HBV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses to all HBV gene products from multiple HBV genotypes (17). In a small cross-sectional study of patients recruited in Australia, we found that in coinfected patients, HBV-specific CD4+ T-cell responses, as measured by gamma interferon (IFN-γ) production, were diminished compared to those seen in HBV-monoinfected patients (17). However, patients had varying lengths of exposure to anti-HBV-active HAART at the time of analysis. In this study, therefore, we aimed to characterize the HBV-specific T-cell response in untreated HBeAg-positive and HBeAg-negative HIV-1-HBV-coinfected patients and to determine the relationship between the HBV-specific immune response, HBeAg status, and liver disease.  相似文献   

11.
12.
A broad Gag-specific CD8+ T-cell response is associated with effective control of adult human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. The association of certain HLA class I molecules, such as HLA-B*57, -B*5801, and -B*8101, with immune control is linked to mutations within Gag epitopes presented by these alleles that allow HIV to evade the immune response but that also reduce viral replicative capacity. Transmission of such viruses containing mutations within Gag epitopes results in lower viral loads in adult recipients. In this study of pediatric infection, we tested the hypothesis that children may tend to progress relatively slowly if either they themselves possess one of the protective HLA-B alleles or the mother possesses one of these alleles, thereby transmitting a low-fitness virus to the child. We analyzed HLA type, CD8+ T-cell responses, and viral sequence changes for 61 mother-child pairs from Durban, South Africa, who were monitored from birth. Slow progression was significantly associated with the mother or child possessing one of the protective HLA-B alleles, and more significantly so when the protective allele was not shared by mother and child (P = 0.007). Slow progressors tended to make CD8+ T-cell responses to Gag epitopes presented by the protective HLA-B alleles, in contrast to progressors expressing the same alleles (P = 0.07; Fisher''s exact test). Mothers expressing the protective alleles were significantly more likely to transmit escape variants within the Gag epitopes presented by those alleles than mothers not expressing those alleles (75% versus 21%; P = 0.001). Reversion of transmitted escape mutations was observed in all slow-progressing children whose mothers possessed protective HLA-B alleles. These data show that HLA class I alleles influence disease progression in pediatric as well as adult infection, both as a result of the CD8+ T-cell responses generated in the child and through the transmission of low-fitness viruses by the mother.Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific CD8+ T cells play a central role in controlling viral replication (12). It is the specificity of the CD8+ T-cell response, particularly the response to Gag, that is associated with low viral loads in HIV infection (7, 17, 34). Although immune control is undermined by the selection of viral mutations that prevent recognition by the CD8+ T cells, evasion of Gag-specific responses mediated by protective class I HLA-B alleles typically brings a reduction in viral replicative capacity, facilitating subsequent immune control of HIV (2, 20, 21). The same principle has been demonstrated in studies of simian immunodeficiency virus infection (18, 22).Recent studies showed that the class I HLA-B alleles that protect against disease progression present more Gag-specific CD8+ T-cell epitopes and drive the selection of more Gag-specific escape mutations than those alleles that are associated with high viral loads (23). These protective HLA-B alleles not only are beneficial to infected individuals expressing those alleles but also benefit a recipient following transmission, since the transmitted virus carrying multiple Gag escape mutations may have substantially reduced fitness (3, 4, 8). However, there is no benefit to the recipient if he or she shares the same protective allele as the donor because the transmitted virus carries escape mutations in the Gag epitopes that would otherwise be expected to mediate successful immune control in the recipient (8, 11).The sharing of HLA alleles between donor and recipient occurs frequently in mother-to-child transmission (MTCT). The risk of MTCT is related to viral load in the mother, and a high viral load is associated with nonprotective alleles, such as HLA-B*18 and -B*5802. This may contribute in two distinct ways to the more rapid progression observed in pediatric HIV infection (24, 26, 27). First, because infected children share 50% or more of their HLA alleles with the transmitting mother, they are less likely than adults to carry protective HLA alleles (16). Thus, infected children as a group carry fewer protective HLA alleles and more nonprotective HLA alleles. Second, even when the child has a protective allele, such as HLA-B*27, this allele does not offer protection if the maternally transmitted virus carries escape mutations within the key Gag epitopes that are presented by the protective allele (11, 19).However, it is clear that infected children who possess protective alleles, such as HLA-B*27 or HLA-B*57, can achieve durable immune control of HIV infection if the virus transmitted from the mother is not preadapted to those alleles (6, 10). HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses are detectable from birth in infected infants (32). Furthermore, as in adult infection (3, 8), HIV-infected children have the potential to benefit from transmission of low-fitness viruses in the situation where the mother possesses protective HLA alleles and the child does not share those protective alleles. MTCT of low-fitness viruses carrying CD8+ T-cell escape mutations was recently documented (28; J. Prado et al., unpublished data).In this study, undertaken in Durban, South Africa, we set out to test the hypothesis that HIV-infected children are less likely to progress rapidly to disease if either the infected child or the transmitting mother possesses a protective HLA allele that is not shared. The HLA alleles most strongly associated with low viral loads and high CD4 counts in a cohort of >1,200 HIV-infected adults in Durban are HLA-B*57 (-B*5702 and -B*5703), HLA-B*5801, and HLA-B*8101 (16; A. Leslie et al., unpublished data). These four alleles all present Gag-specific CD8+ T-cell epitopes, and in each case the escape mutations selected in these epitopes reduce viral replicative capacity (2-4, 8, 21, 23).Analyzing a previously described cohort of 61 HIV-infected children in Durban (24, 26, 32), South Africa, who were all monitored from birth, we first addressed the question of whether possession of any of these four alleles by either mother or child is associated with slower disease progression in the child and then determined whether sharing of protective alleles by mother and child affects the ability of the child to make the Gag-specific CD8+ T-cell responses restricted by the shared allele.  相似文献   

13.
