| Literature DB >> 15795285 |
Marcus Altfeld1, Todd M Allen, Elizabeth T Kalife, Nicole Frahm, Marylyn M Addo, Bianca R Mothe, Almas Rathod, Laura L Reyor, Jason Harlow, Xu G Yu, Beth Perkins, Loren K Robinson, John Sidney, Galit Alter, Mathias Lichterfeld, Alessandro Sette, Eric S Rosenberg, Philip J R Goulder, Christian Brander, Bruce D Walker.
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) mutates to escape immune selection pressure, but there is little evidence of selection mediated through HLA-A2, the dominant class I allele in persons infected with clade B virus. Moreover, HLA-A2-restricted responses are largely absent in the acute phase of infection as the viral load is being reduced, suggesting that circulating viruses may lack immunodominant epitopes targeted through HLA-A2. Here we demonstrate an A2-restricted epitope within Vpr (Vpr59-67) that is targeted by acute-phase HIV-1-specific CD8+ T cells, but only in a subset of persons expressing HLA-A2. Individuals in the acute stage of infection with viruses containing the most common current sequence within this epitope (consensus sequence) were unable to mount epitope-specific T-cell responses, whereas subjects infected with the less frequent I60L variant all developed these responses. The I60L variant epitope was a stronger binder to HLA-A2 and was recognized by epitope-specific T cells at lower peptide concentrations than the consensus sequence epitope. These data demonstrate that HLA-A2 is capable of contributing to the acute-phase cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response in infected subjects, but that most currently circulating viruses lack a dominant immunogenic epitope presented by this allele, and suggest that immunodominant epitopes restricted by common HLA alleles may be lost as the epidemic matures.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15795285 PMCID: PMC1069570 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.79.8.5000-5005.2005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103