1. Expansion of HIV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells by dendritic cells transfected with mRNA encoding cytoplasm- or lysosome-targeted Nef
- Author
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Bruce D. Walker, Mohammad T. Zaman, Mary N. Johnston, Sherzana Sunderji, Daniel Kaufmann, Bradford S. Wagner, Sylvie Le Gall, Christian Brander, David Boczkowski, David Stone, Nicole Frahm, Eli Gilboa, Eric S. Rosenberg, Nina Bhardwaj, and Daniel G. Kavanagh
- Subjects
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Cytoplasm ,viruses ,Immunology ,Antigen presentation ,Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte ,HIV Infections ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Transfection ,Immunotherapy, Adoptive ,Biochemistry ,Gene Products, nef ,Cell Line ,Interleukin 21 ,Antigen ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,RNA, Messenger ,nef Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus ,Antigen-presenting cell ,Immunobiology ,CD40 ,biology ,fungi ,HIV ,Dendritic Cells ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Natural killer T cell ,Molecular biology ,Protein Transport ,biology.protein ,Interleukin 12 ,Lysosomes - Abstract
Transfection with synthetic mRNA is a safe and efficient method of delivering antigens to dendritic cells for immunotherapy. Targeting antigens to the lysosome can sometimes enhance the CD4+ T-cell response. We transfected antigen-presenting cells (APCs) with mRNA encoding Gag-p24 and cytoplasmic, lysosomal, and secreted forms of Nef. Antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells were able to lyse the majority of transfected targets, indicating that transfection was efficient. Transfection of APCs with a Nef construct bearing lysosomal targeting signals produced rapid and prolonged antigen presentation to CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Polyclonal CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell lines recognizing multiple distinct epitopes were expanded by coculture of transfected dendritic cells with peripheral blood mononuclear cells from viremic and aviremic HIV-infected subjects. Importantly, lysosome-targeted antigen drove a significantly greater expansion of Nef-specific CD4+ T cells than cytoplasmic antigen. The frequency of recognition of CD8 but not CD4 epitopes by mRNA-expanded T cells was inversely proportional to sequence entropy and was similar to ex vivo responses from a large chronic cohort. Thus human dendritic cells transfected with mRNA encoding lysosome-targeted HIV antigen can expand a broad, polyclonal repertoire of antiviral T cells, offering a promising approach to HIV immunotherapy.
- Published
- 2006
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