The control of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) associated with particular HLA class I alleles suggests that some CD8+ T-cell responses may be more effective than others at containing HIV-1. Unfortunately, substantial diversities in the breadth, magnitude, and function of these responses have impaired our ability to identify responses most critical to this control. It has been proposed that CD8 responses targeting conserved regions of the virus may be particularly effective, since the development of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) escape mutations in these regions may significantly impair viral replication. To address this hypothesis at the population level, we derived near-full-length viral genomes from 98 chronically infected individuals and identified a total of 76 HLA class I-associated mutations across the genome, reflective of CD8 responses capable of selecting for sequence evolution. The majority of HLA-associated mutations were found in p24 Gag, Pol, and Nef. Reversion of HLA-associated mutations in the absence of the selecting HLA allele was also commonly observed, suggesting an impact of most CTL escape mutations on viral replication. Although no correlations were observed between the number or location of HLA-associated mutations and protective HLA alleles, limiting the analysis to mutations selected by acute-phase immunodominant responses revealed a strong positive correlation between mutations at conserved residues and protective HLA alleles. These data suggest that control of HIV-1 may be associated with acute-phase CD8 responses capable of selecting for viral escape mutations in highly conserved regions of the virus, supporting the inclusion of these regions in the design of an effective vaccine.Despite substantial advances in antiretroviral therapies, development of an effective human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine remains a critical goal (6, 39, 82). Unfortunately, current vaccine efforts have failed to reduce infection rates in humans (9, 75) and have only achieved modest decreases in viral loads in the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)/SHIV macaque model (21, 44, 81). A majority of these vaccine approaches have focused on inducing T-cell responses, utilizing large regions of the virus in an attempt to induce a broad array of immune responses (6, 34, 44, 81). While it is well established that CD8+ T-cell responses play a critical role in the containment of HIV-1 (45, 49, 67), supported in part by the strong association of particular HLA class I alleles with control of HIV (20, 33, 42, 61), it remains unclear which particular CD8+ T-cell responses are best able to control the virus and thus should be preferentially targeted by a vaccine. Studies comparing the magnitude, breadth, and function of CD8+ T-cell responses in subjects exhibiting either enhanced or poor control of HIV-1 have yielded few clues as to the specific factors associated with an effective CD8+ T-cell response (2, 28, 64, 67). Various differences in the functional capacity of T-cell responses have been observed in long-term nonprogressors (1, 26, 64), although it is possible that these differences may be reflective of an intact immune response, as opposed to having had directly enhanced immune control. As such, efforts are needed to identify factors or phenotypes associated with protective CD8+ T-cell responses in order to enable vaccines to induce the most effective responses.Recent studies have begun to suggest that the specificity of the CD8+ T-cell response, or the targeting of specific regions of the virus, may be associated with control of HIV-1. Preferential targeting of Gag, a structurally conserved viral protein responsible for multiple functions, has been associated with lower viral loads (25, 43, 56, 60, 77, 85). Furthermore, Kiepiela et al. (43) recently illustrated in a large cohort of 578 clade C-infected subjects that Gag-specific responses were associated with lowered viremia, in contrast to Env-specific responses, which were associated with higher viremia. These data are in line with previous observations that many of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I alleles most strongly associated with control of HIV-1 and SIV, namely, HLA-B57, HLA-B27, and Mamu-A*01, restrict immunodominant CD8+ T-cell responses against the Gag protein (8, 10, 24, 63, 68, 83). However, other alleles associated with slower disease progression, such as HLA-B51 in humans and Mamu-B08 and B-17 in the rhesus macaque, do not immunodominantly target Gag, suggesting that targeting of some other regions of the virus may also be capable of eliciting control (8, 52-54). In addition, recent studies investigating the pattern of HIV-1-specific CD8+ T-cell responses during acute infection reveal that only a small subset of CD8+ T-cell responses restricted by any given HLA allele arise during acute infection and that there exist clear immunodominance patterns to these responses (8, 77, 85). Since control of HIV-1 is likely to be established or lost during the first few weeks of infection, these data suggest that potentially only a few key CD8+ T-cell responses may be needed to adequately establish early control of HIV-1.One of the major factors limiting the effectiveness of CD8+ T-cell responses is the propensity for HIV-1 to evade these responses through sequence evolution or viral escape (3, 13, 66). Even single point mutations within a targeted CD8 epitope can effectively abrogate recognition by either the HLA allele or the T-cell receptor. However, recent studies have begun to highlight that many sequence polymorphisms will revert to more common consensus residues upon transmission of HIV-1 to a new host, including many cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) escape mutations (4, 30, 33, 48, 50). Notably, the more rapidly reverting mutations have been observed to preferentially occur at conserved residues, indicating that structurally conserved regions of the virus may