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HIV-1-specific CD8(+) T cells are present in most HIV-1-infected people and play an important role in controlling viral replication, but the characteristics of an effective HIV-specific T-cell response are largely unknown. The majority of HIV-2-infected people behave as long-term non-progressors while those who progress to AIDS do so in a manner indistinguishable from HIV-1. A detailed study of HIV-2 infection may identify protective immune responses. Robust gag p26-specific T-cell responses are elicited during HIV-2 infection and correlate with control of viremia. In this study, we analyzed features of an HLA-B 3501-restricted T-cell response to HIV-2 p26 that may contribute to virus control. In contrast to HIV-1, HIV-2-specific T cells are at an early stage of differentiation (CD27(+)CD28(+)), a finding that relates directly to CD4(+) T-cell levels and inversely to immune activation. The cells demonstrate IFN-gamma secretion, oligoclonal T-cell receptor Vbeta gene segment usage, exceptional avidity and secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Despite the potentially strong selection pressure imposed on the virus by these cells, there was no evidence of HIV-2 sequence evolution. We propose that in chronic HIV-2 infection, the maintenance of early-differentiated, highly avid CD8(+) T cells could account for the non-progressive course of disease. Such responses may be desirable from an HIV vaccine.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/eji.200940295

Type

Journal article

Journal

European journal of immunology

Publication Date

07/2010

Volume

40

Pages

1963 - 1972

Addresses

Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, Medical Research Council Human Immunology Unit, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK. aleksandra.leligdowicz@mail.mcgill.ca

Keywords

CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Clone Cells, HIV-2, HIV Infections, Chronic Disease, Disease Progression, Antigens, Differentiation, Antigens, CD, AIDS Vaccines, HLA-B Antigens, HLA-B35 Antigen, Cytokines, Histocompatibility Testing, Cell Count, Immunophenotyping, Lymphocyte Activation, Cell Differentiation, T-Cell Antigen Receptor Specificity, Genes, T-Cell Receptor, gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus