| Literature DB >> 17699580 |
Jonah B Sacha1, Chungwon Chung, Jason Reed, Anna K Jonas, Alexander T Bean, Sean P Spencer, Wonhee Lee, Lara Vojnov, Richard Rudersdorf, Thomas C Friedrich, Nancy A Wilson, Jeffrey D Lifson, David I Watkins.
Abstract
Effective, vaccine-induced CD8+ T-cell responses should recognize infected cells early enough to prevent production of progeny virions. We have recently shown that Gag-specific CD8+ T cells recognize simian immunodeficiency virus-infected cells at 2 h postinfection, whereas Env-specific CD8+ T cells do not recognize infected cells until much later in infection. However, it remains unknown when other proteins present in the viral particle are presented to CD8+ T cells after infection. To address this issue, we explored CD8+ T-cell recognition of epitopes derived from two other relatively large virion proteins, Pol and Nef. Surprisingly, infected cells efficiently presented CD8+ T-cell epitopes from virion-derived Pol proteins within 2 h of infection. In contrast, Nef-specific CD8+ T cells did not recognize infected cells until 12 h postinfection. Additionally, we show that SIVmac239 Nef downregulated surface major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules beginning at 12 h postinfection, concomitant with presentation of Nef-derived CD8+ T-cell epitopes. Finally, Pol-specific CD8+ T cells eliminated infected cells as early as 6 h postinfection, well before MHC-I downregulation, suggesting a previously underappreciated antiviral role for Pol-specific CD8+ T cells.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17699580 PMCID: PMC2168778 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00926-07
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103