| Literature DB >> 22611395 |
Gamze Isitman1, Ivan Stratov, Stephen J Kent.
Abstract
The HIV-1 genome is malleable and a difficult target tot vaccinate against. It has long been recognised that cytotoxic T lymphocytes and neutralising antibodies readily select for immune escape HIV variants. It is now also clear that NK cells can also select for immune escape. NK cells force immune escape through both direct Killer-immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR)-mediated killing as well as through facilitating antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). These newer finding suggest NK cells and ADCC responses apply significant pressure to the virus. There is an opportunity to harness these immune responses in the design of more effective HIV vaccines.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22611395 PMCID: PMC3350948 DOI: 10.1155/2012/637208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Virol ISSN: 1687-8639
Key escape papers.
| Immune response | Hypothesis | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| CTL based | HLA-B*57/B*5801 CTL escape mutations in Gag impacts viral replication | Reductions in relative replication capacity reduce “viral fitness” | [ |
| CTL escape mutations in Env do not result in reduced viral fitness | Escape mutations within Env-specific CTL are epitopes evident but no correlation with reduced SIV replication | [ | |
| Step HIV-1 vaccine trial exerts selective CTL pressure on HIV-1 | Extended sequence divergence for vaccine recipients who become infected suggests vaccine-induced CTL imparted significant immune pressure | [ | |
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| Nab based | Evolving “glycan shield” mechanism prevents Nab binding | Env gene mutations in escape virus sparse | [ |
| Continual selection of Nab escape variants occurs | All previous viral isolates, but not concurrent isolate, are recognised by concurrent Nab | [ | |
| Passive transfer of human neutralizing monoclional antibodies delays HIV-1 rebound post-antiretroviral therapy | 2G12 monoclonal was crucial for transient | [ | |
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| ADCC based | Immune pressure from HIV-specific ADCC results in immune-escape variants | ADCC causes escape in multiple epitopes and evolves over timeADCC antibodies forcing immune escape can be non-eutralizing | [ |
| NK cells apply immunological pressure on HIV-1 through direct killing of infected cells | HIV-1 selects KIR2DL2+ virus mutations that result in reduced antiviral activity of NK cells | [ | |
Figure 1HIV-specific immune responses force immune escape. The mechanism of immune pressure applied by Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (a), neutralizing antibodies (b), and ADCC antibodies (1) is illustrated. Escape from immune responses shows results once free virus (Nab responses) or viral particles are presented either via the MHC class pathway (CTL responses) or possibly on the surface of the infected cell by virus budding (ADCC).