CYTOTOXIC T-CELL ACTIVITY ANTAGONIZED BY NATURALLY-OCCURRING HIV-1 GAG VARIANTS

被引:398
|
作者
KLENERMAN, P
ROWLANDJONES, S
MCADAM, S
EDWARDS, J
DAENKE, S
LALLOO, D
KOPPE, B
ROSENBERG, W
BOYD, D
EDWARDS, A
GIANGRANDE, P
PHILLIPS, RE
MCMICHAEL, AJ
机构
[1] UNIV OXFORD,INST MOLEC MED,OXFORD OX3 9DU,ENGLAND
[2] RADCLIFFE INFIRM,DEPT GENITOURINARY MED,OXFORD OX3 7LJ,ENGLAND
[3] CHURCHILL HOSP,OXFORD HAEMOPHILIA CTR,OXFORD OX3 7LV,ENGLAND
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
D O I
10.1038/369403a0
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
MOST asymptomatic individuals infected with HIV-1 have a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to the virus Gag proteins which can be demonstrated in vitro(1,2). Epitopes have been mapped in p17 Gag and p24 Gag restricted by HLA-B8 (p17-3 and p24-13) and -B27 (p24-14)(2,3). Viruses isolated from patients who make CTL responses to these peptides vary within the genetic sequences encoding these epitopes and some mutations lead to reduction in killing activity in vitro(4). This mas attributed to either failure of the variant epitope to bind major histocompatibility complex class I or failure of T-cell receptors to bind the presented peptide. But peptide variants of class I-restricted epitopes cause 'antagonism', that is, the presence of a variant epitope (in the form of peptide) inhibits normal lysis of targets presenting the original epitope(5,6). This mirrors similar findings in class II-restricted systems(7-10). Here we report that naturally occurring variant forms of p17-3, p24-13 and p24-14 may cause antagonism of CTL lines derived from the same individuals. The effect is present if the epitopes are derived from synthetic peptides and when they are processed from full-length proteins expressed by either recombinant vaccinia constructs or replicating HIV.
引用
收藏
页码:403 / 407
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cytotoxic T-cell antagonism in HIV-1
    Klenerman, P
    Phillips, R
    McMichael, A
    SEMINARS IN VIROLOGY, 1996, 7 (01): : 31 - 39
  • [2] TOTAL SYNTHESIS OF (-)-THIANGAZOLE, A NATURALLY-OCCURRING HIV-1 INHIBITOR
    PARSONS, RL
    HEATHCOCK, CH
    JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 1994, 59 (17): : 4733 - 4734
  • [3] HIV-1 Naturally-Occurring BF Intersubtype Recombination in Gag-Protease Is Associated to Reduction in Viral Replication Capacity
    Espada, C.
    Melo, F.
    Zanotto, P. M.
    Martinez Peralta, L.
    Carobene, M. G.
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2013, 29 (11) : A81 - A81
  • [4] Loss of T-cell cytotoxic responses in the course of HIV-1 infection
    Zerhouni, B
    Sanhadji, K
    Touraine, JL
    THYMUS, 1997, 24 (04) : 203 - 219
  • [5] NATURALLY-OCCURRING MUTATIONS WITHIN HIV-1 ADCC TYPE-SPECIFIC EPITOPE
    MERZOUKI, A
    ACEL, A
    ENNAJI, M
    ARELLA, M
    PROTEIN ENGINEERING, 1995, 8 : 116 - 116
  • [6] Characterization of an HIV-1 p24(gag) epitope recognized by a CD8(+) cytotoxic T-cell clone
    Buseyne, F
    Stevanovic, S
    Rammensee, HG
    Riviere, Y
    IMMUNOLOGY LETTERS, 1997, 55 (03) : 145 - 149
  • [7] HIV-1 SPECIFIC CYTOTOXIC AND PROLIFERATIVE T-CELL RESPONSES IN HIV-1 INFECTED MACACA-NEMESTRINA
    KENT, SJ
    COREY, L
    MCELRATH, J
    GREENBERG, P
    JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY, 1993, : 80 - 80
  • [8] Patient-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte cross-recognition of naturally occurring variants of a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) p24gag epitope by HIV-1-infected children
    Buseyne, F
    Chaix, ML
    Rouzioux, C
    Blanche, S
    Rivière, Y
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2001, 75 (10) : 4941 - 4946
  • [9] Cytotoxic T-cell responses to HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, integrase and protease
    Haas, G
    Samri, A
    Gomard, E
    Hosmalin, A
    Duntze, J
    Bouley, EM
    Ihlenfeldt, HG
    Katlama, C
    Autran, E
    AIDS, 1998, 12 (12) : 1427 - 1436
  • [10] AN HIV-1 AND HIV-2 CROSS-REACTIVE CYTOTOXIC T-CELL EPITOPE
    NIXON, DF
    HUET, S
    ROTHBARD, J
    KIENY, MP
    DELCHAMBRE, M
    THIRIART, C
    RIZZA, CR
    GOTCH, FM
    MCMICHAEL, AJ
    AIDS, 1990, 4 (09) : 841 - 845