Intra- and inter-clade cross-reactivity by HIV-1 gag specific T-cells reveals exclusive and commonly targeted regions : implications for current vaccine trials
Files
Date
2011-10-12
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The genetic diversity of HIV-1 across the globe is a major challenge for developing an HIV vaccine. To facilitate immunogen
design, it is important to characterize clusters of commonly targeted T-cell epitopes across different HIV clades. To address
this, we examined 39 HIV-1 clade C infected individuals for IFN-c Gag-specific T-cell responses using five sets of overlapping
peptides, two sets matching clade C vaccine candidates derived from strains from South Africa and China, and three peptide
sets corresponding to consensus clades A, B, and D sequences. The magnitude and breadth of T-cell responses against the
two clade C peptide sets did not differ, however clade C peptides were preferentially recognized compared to the other
peptide sets. A total of 84 peptides were recognized, of which 19 were exclusively from clade C, 8 exclusively from clade B,
one peptide each from A and D and 17 were commonly recognized by clade A, B, C and D. The entropy of the exclusively
recognized peptides was significantly higher than that of commonly recognized peptides (p = 0.0128) and the median
peptide processing scores were significantly higher for the peptide variants recognized versus those not recognized
(p = 0.0001). Consistent with these results, the predicted Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I IC50 values were
significantly lower for the recognized peptide variants compared to those not recognized in the ELISPOT assay (p,0.0001),
suggesting that peptide variation between clades, resulting in lack of cross-clade recognition, has been shaped by host
immune selection pressure. Overall, our study shows that clade C infected individuals recognize clade C peptides with
greater frequency and higher magnitude than other clades, and that a selection of highly conserved epitope regions within
Gag are commonly recognized and give rise to cross-clade reactivities.
Description
CITATION: Zembe, L., et al. 2011. Intra- and inter-clade cross-reactivity by HIV-1 gag specific T-cells reveals exclusive and commonly targeted regions : implications for current vaccine trials. PLoS ONE, 6(10): 1-12, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026096.
The original publication is available at http://journals.plos.org/plosone
The original publication is available at http://journals.plos.org/plosone
Keywords
Vaccines -- Testing, Immunogen design, T-cell -- Epitopes, HIV (Viruses), HIV-1 clade C, IFN-c Gag-specific T-cell
Citation
Zembe, L., et al. 2011. Intra- and inter-clade cross-reactivity by HIV-1 gag specific T-cells reveals exclusive and commonly targeted regions : implications for current vaccine trials. PLoS ONE, 6(10): 1-12, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026096