Allen Todd M, Altfeld Marcus, Geer Shaun C, Kalife Elizabeth T, Moore Corey, O'sullivan Kristin M, Desouza Ivna, Feeney Margaret E, Eldridge Robert L, Maier Erica L, Kaufmann Daniel E, Lahaie Matthew P, Reyor Laura, Tanzi Giancarlo, Johnston Mary N, Brander Christian, Draenert Rika, Rockstroh Jurgen K, Jessen Heiko, Rosenberg Eric S, Mallal Simon A, Walker Bruce D
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Partners AIDS Research Center, and Infectious Disease Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02129, USA.
J Virol. 2005 Nov;79(21):13239-49. doi: 10.1128/JVI.79.21.13239-13249.2005.
The sequence diversity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) represents a major obstacle to the development of an effective vaccine, yet the forces impacting the evolution of this pathogen remain unclear. To address this issue we assessed the relationship between genome-wide viral evolution and adaptive CD8+ T-cell responses in four clade B virus-infected patients studied longitudinally for as long as 5 years after acute infection. Of the 98 amino acid mutations identified in nonenvelope antigens, 53% were associated with detectable CD8+ T-cell responses, indicative of positive selective immune pressures. An additional 18% of amino acid mutations represented substitutions toward common clade B consensus sequence residues, nine of which were strongly associated with HLA class I alleles not expressed by the subjects and thus indicative of reversions of transmitted CD8 escape mutations. Thus, nearly two-thirds of all mutations were attributable to CD8+ T-cell selective pressures. A closer examination of CD8 escape mutations in additional persons with chronic disease indicated that not only did immune pressures frequently result in selection of identical amino acid substitutions in mutating epitopes, but mutating residues also correlated with highly polymorphic sites in both clade B and C viruses. These data indicate a dominant role for cellular immune selective pressures in driving both individual and global HIV-1 evolution. The stereotypic nature of acquired mutations provides support for biochemical constraints limiting HIV-1 evolution and for the impact of CD8 escape mutations on viral fitness.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)的序列多样性是有效疫苗研发的主要障碍,然而影响这种病原体进化的因素仍不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们评估了4名B亚型病毒感染患者全基因组病毒进化与适应性CD8+ T细胞反应之间的关系,这些患者在急性感染后进行了长达5年的纵向研究。在非包膜抗原中鉴定出的98个氨基酸突变中,53%与可检测到的CD8+ T细胞反应相关,表明存在阳性选择性免疫压力。另外18%的氨基酸突变代表向常见B亚型共有序列残基的替换,其中9个与受试者未表达的HLA I类等位基因强烈相关,因此表明传播的CD8逃逸突变发生了逆转。因此,几乎三分之二的突变可归因于CD8+ T细胞的选择性压力。对其他慢性病患者的CD8逃逸突变进行更深入研究表明,免疫压力不仅经常导致在突变表位中选择相同的氨基酸替换,而且突变残基还与B亚型和C亚型病毒中的高度多态性位点相关。这些数据表明细胞免疫选择性压力在驱动个体和全球HIV-1进化中起主导作用。获得性突变的刻板性质为限制HIV-1进化的生化限制以及CD8逃逸突变对病毒适应性的影响提供了支持。