Virus-Specific CD8 + T-Cell Responses Better Define HIV Disease Progression than HLA Genotype

Author:

Dinges Warren L.12,Richardt Julia1,Friedrich David1,Jalbert Emilie1,Liu Yi3,Stevens Claire E.2,Maenza Janine2,Collier Ann C.2,Geraghty Daniel E.4,Smith Jeremy1,Moodie Zoe5,Mullins James I.236,McElrath M. Juliana126,Horton Helen12

Affiliation:

1. Vaccine and Infectious Disease Institute

2. Departments of Medicine

3. Microbiology

4. Clinical Research Division

5. Statistical Center for HIV Research and Prevention, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington

6. Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington

Abstract

ABSTRACT HLA alleles B57/58, B27, and B35 have the strongest genetic associations with HIV-1 disease progression. The mechanisms of these relationships may be host control of HIV-1 infection via CD8 + T-cell responses. We examined these immune responses in subjects from the Seattle Primary Infection Cohort with these alleles. CD8 + T-cell responses to conserved HIV epitopes within B57/58 alleles (TW10 and KF11) and B27 alleles (KK10 and FY10) delayed declines in CD4 + T-cell counts (4 to 8 times longer), while responses to variable epitopes presented by B35 alleles (DL9 and IL9) resulted in more rapid progression. The plasma viral load was higher in B57/58 + and B27 + subjects lacking the conserved B57/58- and B27-restricted responses. The presence of certain B57/58-, B27-, and B35-restricted HIV-specific CD8 + T-cell responses after primary HIV-1 infection better defined disease progression than the HLA genotype alone, suggesting that it is the HIV-specific CD8 + T cells and not the presence of a particular HLA allele that determine disease progression. Further, the most effective host CD8 + T-cell responses to HIV-1 were prevalent within an HLA allele, represented a high total allele fraction of the host CD8 + T-cell response, and targeted conserved regions of HIV-1. These data suggest that vaccine immunogens should contain only conserved regions of HIV-1.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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