Specificity of CD8+ T-Cell Responses Following Vaccination with Conserved Regions of HIV-1 in Nairobi, Kenya

Author:

Mohamed Yehia S.ORCID,Borthwick Nicola J.,Moyo Nathifa,Murakoshi Hayato,Akahoshi Tomohiro,Siliquini Francesca,Hannoun ZaraORCID,Crook Alison,Hayes Peter,Fast Patricia E.,Mutua GaudensiaORCID,Jaoko Walter,Silva-Arrieta SandraORCID,Llano Anuska,Brander Christian,Takiguchi Masafumi,Hanke Tomáš

Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa carries the biggest burden of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)/AIDS epidemic and is in an urgent need of an effective vaccine. CD8+ T cells are an important component of the host immune response to HIV-1 and may need to be harnessed if a vaccine is to be effective. CD8+ T cells recognize human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-associated viral epitopes and the HLA alleles vary significantly among different ethnic groups. It follows that definition of HIV-1-derived peptides recognized by CD8+ T cells in the geographically relevant regions will critically guide vaccine development. Here, we study fine details of CD8+ T-cell responses elicited in HIV-1/2-uninfected individuals in Nairobi, Kenya, who received a candidate vaccine delivering conserved regions of HIV-1 proteins called HIVconsv. Using 10-day cell lines established by in vitro peptide restimulation of cryopreserved PBMC and stably HLA-transfected 721.221/C1R cell lines, we confirm experimentally many already defined epitopes, for a number of epitopes we define the restricting HLA molecule(s) and describe four novel HLA-epitope pairs. We also identify specific dominance patterns, a promiscuous T-cell epitope and a rescue of suboptimal T-cell epitope induction in vivo by its functional variant, which all together inform vaccine design.

Funder

Medical Research Council

European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

International AIDS Vaccine Initiative

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Horizon 2020

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Immunology

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