Control of HIV-1 Replication by CD8 + T Cells Specific for Two Novel Pol Protective Epitopes in HIV-1 Subtype A/E Infection

  • Nguyen H
  • Kuse N
  • Zhang Y
  • et al.
0Citations
Citations of this article
5Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

It is expected that HIV-1-specific CD8 + T cells that effectively suppress HIV-1 replication will contribute to HIV-1 vaccine development and therapy to achieve an HIV cure. T cells specific for protective epitopes were identified in HIV-1 subtype B and C infections but not in subtype A/E infection, which is epidemic in Southeast Asia. Although many HIV-1-specific CD8 + T cell epitopes have been identified and used in various HIV-1 studies, most of these epitopes were derived from HIV-1 subtypes B and C. Only 17 well-defined epitopes, none of which were protective, have been identified for subtype A/E infection. The roles of HIV-1-specific T cells have been rarely analyzed for subtype A/E infection. In this study, we identified six novel HLA-B*15:02-restricted optimal HIV-1 subtype A/E epitopes and then analyzed the presentation of these epitopes by HIV-1 subtype A/E virus-infected cells and the T cell responses to these epitopes in treatment-naive HIV-1 subtype A/E-infected HLA-B*15:02 + Vietnamese individuals. Responders to the PolTY9 or PolLF10 epitope had a significantly lower plasma viral load (pVL) than nonresponders among HLA-B*15:02 + individuals, whereas no significant difference in pVL was found between responders to four other epitopes and nonresponders. The breadth of T cell responses to these two Pol epitopes correlated inversely with pVL. These findings suggest that HLA-B*15:02-restricted T cells specific for PolTY9 and PolLF10 contribute to the suppression of HIV-1 replication in HLA-B*15:02 + individuals. The HLA-B*15:02-associated mutation Pol266I reduced the recognition of PolTY9-specific T cells in vitro but did not affect HIV-1 replication by PolTY9-specific T cells in Pol266I mutant virus-infected individuals. These findings indicate that PolTY9-specific T cells suppress replication of the Pol266I mutant virus even though the T cells selected this mutant. This study demonstrates the effective role of T cells specific for these Pol epitopes to control circulating viruses in HIV-1 subtype A/E infection. IMPORTANCE It is expected that HIV-1-specific CD8 + T cells that effectively suppress HIV-1 replication will contribute to HIV-1 vaccine development and therapy to achieve an HIV cure. T cells specific for protective epitopes were identified in HIV-1 subtype B and C infections but not in subtype A/E infection, which is epidemic in Southeast Asia. In the present study, we identified six T cell epitopes derived from the subtype A/E virus and demonstrated that T cells specific for two Pol epitopes effectively suppressed HIV-1 replication in treatment-naive Vietnamese individuals infected with HIV-1 subtype A/E. One of these Pol protective epitopes was conserved among circulating viruses, and one escape mutation was accumulated in the other epitope. This mutation did not critically affect HIV-1 control by specific T cells in HIV-1 subtype A/E-infected individuals. This study identified two protective Pol epitopes and characterized them in cases of HIV-1 subtype A/E infection.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Nguyen, H. T., Kuse, N., Zhang, Y., Murakoshi, H., Maeda, Y., Tamura, Y., … Takiguchi, M. (2022). Control of HIV-1 Replication by CD8 + T Cells Specific for Two Novel Pol Protective Epitopes in HIV-1 Subtype A/E Infection. Journal of Virology, 96(19). https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00811-22

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free