Graw Frederik, Regoes Roland R
Center for Modeling and Simulation in the Biosciences, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Virol. 2014 Sep 1;88(17):10134-45. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00647-14. Epub 2014 Jun 25.
During the chronic phase of HIV-1 infection, polyfunctional CD8+ T cell responses, which are characterized by a high frequency of cells able to secrete multiple cytokines simultaneously, are associated with lower virus loads and slower disease progression. This relationship may arise for different reasons. Polyfunctional responses may simply be stronger. Alternatively, it could be that the increased functional diversity in polyfunctional responses leads to lower virus loads and slower disease progression. Lastly, polyfunctional responses could contain more CD8+ T cells that mediate a specific key function that is primarily responsible for viral control. Disentangling the influences of overall strength, functional diversity, and specific function on viral control and disease progression is very relevant for the rational design of vaccines and immunotherapy using cellular immune responses. We developed a mathematical model to study how polyfunctional CD8+ T cell responses mediating lytic and nonlytic effector functions affect the CD4+ T cell count and plasma viral load. We based our model on in vitro data on the efficacy of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) and macrophage inflammatory protein 1β (MIP-1β)/RANTES against HIV. We find that the strength of the response is a good predictor of disease progression, while functional diversity has only a minor influence. In addition, our model predicts for realistic levels of cytotoxicity that immune responses dominated by nonlytic effector functions most positively influence disease outcome.
It is an open question in HIV research why polyfunctional CD8+ T cell responses are associated with better viral control, while individual functional correlates of protection have not been identified so far. Identifying the role of CD8+ T cells in HIV-1 infection has important implications for the potential development of effective T cell-based vaccines. Our analysis provides new ways to think about a causative role of CD8+ T cells by studying different hypotheses regarding why polyfunctional CD8+ T cells might be more advantageous. We identify measurements that have to be obtained in order to evaluate the role of CD8+ T cells in HIV-1 infection. In addition, our method shows how individual cell functionality data can be used in population-based virus dynamics models.
在HIV-1感染的慢性期,多功能CD8 + T细胞反应(其特征是能够同时分泌多种细胞因子的细胞频率较高)与较低的病毒载量和较慢的疾病进展相关。这种关系可能由于不同原因而产生。多功能反应可能只是更强。或者,可能是多功能反应中功能多样性的增加导致较低的病毒载量和较慢的疾病进展。最后,多功能反应可能包含更多介导特定关键功能的CD8 + T细胞,该功能主要负责病毒控制。理清总体强度、功能多样性和特定功能对病毒控制和疾病进展的影响,对于使用细胞免疫反应合理设计疫苗和免疫疗法非常重要。我们开发了一个数学模型来研究介导裂解和非裂解效应功能的多功能CD8 + T细胞反应如何影响CD4 + T细胞计数和血浆病毒载量。我们的模型基于关于γ干扰素(IFN-γ)和巨噬细胞炎性蛋白1β(MIP-1β)/RANTES抗HIV功效的体外数据。我们发现反应强度是疾病进展的良好预测指标,而功能多样性的影响较小。此外,我们的模型预测,对于实际的细胞毒性水平,以非裂解效应功能为主导的免疫反应对疾病结果的影响最为积极。
在HIV研究中,一个悬而未决的问题是为什么多功能CD8 + T细胞反应与更好的病毒控制相关,而迄今为止尚未确定保护的个体功能相关因素。确定CD8 + T细胞在HIV-1感染中的作用对基于T细胞的有效疫苗的潜在开发具有重要意义。我们的分析通过研究关于多功能CD8 + T细胞为何可能更具优势的不同假设,为思考CD8 + T细胞的致病作用提供了新方法。我们确定了为评估CD8 + T细胞在HIV-1感染中的作用而必须获得的测量指标。此外,我们的方法展示了如何在基于群体的病毒动力学模型中使用个体细胞功能数据。