Koeppe John R, Campbell Thomas B, Rapaport Eric L, Wilson Cara C
Division of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Immunology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2006 Feb 1;41(2):140-8. doi: 10.1097/01.qai.0000195608.32885.38.
To determine whether increased sequence variation occurs in regions of endogenous HIV-1 targeted by HIV-1-specific CD4 T cells. The presence of increased variation would be suggestive of immune evasion by HIV-1.
We performed a cross-sectional study of untreated HIV-1-infected subjects measuring HIV-1-specific interferon (IFN)-gamma-secreting CD4 T-cell responses against epitopes in Gag p17 and p24 and concurrent endogenous plasma HIV-1 RNA epitope sequence variation.
CD8- depleted IFNgamma enzyme-linked immunospot assays were used to identify regions of HIV-1 Gag recognized by CD4 T cells. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and TA cloning were used to sequence endogenous plasma HIV-1 virus and identify variants.
CD4 T-cell epitopes in Gag p17 and p24 were identified in 5 individuals, and concurrent sequence information on endogenous HIV-1 was obtained in 4 of these individuals. Endogenous plasma HIV-1 RNA sequencing revealed no intrapatient amino acid sequence variation through identified epitopes.
In these chronically infected viremic subjects, circulating IFNgamma-secreting CD4 T-cell responses were directed against epitope sequences found in the predominant strain of endogenous circulating plasma HIV-1, suggesting that escape from CD4 T-cell responses is not a common process in vivo.
确定在HIV-1特异性CD4 T细胞靶向的内源性HIV-1区域是否会出现序列变异增加的情况。变异增加的存在提示HIV-1可能存在免疫逃逸。
我们对未经治疗的HIV-1感染受试者进行了一项横断面研究,测量针对Gag p17和p24表位的HIV-1特异性分泌干扰素(IFN)-γ的CD4 T细胞反应以及同时期内源性血浆HIV-1 RNA表位序列变异情况。
采用去除CD8细胞的IFNγ酶联免疫斑点试验来识别CD4 T细胞识别的HIV-1 Gag区域。利用逆转录聚合酶链反应和TA克隆对内源性血浆HIV-1病毒进行测序并鉴定变异体。
在5名个体中鉴定出Gag p17和p24中的CD4 T细胞表位,其中4名个体获得了内源性HIV-1的同期序列信息。内源性血浆HIV-1 RNA测序显示,在已识别的表位中未发现患者体内氨基酸序列变异。
在这些慢性感染且病毒血症的受试者中,循环中分泌IFNγ的CD4 T细胞反应针对的是内源性循环血浆HIV-1主要毒株中发现的表位序列,这表明在体内逃避CD4 T细胞反应并非常见过程。