be particularly refractory to sequence changes (50). In support of these data, many CTL escape mutations have now been observed to directly impair viral replication (15, 23, 55, 74), in particular those known to either revert or require the presence of secondary compensatory mutations (15, 23, 73, 74). Taken together, these data suggest that, whereas CTL escape mutations provide a benefit to the virus to enable the evasion of host immune pressures, some of these mutations may come at a substantial cost to viral replication. These data may also imply that the association between Gag-specific responses and control of HIV-1 may be due to the targeting of highly conserved regions of the virus that are difficult to evade through sequence evolution.The propensity by which HIV-1 escapes CD8+ T-cell responses, and the reproducibility by which mutations arise at precise residues in targeted CD8 epitopes (3, 48), also enables the utilization of sequence data to predict which responses may be most capable of exerting immune selection pressure on the virus. Studies in HIV-1, SIV, and hepatitis C virus (16, 58, 65, 78) are now rapidly identifying immune-driven CTL escape mutations across these highly variable pathogens at the population level by correlating sequence polymorphisms in these viruses with the expression of particular HLA alleles. We provide here an analysis of HLA-associated mutations across the entire HIV-1 genome using a set of sequences derived from clade B chronically infected individuals. Through full-length viral genome coverage, these data provide an unbiased analysis of the location of these mutations and suggest that the control of HIV-1 by particular HLA alleles correlates with their ability to preferentially restrict early CD8+ T-cell responses capable of selecting for viral escape mutations at highly conserved residues of the virus. These data provide support for the inclusion of specific highly conserved regions of HIV-1 into vaccine antigens.  相似文献   

14.
We previously showed that agonistic antibodies to CD40 could substitute for CD4 T-cell help and prevent reactivation of murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) in the lungs of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II−/− (CII−/−) mice, which are CD4 T cell deficient. Although CD8 T cells were required for this effect, no change in their activity was detected in vitro. A key question was whether anti-CD40 treatment (or CD4 T-cell help) changed the function of CD8 T cells or another cell type in vivo. To address this question, in the present study, we showed that adoptive transfer of CD8 T cells from virus-infected wild-type mice or anti-CD40-treated CII−/− mice caused a significant reduction in lung viral titers, in contrast to those from control CII−/− mice. Anti-CD40 treatment also greatly prolonged survival of infected CII−/− mice. This confirms that costimulatory signals cause a change in CD8 T cells enabling them to maintain effective long-term control of MHV-68. We investigated the nature of this change and found that expression of the inhibitory receptor PD-1 was significantly increased on CD8 T cells in the lungs of MHV-68-infected CII−/−, CD40−/−, or CD80/86−/− mice, compared with that in wild-type or CD28/CTLA4−/− mice, correlating with the level of viral reactivation. Furthermore, blocking PD-1-PD-L1 interactions significantly reduced viral reactivation in CD4 T-cell-deficient mice. In contrast, the absence of another inhibitory receptor, NKG2A, had no effect. These data suggest that CD4 T-cell help programs a change in CD8 T-cell function mediated by altered PD-1 expression, which enables effective long-term control of MHV-68.Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) is a naturally occurring rodent pathogen which is closely related to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Kaposi''s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) (17, 64). Intranasal administration of MHV-68 to mice results in acute productive infection of lung epithelial cells and a latent infection in various cell types, including B lymphocytes, dendritic cells, epithelial cells, and macrophages (18, 19, 52, 53, 61, 65). The virus induces an inflammatory infiltrate in the lungs, lymph node enlargement, splenomegaly, and mononucleosis comprising increased numbers of activated CD8 T cells in the blood (53, 58). It has also been reported to induce lymphoproliferative disease/lymphoma in immunocompromised mice (30, 55, 60). Thus, the pathogenesis resembles that of EBV in humans, although structurally, the virus is more closely related to KSHV.Infectious MHV-68 is cleared from the lungs by a T-cell-dependent mechanism 10 to 15 days after infection (18, 53, 56). In wild-type mice, the lungs remain clear of replicating virus thereafter. Although CD4 T cells are not essential for primary clearance of replicating virus, they are required for effective long-term control (11). Thus, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II−/− mice that lack CD4 T cells or mice rendered CD4 deficient by antibody treatment initially clear infectious virus from the lungs. However, infectious virus reactivates in the lungs 10 to 15 days later and gradually increases in titer (11, 43). The infected CD4-deficient mice eventually die, apparently from long-term lung damage due to continuing lytic viral replication (11). MHC class II−/− mice do not produce antibody to T-dependent antigens (10). Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitopes have been identified in open reading frame (ORF) 6 (p56, H-2Db-restricted), and ORF 61 (p79, H-2Kb-restricted) gene products, which appear to encode early lytic-phase proteins (32, 49). The epitopes are presented during two distinct phases during MHV-68 infection, which changes the pattern of CTL dominance (32, 51). However, there is no significant difference in the numbers of CD8 T cells specific for each epitope in wild-type mice and CD4 T-cell-deficient mice (4, 50). In addition, CTL activity measured in vitro does not differ substantially in the lungs of wild-type mice or CD4 T-cell-deficient mice (4, 11, 50). Furthermore, postexposure vaccination with the p56 epitope failed to prevent viral reactivation in class II−/− mice, despite dramatically expanding the number of CD8 T cells specific for the peptide (5). In contrast, vaccination of wild-type mice against these epitopes reduced lytic viral titers in the lung dramatically on subsequent challenge with MHV-68. B-cell-deficient mice clear MHV-68 with the kinetics of wild-type mice and do not show viral reactivation in the lungs (13, 61), suggesting that antibody is not essential for control of the virus. Depletion of CD4 T cells during the latent phase of infection in B-cell-deficient mice does not induce viral reactivation, whereas depletion of both CD4 and CD8 T-cell subsets provokes viral reactivation in the lungs (52). Short-term depletion of both CD4 and CD8 T-cell subsets during the latent phase of infection in wild-type mice does not lead to viral reactivation probably due to the presence of neutralizing antibody (11). Taken together, these results suggest that CD4 and CD8 T cells and B cells play overlapping roles in preventing or controlling reactivation of MHV-68 during the latent phase of infection. However, the B-cell- and CD8 T-cell-mediated control mechanisms do not develop in the absence of CD4 T cells.We, and others, have previously shown that the costimulatory molecule CD28 is not required for long-term control of MHV-68 (28, 29). However, interestingly, mice lacking both of the ligands for CD28, CD80 and CD86, show viral reactivation in the lung (21, 35). Our previously published data showed that agonistic antibodies to CD40 could substitute for CD4 T-cell function in the long-term control of MHV-68 (46). CD8 T-cell receptor-positive (TCR+) cells were required for this effect, while antibody production was not restored (45, 46). MHV-68-infected CD40L−/− mice (7) and CD40−/− mice (29) also showed viral reactivation in the lungs. However, no change in CD8 CTL activity was detected in in vitro assays following anti-CD40 treatment (46). A key question was whether anti-CD40 treatment (or CD4 T-cell help) caused a direct change in CD8 T-cell function or whether both CD8 T cells and an independent anti-CD40-sensitive step were required for viral control. To address this question, we used adoptive transfer of CD8 T cells from MHV-68-infected wild-type mice, anti-CD40-treated mice, or control MHC class II−/− mice to MHV-68-infected class II−/− recipients. We also investigated whether anti-CD40 treatment prolonged survival in addition to reducing lung viral titers. The heterodimeric molecule CD94/NKG2A has been implicated in negatively regulating the CD8 T-cell response to polyomavirus (38) and herpes simplex virus (HSV) (54), while the inhibitory receptor PD-1 (programmed death 1) has been implicated in T-cell exhaustion following infection with several other persistent viruses (2, 15, 20, 22, 26, 36, 39-41, 57, 67). In the present study, we investigated the effect of signaling via various costimulatory molecules on the expression of NKG2A and PD-1 and how these molecules influenced viral control.  相似文献   

15.
CD4 T cells have been shown to play an important role in the immunity and immunopathogenesis of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. We identified two novel CD4 T-cell epitopes in the RSV M and M2 proteins with core sequences M213-223 (FKYIKPQSQFI) and M227-37 (YFEWPPHALLV). Peptides containing the epitopes stimulated RSV-specific CD4 T cells to produce gamma interferon (IFN-γ), interleukin 2 (IL-2), and other Th1- and Th2-type cytokines in an I-Ab-restricted pattern. Construction of fluorochrome-conjugated peptide-I-Ab class II tetramers revealed RSV M- and M2-specific CD4 T-cell responses in RSV-infected mice in a hierarchical pattern. Peptide-activated CD4 T cells from lungs were more activated and differentiated, and had greater IFN-γ expression, than CD4 T cells from the spleen, which, in contrast, produced greater levels of IL-2. In addition, M209-223 peptide-activated CD4 T cells reduced IFN-γ and IL-2 production in M- and M2-specific CD8 T-cell responses to Db-M187-195 and Kd-M282-90 peptides more than M225-39 peptide-stimulated CD4 T cells. This correlated with the fact that I-Ab-M209-223 tetramer-positive cells responding to primary RSV infection had a much higher frequency of FoxP3 expression than I-Ab-M226-39 tetramer-positive CD4 T cells, suggesting that the M-specific CD4 T-cell response has greater regulatory function. Characterization of epitope-specific CD4 T cells by novel fluorochrome-conjugated peptide-I-Ab tetramers allows detailed analysis of their roles in RSV pathogenesis and immunity.CD4 T lymphocytes play an important role in the resolution of primary viral infections and the prevention of reinfection by regulating a variety of humoral and cellular immune responses. CD4 T cells provide cytokines and other molecules to support the differentiation and expansion of antigen-specific CD8 T cells, which are major effectors for both virus clearance and immunopathology during primary infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) (3, 17, 42, 43). CD4 T-cell help is mandatory for an effective B-cell response (14), which is necessary for producing neutralizing antibodies that prevent secondary RSV infection (12, 18, 21). A concurrent CD4 T-cell response also promotes the maintenance of CD8 T-cell surveillance and effector capacity (9). Previous studies have shown that interleukin 2 (IL-2) from CD4 T cells can restore CD8 T-cell function in lungs (10) and that IL-2 supplementation can increase the production of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) by CD8 T cells upon peptide stimulation in vitro (45).While CD4 T cells are important for providing support to host immunity, they have also been associated with immunopathogenesis by playing a key role in the Th2-biased T-cell response (34, 46), which may be the common mechanism of enhanced