Jennes Wim, Camara Makhtar, Dièye Tandakha, Mboup Souleymane, Kestens Luc
Department of Microbiology, Laboratory of Immunology, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
J Virol. 2008 Sep;82(17):8619-28. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00027-08. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) infection results in slower CD4(+) T-cell decline, lower plasma viral load levels, and hence slower progression of the disease than does HIV-1 infection. Although the reasons for this are not clear, it is possible that HIV-2 replication is more effectively controlled by host responses. We used aligned pools of overlapping HIV-1 and HIV-2 Gag peptides in an enhanced gamma interferon enzyme-linked immunospot assay to compare the levels of homologous and cross-reactive Gag-specific T-cell responses between HIV-1- and HIV-2-infected patients. HIV-2-infected patients showed broader and stronger homologous Gag-specific T-cell responses than HIV-1-infected patients. In contrast, the cross-reactive T-cell responses in HIV-2-infected patients were both narrower and weaker than those in HIV-1-infected patients, in line with overall weaker correlations between homologous and heterologous T-cell responses among HIV-2-infected patients than among HIV-1-infected patients. Cross-reactive responses in HIV-2-infected patients tended to correlate directly with HIV-1/HIV-2 Gag sequence similarities; this was not found in HIV-1-infected patients. The CD4(+) T-cell counts of HIV-2-infected patients correlated directly with homologous responses and inversely with cross-reactive responses; this was not found in HIV-1-infected patients. Our data support a model whereby high-level HIV-2-specific T-cell responses control the replication of HIV-2, thus limiting viral diversification and priming of HIV-1 cross-reactive T-cell responses over time. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that HIV-2 replication is controlled by other host factors and that HIV-2-specific T-cell responses are better maintained in the context of slow viral divergence and a less damaged immune system. Understanding the nature of immune control of HIV-2 infection could be crucial for HIV vaccine design.
与1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染相比,2型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-2)感染导致CD4(+) T细胞下降速度较慢、血浆病毒载量水平较低,因此疾病进展也较慢。尽管其原因尚不清楚,但有可能HIV-2复制受到宿主反应更有效的控制。我们在增强型γ干扰素酶联免疫斑点试验中使用重叠的HIV-1和HIV-2 Gag肽对齐库,以比较HIV-1和HIV-2感染患者之间同源和交叉反应性Gag特异性T细胞反应的水平。与HIV-1感染患者相比,HIV-2感染患者表现出更广泛、更强的同源Gag特异性T细胞反应。相反,HIV-2感染患者的交叉反应性T细胞反应比HIV-1感染患者更窄、更弱,这与HIV-2感染患者中同源和异源T细胞反应之间的总体相关性比HIV-1感染患者中更弱一致。HIV-2感染患者的交叉反应性反应往往与HIV-1/HIV-2 Gag序列相似性直接相关;而在HIV-1感染患者中未发现这种情况。HIV-2感染患者的CD4(+) T细胞计数与同源反应直接相关,与交叉反应性反应呈负相关;在HIV-1感染患者中未发现这种情况。我们的数据支持这样一种模型,即高水平的HIV-2特异性T细胞反应控制HIV-2的复制,从而随着时间的推移限制病毒的多样性并引发HIV-1交叉反应性T细胞反应。然而,我们不能排除HIV-2复制受其他宿主因素控制以及在病毒缓慢分化和免疫系统受损较小的情况下HIV-2特异性T细胞反应得到更好维持的可能性。了解HIV-2感染免疫控制的本质对于HIV疫苗设计可能至关重要。