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Targeting of a CD8 T cell env epitope presented by HLA-B*5802 is associated with markers of HIV disease progression and lack of selection pressure

Authors :
Dhanwanthie Ramduth
Daniel G. Kavanagh
Isobella Honeyborne
Hayley Crawford
Zenele Mncube
M van der Stok
David C. Nickle
Karen S. Bishop
Christine Rousseau
Eshia Moodley
Hoosen M. Coovadia
Nompumelelo Mkhwanazi
Nasreen Ismail
Kriebashnie Nair
Sharon Reddy
James I. Mullins
Philip J. R. Goulder
Bruce D. Walker
Christina F. Thobakgale
Kholiswa C. Ngumbela
C. de Pierres
Bette T. Korber
Cheryl L. Day
David Heckerman
Photini Kiepiela
Source :
AIDS research and human retroviruses. 24(1)
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

In HIV-infected persons, certain HLA class I alleles are associated with effective control of viremia, while others are associated with rapid disease progression. Among the most divergent clinical outcomes are the relatively good prognosis in HLA-B*5801 expressing persons and poor prognosis with HLA-B*5802. These two alleles differ by only three amino acids in regions involved in HLA-peptide recognition. This study evaluated a cohort of over 1000 persons with chronic HIV clade C virus infection to determine whether clinical outcome differences associated with B*5801 (n = 93) and B*5802 ( n = 259) expression are associated with differences in HIV-1-specific CD8 (+) T cell responses. The overall breadth and magnitude of HIV-1-specific CD8(+) T cell responses were lower in persons expressing B*5802, and epitope presentation by B*5802 contributed significantly less to the overall response as compared to B*5801-restricted CD8 (+) T cells. Moreover, viral load in B*5802-positive persons was higher and CD4 cell counts lower when this allele contributed to the overall CD8 (+) T cell response, which was detected exclusively through a single epitope in Env. In addition, persons heterozygous for B*5802 compared to persons homozygous for other HLA-B alleles had significantly higher viral loads. Viral sequencing revealed strong selection pressure mediated through B*5801-restricted responses but not through B*5802. These data indicate that minor differences in HLA sequence can have a major impact on epitope recognition, and that selective targeting of Env through HLA-B*5802 is at least ineffectual if not actively adverse in the containment of viremia. These results provide experimental evidence that not all epitope-specific responses contribute to immune containment, a better understanding of which is essential to shed light on mechanisms involved in HIV disease progression.

Details

ISSN :
08892229
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS research and human retroviruses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....53103518d9ae87d92691e055257a1396