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Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection

Genetic and immunologic analyses of epidemiologically-linked HIV transmission enable insights into the impact of immune responses on clinical outcomes. Human vaccine trials and animal studies of HIV-1 infection have suggested immune correlates of protection; however, their role in natural infection...

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Autores principales: Tuen, Michael, Bimela, Jude S., Banin, Andrew N., Ding, Shilei, Harkins, Gordon W., Weiss, Svenja, Itri, Vincenza, Durham, Allison R., Porcella, Stephen F., Soni, Sonal, Mayr, Luzia, Meli, Josephine, Torimiro, Judith N., Tongo, Marcel, Wang, Xiaohong, Kong, Xiang-Peng, Nádas, Arthur, Kaufmann, Daniel E., Brumme, Zabrina L., Nanfack, Aubin J., Quinn, Thomas C., Zolla-Pazner, Susan, Redd, Andrew D., Finzi, Andrés, Gorny, Miroslaw K., Nyambi, Phillipe N., Duerr, Ralf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6527802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31139189
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01062
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author Tuen, Michael
Bimela, Jude S.
Banin, Andrew N.
Ding, Shilei
Harkins, Gordon W.
Weiss, Svenja
Itri, Vincenza
Durham, Allison R.
Porcella, Stephen F.
Soni, Sonal
Mayr, Luzia
Meli, Josephine
Torimiro, Judith N.
Tongo, Marcel
Wang, Xiaohong
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Nádas, Arthur
Kaufmann, Daniel E.
Brumme, Zabrina L.
Nanfack, Aubin J.
Quinn, Thomas C.
Zolla-Pazner, Susan
Redd, Andrew D.
Finzi, Andrés
Gorny, Miroslaw K.
Nyambi, Phillipe N.
Duerr, Ralf
author_facet Tuen, Michael
Bimela, Jude S.
Banin, Andrew N.
Ding, Shilei
Harkins, Gordon W.
Weiss, Svenja
Itri, Vincenza
Durham, Allison R.
Porcella, Stephen F.
Soni, Sonal
Mayr, Luzia
Meli, Josephine
Torimiro, Judith N.
Tongo, Marcel
Wang, Xiaohong
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Nádas, Arthur
Kaufmann, Daniel E.
Brumme, Zabrina L.
Nanfack, Aubin J.
Quinn, Thomas C.
Zolla-Pazner, Susan
Redd, Andrew D.
Finzi, Andrés
Gorny, Miroslaw K.
Nyambi, Phillipe N.
Duerr, Ralf
author_sort Tuen, Michael
collection PubMed
description Genetic and immunologic analyses of epidemiologically-linked HIV transmission enable insights into the impact of immune responses on clinical outcomes. Human vaccine trials and animal studies of HIV-1 infection have suggested immune correlates of protection; however, their role in natural infection in terms of protection from disease progression is mostly unknown. Four HIV-1(+) Cameroonian individuals, three of them epidemiologically-linked in a polygamous heterosexual relationship and one incidence-matched case, were studied over 15 years for heterologous and cross-neutralizing antibody responses, antibody binding, IgA/IgG levels, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against cells expressing wild-type or CD4-bound Env, viral evolution, Env epitopes, and host factors including HLA-I alleles. Despite viral infection with related strains, the members of the transmission cluster experienced contrasting clinical outcomes including cases of rapid progression and long-term non-progression in the absence of strongly protective HLA-I or CCR5Δ32 alleles. Slower progression and higher CD4/CD8 ratios were associated with enhanced IgG antibody binding to native Env and stronger V1V2 antibody binding responses in the presence of viruses with residue K169 in V2. ADCC against cells expressing Env in the CD4-bound conformation in combination with low Env-specific IgA/IgG ratios correlated with better clinical outcome. This data set highlights for the first time that V1V2-directed antibody responses and ADCC against cells expressing open, CD4-exposed Env, in the presence of low plasma IgA/IgG ratios, can correlate with clinical outcome in natural infection. These parameters are comparable to the major correlates of protection, identified post-hoc in the RV144 vaccine trial; thus, they may also modulate the rate of clinical progression once infected. The findings illustrate the potential of immune correlate analysis in natural infection to guide vaccine development.
