Genetic and immunologic heterogeneity among persons who control HIV infection in the absence of therapy

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Abstract

Background. Spontaneous control of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection has been documented in a minority of HIV-infected individuals. The mechanisms behind this outcome remain largely unknown, and a better understanding of them will likely influence future vaccine strategies. Methods. HIV-specific T cell and antibody responses as well as host genetics were examined in untreated HIVinfected patients who maintain comparatively low plasma HIV RNA levels (hereafter, controllers), including those with levels of < 50 RNA copies/mL (elite controllers, n = 64), those with levels of 50-2000 copies/mL (viremic controllers, n = 60); we also examined HIV-specific T cell and antibody responses as well as host genetics for patients with levels of > 10,000 copies/mL (chronic progressors, n = 30). Results. CD8+ T cells from both controller groups preferentially target Gag over other proteins in the context of diverse HLA class I alleles, whereas responses are more broadly distributed in persons with progressive infection. Elite controllers represent a distinct group of individuals who have significantly more CD4 and CD8 T cells that secrete interferon-γ and interleukin-2 and lower levels of HIV-neutralizing antibodies. Individual responses were quite heterogeneous, and none of the parameters evaluated was uniquely associated with the ability to control viremia. Conclusions. Elite controllers are a distinct group, even when compared to persons with low level viremia, but they exhibit marked genetic and immunologic heterogeneity. Even low-level viremia among HIV controllers was associated with measurable T cell dysfunction, which has implications for current prophylactic vaccine strategies. © 2008 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Pereyra, F., Addo, M. M., Kaufmann, D. E., Liu, Y., Miura, T., Rathod, A., … Walker, B. D. (2008). Genetic and immunologic heterogeneity among persons who control HIV infection in the absence of therapy. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 197(4), 563–571. https://doi.org/10.1086/526786

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