Identification of Sequential Viral Escape Mutants Associated with Altered T-Cell Responses in a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Individual

Author:

Geels Mark J.1,Cornelissen Marion1,Schuitemaker Hanneke23,Anderson Kiersten4,Kwa David23,Maas Jolanda5,Dekker John T.5,Baan Elly1,Zorgdrager Fokla1,van den Burg Remco1,van Beelen Martijn1,Lukashov Vladimir V.1,Fu Tong-Ming4,Paxton William A.1,van der Hoek Lia1,Dubey Sheri A.4,Shiver John W.4,Goudsmit Jaap6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Retrovirology, Academic Medical Center

2. Sanquin Research at CLB

3. Landsteiner Laboratory at AMC, University of Amsterdam

4. Department of Virus and Cell Biology, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, Pennsylvania

5. PrimaGen

6. Center for Poverty-Related Communicable Diseases, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACT Control of viremia in natural human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in humans is associated with a virus-specific T-cell response. However, still much is unknown with regard to the extent of CD8 + cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses required to successfully control HIV-1 infection and to what extent CTL epitope escape can account for rises in viral load and ultimate progression to disease. In this study, we chose to monitor through full-length genome sequence of replication-competent biological clones the modifications that occurred within predicted CTL epitopes and to identify whether the alterations resulted in epitope escape from CTL recognition. From an extensive analysis of 59 biological HIV-1 clones generated over a period of 4 years from a single individual in whom the viral load was observed to rise, we identified the locations in the genome of five CD8 + CTL epitopes. Fixed mutations were identified within the p17, gp120, gp41, Nef, and reverse transcriptase genes. Using a gamma interferon ELIspot assay, we identified for four of the five epitopes with fixed mutations a complete loss of T-cell reactivity against the wild-type epitope and a partial loss of reactivity against the mutant epitope. These results demonstrate the sequential accumulation of CTL escape in a patient during disease progression, indicating that multiple combinations of T-cell epitopes are required to control viremia.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

Reference53 articles.

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