lung pathology and other disease syndromes shown in murine studies (2, 16, 17, 19, 35). Earlier studies showed the positive association of formalin-inactivated RSV (FI-RSV) immunization-mediated enhanced illness upon subsequent natural RSV infection with a Th2-biased CD4 T-cell response (19, 44). Th2-orientated CD4 T cells elicit severe pneumonia with extensive eosinophilic infiltrates in the lungs of FI-RSV-immunized mice (13, 24, 48). Patients with severe RSV disease showed an elevated Th2/Th1 cytokine ratio in nasal secretions and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (27, 29, 31, 38). Increased disease severity has also been associated with polymorphisms in Th2-related cytokine genes, such as the IL-4, IL-4 receptor, and IL-13 genes (11, 23, 36). Th2 cytokines from CD4 T cells can also diminish the CD8 T-cell response and delay viral clearance (4, 8).The evaluation of CD4 T-cell responses in viral infection is particularly relevant in the RSV model because of the association of RSV and allergic inflammation, which is largely mediated by CD4 T cells. Understanding the influence of CD4 T cells on CD8 T-cell responses and other immunological effector mechanisms is central to understanding RSV pathogenesis and developing preventive vaccine strategies for RSV. Our lab and others have demonstrated that CD8 T cells target RSV M and M2 proteins with cytolytic effector activities (28, 30, 39). In this study, we found that both RSV M and M2 proteins also contain CD4 T-cell epitopes. These epitopes have 11-mer amino acid core sequences and are associated with the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecule I-Ab. Fluorochrome-conjugated peptide-I-Ab molecule tetrameric complexes can identify RSV M- and M2-specific CD4 T cells from CB6F1 mice following RSV infection in a hierarchical pattern. Peptides containing the epitopes can stimulate CD4 T cells from RSV M or M2 DNA-immunized and virus-challenged mice and can lead to the production of IFN-γ, IL-2, and other Th1- and Th2-type cytokines that can modulate the CD8 T-cell response to RSV M and M2. We also found that CD4 T cells from the lungs and spleens of immunized mice have different phenotype and cytokine profiles upon in vitro stimulation. These observations suggest a regulatory role for CD4 T cells in the host response to RSV infection. The development of novel MHC class II tetramer reagents allows the characterization of epitope-specific CD4 T-cell responses to RSV and will enable the investigation of basic mechanisms by which CD4 T cells affect pathogenesis and immunity to viral infections.  相似文献   

16.
Vaccines that elicit CD8+ T-cell responses are routinely tested for immunogenicity in nonhuman primates before advancement to clinical trials. Unfortunately, the magnitude and specificity of vaccine-elicited T-cell responses are variable in currently utilized nonhuman primate populations, owing to heterogeneity in major histocompatibility (MHC) class I genetics. We recently showed that Mauritian cynomolgus macaques (MCM) have unusually simple MHC genetics, with three common haplotypes encoding a shared pair of MHC class IA alleles, Mafa-A*25 and Mafa-A*29. Based on haplotype frequency, we hypothesized that CD8+ T-cell responses restricted by these MHC class I alleles would be detected in nearly all MCM. We examine here the frequency and functionality of these two alleles, showing that 88% of MCM express Mafa-A*25 and Mafa-A*29 and that animals carrying these alleles mount three newly defined simian immunodeficiency virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses. The epitopes recognized by each of these responses accumulated substitutions consistent with immunologic escape, suggesting these responses exert antiviral selective pressure. The demonstration that Mafa-A*25 and Mafa-A*29 restrict CD8+ T-cell responses that are shared among nearly all MCM indicates that these animals are an advantageous nonhuman primate model for comparing the immunogenicity of vaccines that elicit CD8+ T-cell responses.The immunogenicity and efficacy of vaccines intended for human use are commonly evaluated in rhesus and cynomolgus macaques. Indeed, researchers studied an estimated one million macaques in the search for a polio vaccine (5). More recently, these animals have become the dominant preclinical model for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine evaluation. Rhesus and cynomolgus macaques are susceptible to infection with pathogenic strains of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), lentiviruses that share close genetic homology to HIV and cause AIDS-defining illnesses (11, 14). Vaccines designed to provide sterilizing immunity or control immunodeficiency virus replication can therefore be evaluated in macaques. In addition, the immune systems of humans and macaques are highly similar, providing hope that promising vaccines in macaques can be readily adapted for use in humans.CD8+ T cells are particularly attractive candidates for vaccine development. Several lines of evidence indicate that CD8+ T cells are important to the control of HIV/SIV viral replication. Expansion of HIV/SIV-specific CD8+ T cells during acute viremia is associated with a sharp decline in viral load (6, 21, 50), while the depletion of CD8+ cells in SIV-infected macaques results in increased viral loads (13, 27) and abrogates the protection elicited by live, attenuated vaccination (30, 38). Furthermore, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genotyping studies have identified multiple MHC class I alleles enriched in human and macaque elite controllers (17, 19, 26, 31, 49).Recently, Merck and the HIV Vaccine Trials Network cancelled a phase IIb clinical trial evaluating an HIV vaccine designed to elicit CD8+ T-cell immunity. An interim analysis revealed the vaccine was ineffective and that participants with prior immunity to the vaccine vector actually had a higher incidence of HIV infection (7, 28, 39, 43). Dozens of additional vaccines that aim to elicit CD8+ T