Bell S J, Geczy A F, Russell-Jones G J, Croft S, Cooper D A, Penny R
Centre for Immunology, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
AIDS. 1993 Jun;7(6):807-12. doi: 10.1097/00002030-199306000-00008.
To evaluate the potential of TraT to restore HIV-specific cell-mediated immunity.
CD4+ T cell-associated antiviral and recall antigen-specific lymphoproliferative responses are generally impaired or absent in HIV-infected individuals.
Using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from a group of asymptomatic and symptomatic HIV-infected individuals, we compared the immunomodulatory effects of exogenous interleukin-2 (IL-2) with the effects elicited by the bacterial integral membrane protein, TraT.
Exogenous IL-2 enhanced lymphoproliferation induced by an immunodominant synthetic HIV gp41 analogue, gp41[8] (amino acids 593-604), in four out of 10 asymptomatics and six out of 19 symptomatics. In contrast, TraT acted synergistically with gp41[8] to augment HIV-specific proliferation with higher frequency and greater magnitude than exogenous IL-2. Moreover, this TraT-mediated enhancement of HIV-specific lymphoproliferation occurred in the majority of HIV-infected individuals, irrespective of CD4+ T-cell count in peripheral blood or disease status, and thus appears not to be major histocompatibility complex-restricted. TraT also augmented lymphoproliferation induced by well-known recall antigens and other less immunodominant HIV analogues.
These findings suggest that TraT, in combination with HIV-derived peptides, could be used to maintain or restore cell-mediated immune functions of HIV-infected individuals, as well as cellular immune functions in individuals suffering from other immunodeficiency disorders.