| Literature DB >> 16709828 |
June Kan-Mitchell1, Melissa Bajcz, Keri L Schaubert, David A Price, Jason M Brenchley, Tedi E Asher, Daniel C Douek, Hwee L Ng, Otto O Yang, Charles R Rinaldo, Jose Miguel Benito, Brygida Bisikirska, Ramakrishna Hegde, Franco M Marincola, César Boggiano, Dianne Wilson, Judith Abrams, Sylvie E Blondelle, Darcy B Wilson.
Abstract
CD8+ CTL responses are important for the control of HIV-1 infection. The immunodominant HLA-A2-restricted Gag epitope, SLYNTVATL (SL9), is considered to be a poor immunogen because reactivity to it is rare in acute infection despite its paradoxical dominance in patients with chronic infection. We have previously reported SL9 to be a help-independent epitope in that it primes highly activated CTLs ex vivo from CD8+ T cells of seronegative healthy donors. These CTLs produce sufficient cytokines for extended autocrine proliferation but are sensitive to activation-induced cell death, which may cause them to be eliminated by a proinflammatory cytokine storm. Here we identified an agonist variant of the SL9 peptide, p41 (SLYNTVAAL), by screening a large synthetic combinatorial nonapeptide library with ex vivo-primed SL9-specific T cells. p41 invariably immunized SL9-cross-reactive CTLs from other donors ex vivo and H-2Db beta2m double knockout mice expressing a chimeric HLA-A*0201/H2-Db MHC class I molecule. Parallel human T cell cultures showed p41-specific CTLs to be less fastidious than SL9-CTLs in the level of costimulation required from APCs and the need for exogenous IL-2 to proliferate (help dependent). TCR sequencing revealed that the same clonotype can develop into either help-independent or help-dependent CTLs depending on the peptide used to activate the precursor CD8+ T cells. Although Ag-experienced SL9-T cells from two patients were also sensitive to IL-2-mediated cell death upon restimulation in vitro, the loss of SL9 T cells was minimized with p41. This study suggests that agonist sequences can replace aberrantly immunogenic native epitopes for the rational design of vaccines targeting HIV-1.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16709828 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.176.11.6690
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422