cells are in various stages of preclinical and early-stage clinical development, and testing these vaccines in macaques will provide the proof-of-concept necessary to predict their success.Unfortunately, it has been impossible to definitively associate the breadth, magnitude, or phenotype of SIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses, elicited by competing vaccine modalities, to viral control. Indian rhesus macaques are the most commonly used model for HIV vaccine testing but have extremely diverse MHC class I genetics, giving rise to heterogeneous CD8+ T-cell responses. SIV derived CD8+ T-cell epitopes have been defined for eight Indian rhesus macaque MHC class I alleles (24). However, more than 400 classical MHC class I alleles have been identified in rhesus macaques, leaving an enormous gap in our understanding of the overall CD8+ T-cell repertoire following SIV infection (37). Identifying large cohorts of Indian rhesus macaques matched for one or more MHC class I alleles, and thus predicted to mount CD8+ T-cell responses against the same epitopes, is both difficult and expensive. An abundant nonhuman primate model with limited MHC diversity could standardize testing of each new vaccine entering preclinical development. Indeed, head-to-head testing of CD8+ T-cell vaccines is essential to maximize the efficiency of the global vaccine enterprise and prioritize rapid advancement of promising candidates.In contrast to Indian rhesus macaques, Mauritian cynomolgus macaques (MCM) are an insular population that expanded from a small number of founder animals (23) over the last 500 years. The unique natural history of these animals is manifest by exceptionally low genetic diversity. We have characterized the MHC genetics of this population and found only seven common haplotypes containing fewer than 30 MHC class I alleles (12, 48). The three most common MHC haplotypes each express Mafa-A*25 and Mafa-A*29. We examine here the frequency and functionality of these two alleles, showing that 88% of MCM express Mafa-A*25 and Mafa-A*29 and that animals carrying these alleles mount three newly defined SIV-specific CD8+ T-cell responses that drive SIV variation. These results suggest that MCM will provide an exceptionally valuable resource for head-to-head evaluations of competing vaccine modalities.  相似文献   

17.
Primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) is marked by a flu-like syndrome and high levels of viremia that decrease to a viral set point with the first emergence of virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses. Here, we investigated in a large cohort of 527 subjects the immunodominance pattern of the first virus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses developed during PHI in comparison to CTL responses in chronic infection and demonstrated a distinct relationship between the early virus-specific CTL responses and the viral set point, as well as the slope of CD4+ T-cell decline. CTL responses during PHI followed clear hierarchical immunodominance patterns that were lost during the transition to chronic infection. Importantly, the immunodominance patterns of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-specific CTL responses detected in primary, but not in chronic, HIV-1 infection were significantly associated with the subsequent set point of viral replication. Moreover, the preservation of the initial CD8+ T-cell immunodominance patterns from the acute into the chronic phase of infection was significantly associated with slower CD4+ T-cell decline. Taken together, these data show that the specificity of the initial CTL response to HIV is critical for the subsequent control of viremia and have important implications for the rational selection of antigens for future HIV-1 vaccines.In the first weeks after human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) acquisition, viral loads peak at high levels, accompanied by a flu-like syndrome (15). A rapid depletion of the CD4+ T-cell population occurs during this acute infection, in particular, within the gastrointestinal tract-associated lymphoid tissue (6, 19, 20), marking a nonrecoverable scar on the immune system. With the resolution of the clinical syndromes, viral loads decrease to a set point, which persists at this level for months to years until progressive CD4+ T-cell decline results in the onset of AIDS. It has been shown that the initial viral set point following primary infection is a very strong predictor of the disease-free period until the onset of AIDS (18, 21, 22).The initial decrease in the viral load during primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) is temporally associated with the first emergence of virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses, and several studies have provided strong evidence that HIV-1-specific CD8+ T-cell responses are capable of controlling viral replication (5, 16, 24, 25, 27, 31, 33). However, significant numbers of virus-specific CD8+ T cells are detectable both in chronically infected individuals who progress rapidly to AIDS and in those who do not experience HIV-1 disease progression for decades (1, 11), and the characteristics that define a protective HIV-1-specific CD8+ T-cell response are not known. In particular, the level of control over viral replication is not predicted by the overall breadth, magnitude, or function of virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses in chronic HIV-1 infection (1, 4, 11, 26, 28).Here, we demonstrate in a large cohort of individuals identified during PHI that immunodominance patterns of virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses detected in PHI, but not in chronic HIV-1 infection, are strongly associated with the subsequent set point of viral replication. These data show that the specificity of the initial CD8+ T-cell response to HIV is critical for the subsequent control of viremia and have important implications for the rational selection of antigens for future HIV-1 vaccines.  相似文献   

18.
