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HLA-B63 presents HLA-B57/B58-restricted cytotoxic T-lymphocyte epitopes and is associated with low human immunodeficiency virus load
Authors:Frahm Nicole  Adams Sharon  Kiepiela Photini  Linde Caitlyn H  Hewitt Hannah S  Lichterfeld Mathias  Sango Kaori  Brown Nancy V  Pae Eunice  Wurcel Alysse G  Altfeld Marcus  Feeney Margaret E  Allen Todd M  Roach Timothy  St John M Anne  Daar Eric S  Rosenberg Eric  Korber Bette  Marincola Francesco  Walker Bruce D  Goulder Philip J R  Brander Christian
Institution:Partners AIDS Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, No. 5214, 149 13th Street, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA.
Abstract:Several HLA class I alleles have been associated with slow human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease progression, supporting the important role HLA class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) play in controlling HIV infection. HLA-B63, the serological marker for the closely related HLA-B*1516 and HLA-B*1517 alleles, shares the epitope binding motif of HLA-B57 and HLA-B58, two alleles that have been associated with slow HIV disease progression. We investigated whether HIV-infected individuals who express HLA-B63 generate CTL responses that are comparable in breadth and specificity to those of HLA-B57/58-positive subjects and whether HLA-B63-positive individuals would also present with lower viral set points than the general population. The data show that HLA-B63-positive individuals indeed mounted responses to previously identified HLA-B57-restricted epitopes as well as towards novel, HLA-B63-restricted CTL targets that, in turn, can be presented by HLA-B57 and HLA-B58. HLA-B63-positive subjects generated these responses early in acute HIV infection and were able to control HIV replication in the absence of antiretroviral treatment with a median viral load of 3,280 RNA copies/ml. The data support an important role of the presented epitope in mediating relative control of HIV replication and help to better define immune correlates of controlled HIV infection.
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