Horton Helen, Havenar-Daughton Colin, Lee Deborah, Moore Erin, Cao Jianhong, McNevin John, Andrus Thomas, Zhu Haiying, Rubin Abbe, Zhu Tuofu, Celum Connie, McElrath M Juliana
Program in Infectious Diseases, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1100 Fairview Ave. N D3-100, Seattle, WA 98109, USA.
J Virol. 2006 Oct;80(19):9779-88. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00794-06.
Candidate human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccines designed to elicit T-cell immunity in HIV-1-uninfected persons are under investigation in phase I to III clinical trials. Little is known about how these vaccines impact the immunologic response postinfection in persons who break through despite vaccination. Here, we describe the first comprehensive characterization of HIV-specific T-cell immunity in vaccine study participants following breakthrough HIV-1 infection in comparison to 16 nonvaccinated subjects with primary HIV-1 infection. Whereas none of the 16 breakthrough infections possessed vaccine-induced HIV-1-specific T-cell responses preinfection, 85% of vaccinees and 86% of nonvaccinees with primary HIV-1 infection developed HIV-specific T-cell responses postinfection. Breakthrough subjects' T cells recognized 43 unique HIV-1 T-cell epitopes, of which 8 are newly described, and 25% were present in the vaccine. The frequencies of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma)-secreting cells recognizing epitopes within gene products that were and were not encoded by the vaccine were not different (P = 0.64), which suggests that responses were not anamnestic. Epitopes within Nef and Gag proteins were the most commonly recognized in both vaccinated and nonvaccinated infected subjects. One individual controlled viral replication without antiretroviral therapy and, notably, mounted a novel HIV-specific HLA-C14-restricted Gag LYNTVATL-specific T-cell response. Longitudinally, HIV-specific T cells in this individual were able to secrete IFN-gamma and tumor necrosis factor alpha, as well as proliferate and degranulate in response to their cognate antigenic peptides up to 5 years postinfection. In conclusion, a vaccinee's ability to mount an HIV-specific T-cell response postinfection is not compromised by previous immunization, since the CD8+ T-cell responses postinfection are similar to those seen in vaccine-naïve individuals. Finding an individual who is controlling infection highlights the importance of comprehensive studies of breakthrough infections in vaccine trials to determine whether host genetics/immune responses and/or viral characteristics are responsible for controlling viral replication.
旨在在未感染人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)的人群中引发T细胞免疫的候选HIV-1疫苗正处于I期至III期临床试验阶段。对于这些疫苗如何影响尽管接种了疫苗但仍发生感染的人群感染后的免疫反应,我们了解甚少。在此,我们描述了疫苗研究参与者在HIV-1突破性感染后HIV特异性T细胞免疫的首次全面特征分析,并与16名原发性HIV-1感染的未接种疫苗受试者进行了比较。16例突破性感染中,没有一例在感染前具有疫苗诱导的HIV-1特异性T细胞反应,而85%的接种疫苗者和86%的原发性HIV-1感染未接种疫苗者在感染后产生了HIV特异性T细胞反应。突破性感染受试者的T细胞识别出43个独特的HIV-1 T细胞表位,其中8个是新描述的,25%存在于疫苗中。识别疫苗编码和未编码基因产物内表位的γ干扰素(IFN-γ)分泌细胞频率无差异(P = 0.64),这表明这些反应不是回忆性的。Nef和Gag蛋白内的表位在接种疫苗和未接种疫苗的感染受试者中最常被识别。一名个体在未接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的情况下控制了病毒复制,值得注意的是,该个体产生了一种新的HIV特异性HLA-C14限制性Gag LYNTVATL特异性T细胞反应。纵向来看,该个体的HIV特异性T细胞在感染后长达5年的时间里能够分泌IFN-γ和肿瘤坏死因子α,以及对其同源抗原肽作出反应而增殖和脱颗粒。总之,接种疫苗者在感染后产生HIV特异性T细胞反应的能力不会因先前的免疫接种而受损,因为感染后的CD8 + T细胞反应与未接种疫苗个体中的反应相似。发现一名能够控制感染的个体凸显了在疫苗试验中对突破性感染进行全面研究的重要性,以确定宿主遗传学/免疫反应和/或病毒特征是否负责控制病毒复制。