» Articles » PMID: 24312453

Adaptation of CD8 T Cell Responses to Changing HIV-1 Sequences in a Cohort of HIV-1 Infected Individuals Not Selected for a Certain HLA Allele

Overview
Journal PLoS One
Date 2013 Dec 7
PMID 24312453
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

HIV evades CD8 T cell mediated pressure by viral escape mutations in targeted CD8 T cell epitopes. A viral escape mutation can lead to a decline of the respective CD8 T cell response. Our question was what happened after the decline of a CD8 T cell response and - in the case of viral escape - if a new CD8 T cell response towards the mutated antigen could be generated in a population not selected for certain HLA alleles. We studied 19 antiretroviral-naïve HIV-1 infected individuals with different disease courses longitudinally. A median number of 12 (range 2-24) CD8 T cell responses towards Gag and Nef were detected per study subject. A total of 30 declining CD8 T cell responses were studied in detail and viral sequence analyses showed amino acid changes in 25 (83%) of these. Peptide titration assays and definition of optimal CD8 T cell epitopes revealed 12 viral escape mutations with one de-novo response (8%). The de-novo response, however, showed less effector functions than the original CD8 T cell response. In addition we identified 4 shifts in immunodominance. For one further shift in immunodominance, the mutations occurred outside the optimal epitope and might represent processing changes. Interestingly, four adaptations to the virus (the de-novo response and 3 shifts in immunodominance) occurred in the group of chronically infected progressors. None of the subjects with adaptation to the changing virus carried the HLA alleles B57, B*58:01 or B27. Our results show that CD8 T cell responses adapt to the mutations of HIV. However it was limited to only 20% (5 out of 25) of the epitopes with viral sequence changes in a cohort not expressing protective HLA alleles.

Citing Articles

T-cell responses to sequentially emerging viral escape mutants shape long-term HIV-1 population dynamics.

Akahoshi T, Gatanaga H, Kuse N, Chikata T, Koyanagi M, Ishizuka N PLoS Pathog. 2020; 16(12):e1009177.

PMID: 33370400 PMC: 7833229. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009177.


Cutting Edge: Synapse Propensity of Human Memory CD8 T Cells Confers Competitive Advantage over Naive Counterparts.

Mayya V, Judokusumo E, Abu-Shah E, Neiswanger W, Sachar C, Depoil D J Immunol. 2019; 203(3):601-606.

PMID: 31201237 PMC: 6643047. DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1801687.


Mycobacterium tuberculosis peptide E7/HLA-DRB1 tetramers with different HLA-DR alleles bound CD4 T cells might share identical CDR3 region.

Gan Y, Wang C, Fang Y, Yao Y, Tu X, Wang J Sci Rep. 2018; 8(1):9903.

PMID: 29967390 PMC: 6028479. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-28344-7.


Mutational escape of CD8+ T cell epitopes: implications for prevention and therapy of persistent hepatitis virus infections.

Timm J, Walker C Med Microbiol Immunol. 2014; 204(1):29-38.

PMID: 25537849 PMC: 4305108. DOI: 10.1007/s00430-014-0372-z.


Comparison of experimental fine-mapping to in silico prediction results of HIV-1 epitopes reveals ongoing need for mapping experiments.

Roider J, Meissner T, Kraut F, Vollbrecht T, Stirner R, Bogner J Immunology. 2014; 143(2):193-201.

PMID: 24724694 PMC: 4172136. DOI: 10.1111/imm.12301.

References
1.
Draenert R, Brander C, Yu X, Altfeld M, Verrill C, Feeney M . Impact of intrapeptide epitope location on CD8 T cell recognition: implications for design of overlapping peptide panels. AIDS. 2004; 18(6):871-6. DOI: 10.1097/00002030-200404090-00004. View

2.
Goulder P, Sewell A, Lalloo D, Price D, Whelan J, Evans J . Patterns of immunodominance in HIV-1-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in two human histocompatibility leukocyte antigens (HLA)-identical siblings with HLA-A*0201 are influenced by epitope mutation. J Exp Med. 1997; 185(8):1423-33. PMC: 2196285. DOI: 10.1084/jem.185.8.1423. View

3.
Vollbrecht T, Brackmann H, Henrich N, Roeling J, Seybold U, Bogner J . Impact of changes in antigen level on CD38/PD-1 co-expression on HIV-specific CD8 T cells in chronic, untreated HIV-1 infection. J Med Virol. 2010; 82(3):358-70. DOI: 10.1002/jmv.21723. View

4.
Allen T, Altfeld M, Geer S, Kalife E, Moore C, OSullivan K . Selective escape from CD8+ T-cell responses represents a major driving force of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) sequence diversity and reveals constraints on HIV-1 evolution. J Virol. 2005; 79(21):13239-49. PMC: 1262562. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.79.21.13239-13249.2005. View

5.
Price D, Goulder P, Klenerman P, Sewell A, Easterbrook P, Troop M . Positive selection of HIV-1 cytotoxic T lymphocyte escape variants during primary infection. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997; 94(5):1890-5. PMC: 20013. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.94.5.1890. View