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spelling pubmed-65278022019-05-28 Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection Tuen, Michael Bimela, Jude S. Banin, Andrew N. Ding, Shilei Harkins, Gordon W. Weiss, Svenja Itri, Vincenza Durham, Allison R. Porcella, Stephen F. Soni, Sonal Mayr, Luzia Meli, Josephine Torimiro, Judith N. Tongo, Marcel Wang, Xiaohong Kong, Xiang-Peng Nádas, Arthur Kaufmann, Daniel E. Brumme, Zabrina L. Nanfack, Aubin J. Quinn, Thomas C. Zolla-Pazner, Susan Redd, Andrew D. Finzi, Andrés Gorny, Miroslaw K. Nyambi, Phillipe N. Duerr, Ralf Front Immunol Immunology Genetic and immunologic analyses of epidemiologically-linked HIV transmission enable insights into the impact of immune responses on clinical outcomes. Human vaccine trials and animal studies of HIV-1 infection have suggested immune correlates of protection; however, their role in natural infection in terms of protection from disease progression is mostly unknown. Four HIV-1(+) Cameroonian individuals, three of them epidemiologically-linked in a polygamous heterosexual relationship and one incidence-matched case, were studied over 15 years for heterologous and cross-neutralizing antibody responses, antibody binding, IgA/IgG levels, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against cells expressing wild-type or CD4-bound Env, viral evolution, Env epitopes, and host factors including HLA-I alleles. Despite viral infection with related strains, the members of the transmission cluster experienced contrasting clinical outcomes including cases of rapid progression and long-term non-progression in the absence of strongly protective HLA-I or CCR5Δ32 alleles. Slower progression and higher CD4/CD8 ratios were associated with enhanced IgG antibody binding to native Env and stronger V1V2 antibody binding responses in the presence of viruses with residue K169 in V2. ADCC against cells expressing Env in the CD4-bound conformation in combination with low Env-specific IgA/IgG ratios correlated with better clinical outcome. This data set highlights for the first time that V1V2-directed antibody responses and ADCC against cells expressing open, CD4-exposed Env, in the presence of low plasma IgA/IgG ratios, can correlate with clinical outcome in natural infection. These parameters are comparable to the major correlates of protection, identified post-hoc in the RV144 vaccine trial; thus, they may also modulate the rate of clinical progression once infected. The findings illustrate the potential of immune correlate analysis in natural infection to guide vaccine development. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-05-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6527802/ /pubmed/31139189 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01062 Text en Copyright © 2019 Tuen, Bimela, Banin, Ding, Harkins, Weiss, Itri, Durham, Porcella, Soni, Mayr, Meli, Torimiro, Tongo, Wang, Kong, Nádas, Kaufmann, Brumme, Nanfack, Quinn, Zolla-Pazner, Redd, Finzi, Gorny, Nyambi and Duerr. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Tuen, Michael
Bimela, Jude S.
Banin, Andrew N.
Ding, Shilei
Harkins, Gordon W.
Weiss, Svenja
Itri, Vincenza
Durham, Allison R.
Porcella, Stephen F.
Soni, Sonal
Mayr, Luzia
Meli, Josephine
Torimiro, Judith N.
Tongo, Marcel
Wang, Xiaohong
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Nádas, Arthur
Kaufmann, Daniel E.
Brumme, Zabrina L.
Nanfack, Aubin J.
Quinn, Thomas C.
Zolla-Pazner, Susan
Redd, Andrew D.
Finzi, Andrés
Gorny, Miroslaw K.
Nyambi, Phillipe N.
Duerr, Ralf
Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title_full Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title_fullStr Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title_full_unstemmed Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title_short Immune Correlates of Disease Progression in Linked HIV-1 Infection
title_sort immune correlates of disease progression in linked hiv-1 infection
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6527802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31139189
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01062
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