Allen Todd M, Altfeld Marcus, Yu Xu G, O'Sullivan Kristin M, Lichterfeld Mathias, Le Gall Sylvie, John Mina, Mothe Bianca R, Lee Paul K, Kalife Elizabeth T, Cohen Daniel E, Freedberg Kenneth A, Strick Daryld A, Johnston Mary N, Sette Alessandro, Rosenberg Eric S, Mallal Simon A, Goulder Philip J R, Brander Christian, Walker Bruce D
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Partners AIDS Research Center, Infectious Disease Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Division of AIDS, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Virol. 2004 Jul;78(13):7069-78. doi: 10.1128/JVI.78.13.7069-7078.2004.
Numerous studies now support that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution is influenced by immune selection pressure, with population studies showing an association between specific HLA alleles and mutations within defined cytotoxic T-lymphocyte epitopes. Here we combine sequence data and functional studies of CD8 T-cell responses to demonstrate that allele-specific immune pressures also select for mutations flanking CD8 epitopes that impair antigen processing. In persons expressing HLA-A3, we demonstrate consistent selection for a mutation in a C-terminal flanking residue of the normally immunodominant Gag KK9 epitope that prevents its processing and presentation, resulting in a rapid decline in the CD8 T-cell response. This single amino acid substitution also lies within a second HLA-A3-restricted epitope, with the mutation directly impairing recognition by CD8 T cells. Transmission of the mutation to subjects expressing HLA-A3 was shown to prevent the induction of normally immunodominant acute-phase responses to both epitopes. However, subsequent in vivo reversion of the mutation was coincident with delayed induction of new CD8 T-cell responses to both epitopes. These data demonstrate that mutations within the flanking region of an HIV-1 epitope can impair recognition by an established CD8 T-cell response and that transmission of these mutations alters the acute-phase CD8(+) T-cell response. Moreover, reversion of these mutations in the absence of the original immune pressure reveals the potential plasticity of immunologically selected evolutionary changes.
现在有大量研究支持,1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)的进化受免疫选择压力影响,群体研究表明特定HLA等位基因与特定细胞毒性T淋巴细胞表位内的突变之间存在关联。在此,我们结合序列数据和CD8 T细胞反应的功能研究,以证明等位基因特异性免疫压力也会选择损害抗原加工的CD8表位侧翼的突变。在表达HLA-A3的个体中,我们证明对正常免疫显性的Gag KK9表位C末端侧翼残基中的一个突变存在一致的选择,该突变阻止其加工和呈递,导致CD8 T细胞反应迅速下降。这个单氨基酸取代也位于第二个HLA-A3限制性表位内,该突变直接损害CD8 T细胞的识别。该突变向表达HLA-A3的受试者的传播表明,可阻止对这两个表位正常免疫显性的急性期反应的诱导。然而,随后该突变在体内的回复与对这两个表位新的CD8 T细胞反应的延迟诱导同时发生。这些数据表明,HIV-1表位侧翼区域内的突变可损害已建立的CD8 T细胞反应的识别,并且这些突变的传播会改变急性期CD8(+) T细胞反应。此外,在没有原始免疫压力的情况下这些突变的回复揭示了免疫选择的进化变化的潜在可塑性。