Hierarchical Targeting of Subtype C Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Proteins by CD8 + T Cells: Correlation with Viral Load

Author:

Masemola Agatha1,Mashishi Tumelo1,Khoury Greg1,Mohube Phineas1,Mokgotho Pauline1,Vardas Efthyia23,Colvin Mark3,Zijenah Lynn4,Katzenstein David5,Musonda Rosemary6,Allen Susan6,Kumwenda Newton7,Taha Taha7,Gray Glenda2,McIntyre James2,Karim Salim Abdool38,Sheppard Haynes W.9,Gray Clive M.1

Affiliation:

1. National Institute for Communicable Diseases

2. Perinatal HIV Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg

3. HIV Vaccine and Prevention Trials Unit, MRC

4. Department of Immunology, University of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe

5. Center for AIDS Research, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford

6. Zambia-UAB HIV Research Project, Lusaka, Zambia

7. Johns Hopkins Research Project, Blantyre, Malawi

8. University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban, South Africa

9. California Department of Health Sciences, Richmond, California

Abstract

ABSTRACT An understanding of the relationship between the breadth and magnitude of T-cell epitope responses and viral loads is important for the design of effective vaccines. For this study, we screened a cohort of 46 subtype C human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected individuals for T-cell responses against a panel of peptides corresponding to the complete subtype C genome. We used a gamma interferon ELISPOT assay to explore the hypothesis that patterns of T-cell responses across the expressed HIV-1 genome correlate with viral control. The estimated median time from seroconversion to response for the cohort was 13 months, and the order of cumulative T-cell responses against HIV proteins was as follows: Nef > Gag > Pol > Env > Vif > Rev > Vpr > Tat > Vpu. Nef was the most intensely targeted protein, with 97.5% of the epitopes being clustered within 119 amino acids, constituting almost one-third of the responses across the expressed genome. The second most targeted region was p24, comprising 17% of the responses. There was no correlation between viral load and the breadth of responses, but there was a weak positive correlation ( r = 0.297; P = 0.034) between viral load and the total magnitude of responses, implying that the magnitude of T-cell recognition did not contribute to viral control. When hierarchical patterns of recognition were correlated with the viral load, preferential targeting of Gag was significantly ( r = 0.445; P = 0.0025) associated with viral control. These data suggest that preferential targeting of Gag epitopes, rather than the breadth or magnitude of the response across the genome, may be an important marker of immune efficacy. These data have significance for the design of vaccines and for interpretation of vaccine-induced responses.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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