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Heteroclitic peptides enhance human immunodeficiency virus-specific CD8 T cell responses
Authors:Krista H Gladney  Julia Pohling  Natasha A Hollett  Katrin Zipperlen  Maureen E Gallant  Michael D Grant
Institution:Division of BioMedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, 300 Prince Philip Drive, St. John''s, NL, Canada A1B 3V6
Abstract:The inability of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific CD8+ T cells to durably control HIV replication due to HIV escape mutations and CD8+ T cell dysfunction is a key factor in disease progression. A few HIV-infected individuals termed elite controllers (EC) maintain polyfunctional HIV-specific CD8+ T cells, minimal HIV replication and normal CD4+ T lymphocyte numbers. Thus, therapeutic intervention to sustain or restore CD8+ T cell responses similar to those persisting in EC could relieve terminal dependence on antiretrovirals. Vaccination with HIV peptides is one approach to achieve this and our objective in this study was to determine whether certain HIV peptide variants display antigenic superiority over the reference peptides normally included in vaccines. Eight peptide sets were generated, each with a reference peptide and six variants harboring conservative or semi-conservative amino acid substitutions at positions predicted to affect T cell receptor interactions without affecting human class I histocompatibililty-linked antigen (HLA) binding. Recognition across peptide sets was tested with >80 HIV-infected individuals bearing the appropriate HLA alleles. While reference peptides were often the most antigenic, cross-reactivity with variants was common and in many cases, peptide variants were superior at stimulating interferon-γ production or selectively enhanced interleukin-2 production. Although such heteroclitic activity was not generalized for all individuals bearing the HLA class I allele involved, these data suggest that heteroclitic peptide variants could improve the efficacy of therapeutic peptide vaccines in HIV infection.
Keywords:AIDS  acquired immune deficiency syndrome  ALP  alkaline phosphatase  aa  amino acid  CTLA-4  cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4  EC  elite controller  EBV  Epstein-Barr virus  HIV  human immunodeficiency virus  HLA  human histocompatibility-linked leukocyte antigen  IFN-γ  interferon-gamma  IL-2  interleukin-2  LTNP  long term non-progressor  LCMV  lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus  MHC  major histocompatibility complex  PBMC  peripheral blood mononuclear cells  PD-1  programmed death 1  SIV  simian immunodeficiency virus  SFU  spot forming unit  TCR  T cell receptor  TIM-3  T cell immunoglobulin-like molecule 3
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