HIV-1 superinfection despite broad CD8+ T-cell responses containing replication of the primary virus

被引:0
|
作者
Marcus Altfeld
Todd M. Allen
Xu G. Yu
Mary N. Johnston
Deepak Agrawal
Bette T. Korber
David C. Montefiori
David H. O'Connor
Ben T. Davis
Paul K. Lee
Erica L. Maier
Jason Harlow
Philip J. R. Goulder
Christian Brander
Eric S. Rosenberg
Bruce D. Walker
机构
[1] Harvard Medical School,Partners AIDS Research Center and Infectious Disease Division, Massachusetts General Hospital and Division of AIDS
[2] Los Alamos National Laboratory,Department of Surgery
[3] Duke University Medical Center,Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center
[4] University of Wisconsin,undefined
[5] Department of Pediatrics,undefined
[6] Nuffield Department of Medicine,undefined
[7] Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research,undefined
来源
Nature | 2002年 / 420卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Early treatment of acute HIV-1 infection followed by treatment interruptions has shown promise for enhancing immune control of infection1,2,3. A subsequent loss of control, however, allows the correlates of protective immunity to be assessed. Here we show that sudden breakthrough of plasma viraemia occurred after prolonged immune containment in an individual infected with HIV-1 at a time when 25 distinct CD8+ T-cell epitopes in the viral proteins Gag, RT, Integrase, Env, Nef, Vpr, Vif and Rev were being targeted. Sequencing of the virus in plasma and cells showed that superinfection with a second clade-B virus was coincident with the loss of immune control. This sudden increase in viraemia was associated with a decline in half of the CD8+ T-cell responses. The declining CD8+ T-cell responses were coupled with sequence changes relative to the initial virus that resulted in impaired recognition. Our data show that HIV-1 superinfection can occur in the setting of a strong and broadly directed virus-specific CD8+ T-cell response. The lack of cross-protective immunity for closely related HIV-1 strains, despite persistent recognition of multiple CD8 epitopes, has important implications for public health and vaccine development.
引用
收藏
页码:434 / 439
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] HIV-1 superinfection despite broad CD8+ T-cell responses containing replication of the primary virus
    Altfeld, M
    Allen, TM
    Yu, XG
    Johnston, MN
    Agrawal, D
    Korber, BT
    Montefiori, DC
    O'Connor, DH
    Davis, BT
    Lee, PK
    Maier, EL
    Harlow, J
    Goulder, PJR
    Brander, C
    Rosenberg, ES
    Walker, BD
    NATURE, 2002, 420 (6914) : 434 - 439
  • [2] addendum: HIV-1 superinfection despite broad CD8+ T-cell responses containing replication of the primary virus
    Marcus Altfeld
    Todd M. Allen
    Xu G. Yu
    Mary N. Johnston
    Deepak Agrawal
    Bette T. Korber
    David C. Montefiori
    David H. O'Connor
    Ben T. Davis
    Paul K. Lee
    Erica L. Maier
    Jason Harlow
    Philip J. R. Goulder
    Christian Brander
    Eric S. Rosenberg
    Bruce D. Walker
    Nature, 2003, 423 : 461 - 461
  • [3] HIV-1 superinfection despite broad CD8+ T-cell responses containing replication of the primary virus (vol 420, pg 434, 2002)
    Altfeld, M
    Allen, TM
    Yu, XG
    Johnston, MN
    Agrawal, D
    Korber, BT
    Montefiori, DC
    O'Connor, DH
    Davis, BT
    Lee, PK
    Maier, EL
    Harlow, J
    Goulder, PJR
    Brander, C
    Rosenberg, ES
    Walker, BD
    NATURE, 2003, 423 (6938) : 461 - 461
  • [4] Polyfunctional CD8+ T Cell Responses Did Not Predict Efficient Suppression of HIV-1 Replication
    Akinsiku, Olusimidele
    Goepfert, Paul
    CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2010, 135 : S54 - S54
  • [5] Codon Optimization of HIV-1 Vaccines Decreases the Potential Breadth of CD8+ T-Cell Responses
    Bet, A.
    Bansal, A.
    Goepfert, P. A.
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2010, 26 (10) : A2 - A2
  • [6] HIV-SPECIFIC CD8+ T-CELL IMMUNE-RESPONSES AND VIRAL REPLICATION
    BUSEYNE, F
    RIVIERE, Y
    AIDS, 1993, 7 : S81 - S85
  • [7] Effects of neutralizing antibodies on escape from CD8+ T-cell responses in HIV-1 infection
    Wikramaratna, Paul S.
    Lourenco, Jose
    Klenerman, Paul
    Pybus, Oliver G.
    Gupta, Sunetra
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2015, 370 (1675)
  • [8] Subdominant CD8+ T-cell responses are involved in durable control of AIDS virus replication
    Friedrich, Thomas C.
    Valentine, Laura E.
    Yant, Levi J.
    Rakasz, Eva G.
    Piaskowski, Shari M.
    Furlott, Jessica R.
    Weisgrau, Kimberly L.
    Burwitz, Benjamin
    May, Gemma E.
    Leon, Enrique J.
    Soma, Taeko
    Napoe, Gnankang
    Capuano, Saverio V., III
    Wilson, Nancy A.
    Watkins, David I.
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2007, 81 (07) : 3465 - 3476
  • [9] NONCYTOLYTIC CD8 T-CELL ANTI-HIV RESPONSES IN PRIMARY HIV-1 INFECTION
    MACKEWICZ, CE
    YANG, LC
    LIFSON, JD
    LEVY, JA
    LANCET, 1994, 344 (8938): : 1671 - 1673
  • [10] Complex T-Cell Receptor Repertoire Dynamics Underlie the CD8+ T-Cell Response to HIV-1
    Costa, Ana I.
    Koning, Dan
    Ladell, Kristin
    McLaren, James E.
    Grady, Bart P. X.
    Schellens, Ingrid M. M.
    van Ham, Petra
    Nijhuis, Monique
    Borghans, Jose A. M.
    Kesmir, Can
    Price, David A.
    van Baarle, Debbie
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2015, 89 (01) : 110 - 119