Little is known about the transmission or tropism of the newly discovered human retrovirus, human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 3 (HTLV-3). Here, we examine the entry requirements of HTLV-3 using independently expressed Env proteins. We observed that HTLV-3 surface glycoprotein (SU) binds efficiently to both activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. This contrasts with both HTLV-1 SU, which primarily binds to activated CD4+ T cells, and HTLV-2 SU, which primarily binds to activated CD8+ T cells. Binding studies with heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) and neuropilin-1 (NRP-1), two molecules important for HTLV-1 entry, revealed that these molecules also enhance HTLV-3 SU binding. However, unlike HTLV-1 SU, HTLV-3 SU can bind efficiently in the absence of both HSPGs and NRP-1. Studies of entry performed with HTLV-3 Env-pseudotyped viruses together with SU binding studies revealed that, for HTLV-1, glucose transporter 1 (GLUT-1) functions at a postbinding step during HTLV-3 Env-mediated entry. Further studies revealed that HTLV-3 SU binds efficiently to naïve CD4+ T cells, which do not bind either HTLV-1 or HTLV-2 SU and do not express detectable levels of HSPGs, NRP-1, and GLUT-1. These results indicate that the complex of receptor molecules used by HTLV-3 to bind to primary T lymphocytes differs from that of both HTLV-1 and HTLV-2.The primate T-cell lymphotropic virus (PTLV) group of deltaretroviruses consists of three types of human T-cell lymphotropic viruses (HTLVs) (HTLV-1, HTLV-2, HTLV-3), their closely related simian T-cell lymphotropic viruses (STLVs) (STLV-1, STLV-2, STLV-3), an HTLV (HTLV-4) for which a simian counterpart has not been yet identified, and an STLV (STLV-5) originally described as a divergent STLV-1 (5-7, 30, 35, 37, 38, 45, 51, 53). HTLV-1 and HTLV-2, which have a 70% nucleotide homology, differ in both their pathobiology and tropism (reviewed in reference 13). While HTLV-1 causes a neurological disorder (tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-1-associated myelopathy) and a hematological disease (adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma) (15, 42, 55), HTLV-2 is only rarely associated with tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-1-associated myelopathy-like disease and is not definitively linked to any lymphoproliferative disease (12, 20). In vivo, both HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 infect T cells. Although HTLV-1 is primarily found in CD4+ T cells, other cell types in the peripheral blood of infected individuals have been found to contain HTLV-1, including CD8+ T cells, dendritic cells, and B cells (19, 29, 33, 36, 46).Binding and entry of retroviruses requires specific interactions between the Env glycoproteins on the virus and cell surface receptor complexes on target cells. For HTLV-1, three molecules have been identified as important for entry, as follows: heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), neuropilin-1 (NRP-1), and glucose transporter 1 (GLUT-1) (16, 22, 26, 28, 29, 34, 39, 44). Recent studies support a model in which HSPG and NRP-1 function during the initial binding of HTLV-1 to target cells, and GLUT-1 functions at a postattachment stage, most likely to facilitate fusion (29, 34, 49). Efficient HTLV-2 binding and entry requires NRP-1 and GLUT-1 but not HSPGs (16, 26, 39, 49).This difference in the molecules required for binding to target cells reflects differences in the T-cell tropisms of these two viruses. Activated CD4+ T cells express much higher levels of HSPGs than CD8+ T cells (26). In infected individuals, HTLV-1 is primarily found in CD4+ T cells, while HTLV-2 is primarily found in CD8+ T cells (21, 43, 46). In vitro, HTLV-1 preferentially transforms CD4+ T cells while HTLV-2 preferentially transforms CD8+ T cells, and this difference has been mapped to the Env proteins (54).We and others have reported the discovery of HTLV-3 in two Cameroonese inhabitants (6, 7, 53). We recently uncovered the presence of a third HTLV-3 strain in a different population living several hundred kilometers away from the previously identified groups (5), suggesting that this virus may be common in central Africa. Since the HTLV-3 sequences were obtained by PCR amplification of DNA isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of infected individuals, little is known about its tropism and pathobiology in vivo. Based on the correlation between HSPG expression levels and viral tropisms of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2, we reasoned that knowledge about the HTLV-3 receptors might provide insight into the tropism of this virus. We therefore generated vectors expressing HTLV-3 Env proteins and used them to begin to characterize the receptor complex used by HTLV-3 to bind and enter cells.  相似文献   

19.
An understanding of the mechanism(s) by which some individuals spontaneously control human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/simian immunodeficiency virus replication may aid vaccine design. Approximately 50% of Indian rhesus macaques that express the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I allele Mamu-B*08 become elite controllers after infection with simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmac239. Mamu-B*08 has a binding motif that is very similar to that of HLA-B27, a human MHC class I allele associated with the elite control of HIV, suggesting that SIVmac239-infected Mamu-B*08-positive (Mamu-B*08+) animals may be a good model for the elite control of HIV. The association with MHC class I alleles implicates CD8+ T cells and/or natural killer cells in the control of viral replication. We therefore introduced point mutations into eight Mamu-B*08-restricted CD8+ T-cell epitopes to investigate the contribution of epitope-specific CD8+ T-cell responses to the development of the control of viral replication. Ten Mamu-B*08+ macaques were infected with this mutant virus, 8X-SIVmac239. We compared immune responses and viral loads of these animals to those of wild-type SIVmac239-infected Mamu-B*08+ macaques. The five most immunodominant Mamu-B*08-restricted CD8+ T-cell responses were barely detectable in 8X-SIVmac239-infected animals. By 48 weeks postinfection, 2 of 10 8X-SIVmac239-infected Mamu-B*08+ animals controlled viral replication to <20,000 viral RNA (vRNA) copy equivalents (eq)/ml plasma, while 10 of 15 wild-type-infected Mamu-B*08+ animals had viral loads of <20,000 vRNA copy eq/ml (P = 0.04). Our results suggest that these epitope-specific CD8+ T-cell responses may play a role in establishing the control of viral replication in Mamu-B*08+ macaques.A few individuals spontaneously control the replication of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) to very low levels. The precise mechanisms underlying this control are of great interest, as a clear understanding of what constitutes a successful immune response may aid in developing an AIDS vaccine. Particularly pressing questions for vaccine design include which proteins to use as immunogens, the extent to which increasing the breadth and magnitude of responses is advantageous, how immunodomination affects T-cell responses, and if biasing the immune response toward particular effector profiles is beneficial. Characterization of immune responses made by elite controllers (ECs) may reveal patterns that can then be applied to vaccine formulation and evaluation.HIV ECs are generally not infected with grossly unfit viruses (6, 42). Instead, elite control of immunodeficiency virus replication is correlated with the presence of particular major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) alleles (11, 12, 18, 32, 41, 55). The association of MHC-I alleles with the control of viremia implicates CD8+ T cells as being mediators of this immune containment. Several lines of evidence support this hypothesis. These lines of evidence include the correlation between the appearance of CD8+ T-cell responses and the resolution of peak viremia during acute infection (7, 29), the finding that alleles associated with viral control restrict dominant acute-phase CD8+ T-cell responses (3), and the finding that responses directed against epitopes restricted by these alleles frequently select for viral escape variants (4, 27, 38). Perhaps most compelling is the observation that for a few HIV-infected individuals, the selection of escape variants by an immunodominant HLA-B27-restricted T-cell response temporally preceded substantial increases in viremia (17, 21, 53). While viruses exhibiting escape variants in epitopes restricted by protective alleles are often detectably less fit in vitro (10, 38, 43, 51), recent data have found normal, high levels of replication in vivo upon the transmission of some of these variants (15).The association of control with MHC-I alleles does not, of course, implicate solely CD8+ T cells. MHC-I molecules are also ligands for killer immunoglobulin receptors (KIRs), which are predominantly expressed on natural killer (NK) cells. Genetic studies of HIV-infected humans suggest a model in which individuals with particular KIR/HLA combinations are predisposed to control HIV replication more readily than those with other KIR/HLA combinations (36, 37). These data were supported by functional studies of this KIR/HLA pairing in vitro, which demonstrated an inhibition of HIV replication by such NK cells (2). The relative contributions of NK and CD8+ T-cell responses to control have yet to be elucidated and may be closely intertwined.Previously, the experimental depletion of circulating CD8+ cells from SIVmac239-infected ECs resulted in a sharp spike in viremia, which resolved as CD8+ cells repopulated the periphery (19). During the reestablishment of control of SIV replication, CD8+ T cells targeting multiple epitopes restricted by alleles associated with elite control expanded in frequency, providing strong circumstantial evidence for their role in maintaining elite control (19, 31). However, CD8 depletion antibodies used in macaques also remove NK cells, which, at least in vitro, also inhibit SIV replication (19). It was therefore difficult to make definitive conclusions regarding the separate contributions of these subsets to maintaining the control of SIV replication in vivo.Here we investigate elite control in the rhesus macaque model for AIDS. We focused on the macaque MHC-I allele most tightly associated with the control of SIVmac239, Mamu-B*08. Approximately 50% of Mamu-B*08-positive (Mamu-B*08+) animals infected with SIVmac239 become ECs (32). Peptides presented by Mamu-B*08 share a binding motif with peptides presented by HLA-B27. Although these two MHC-I genes are dissimilar in domains that are important for peptide binding, each molecule can bind peptides that are presented by the other molecule (33). This striking similarity suggests that the elite control of SIVmac239 in Mamu-B*08+ animals is a good model for the elite control of HIV.Seven SIVmac239 epitopes restricted by Mamu-B*08 accrue variation in Mamu-B*08+ rhesus macaques (30, 31). For an eighth Mamu-B*08-restricted epitope, which is also restricted by Mamu-B*03 (Mamu-B*03 differs from Mamu-B*08 by 2 amino acids in the α1 and α2 domains [9, 32]), escape has been documented only for SIV-infected Mamu-B*03+ macaques (16). Variation in these CD8+ T-cell epitopes accumulates with different kinetics, starting during acute infection for those targeted by high-magnitude responses.In this study, we addressed the question of whether the elite control of SIVmac239 in Mamu-B*08+ animals is mediated by the known high-frequency CD8+ T-cell responses targeting Mamu-B*08-restricted epitopes. To this end, we introduced point mutations into eight epitopes, with the goal of reducing or abrogating immune responses directed against these epitopes during acute infection. We hypothesized that Mamu-B*08+ macaques would be unable to control SIV replication without these Mamu-B*08-restricted T-cell responses.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号