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Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele

Rare HLA alleles such as HLA-B57 are associated with slow progression to AIDS. However, the evidence for the advantage of rare protective alleles is limited, and the mechanism is still unclear. Although the prevalence of HLA-B*67:01 is only 1.2% in Japan, HLA-B*67:01-positive (HLA-B*67:01(+)) indivi...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Yu, Chikata, Takayuki, Kuse, Nozomi, Murakoshi, Hayato, Gatanaga, Hiroyuki, Oka, Shinichi, Takiguchi, Masafumi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9683060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36326273
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01248-22
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author Zhang, Yu
Chikata, Takayuki
Kuse, Nozomi
Murakoshi, Hayato
Gatanaga, Hiroyuki
Oka, Shinichi
Takiguchi, Masafumi
author_facet Zhang, Yu
Chikata, Takayuki
Kuse, Nozomi
Murakoshi, Hayato
Gatanaga, Hiroyuki
Oka, Shinichi
Takiguchi, Masafumi
author_sort Zhang, Yu
collection PubMed
description Rare HLA alleles such as HLA-B57 are associated with slow progression to AIDS. However, the evidence for the advantage of rare protective alleles is limited, and the mechanism is still unclear. Although the prevalence of HLA-B*67:01 is only 1.2% in Japan, HLA-B*67:01-positive (HLA-B*67:01(+)) individuals had the lowest plasma viral load (pVL) and highest CD4 count in HIV-1 clade B-infected Japanese individuals. We investigated the mechanism of immunological control of HIV-1 by a rare protective allele, HLA-B*67:01. We identified six novel HLA-B*67:01-restricted epitopes and found that T cells specific for four epitopes were significantly associated with good clinical outcomes, pVL and/or CD4 count. The wild type or cross-reactive sequences of three protective and immunodominant Pol and Gag epitopes were found in around 95% of the circulating HIV-1, indicating that T cells specific for three conserved or cross-reactive epitopes contributed to good clinical outcomes. One escape mutation (Nef71K) in the Nef protective epitope, which was selected by T cells restricted by either HLA allele in the HLA-B*67:01-C*07:02 haplotype, affected the HLA-B*67:01-restricted RY11-specific T-cell recognition. These results imply that the further accumulation of the Nef71K mutation in the population will negatively affect the control of HIV-1 replication by RY11-specific CD8(+) T cells in HIV-1-infected HLA-B*67:01(+) individuals. The present study demonstrated that conserved or cross-reactive epitope-specific T cells mainly contribute to control of HIV-1 by a rare protective allele, HLA-B*67:01. IMPORTANCE HLA-B57 is a relatively rare allele around world and the strongest protective HLA allele in Caucasians and African black individuals infected with HIV-1. Previous studies suggested that the advantage of this allele in HIV-1 disease progression is due to a strong functional ability of HLA-B57-restricted Gag-specific T cells and lower fitness of mutant viruses selected by the T cells. HLA-B*57 is a very rare allele and has not been reported as a protective allele in Asian countries, whereas a rare allele, HLA-B*67:01, was shown to be a protective allele in Japan. Therefore, the analysis of HLA-B*67:01-restricted T cells is important to clarify the mechanism of immunological control of HIV-1 by a rare protective HLA allele in Asia. We found that HLA-B*67:01-restricted T cells specific for three conserved or cross-reactive Gag and Pol epitopes are associated with good clinical outcomes in HLA-B*67:01(+) individuals. It is expected that T cells specific for conserved or cross-reactive epitopes contribute to a curing treatment.
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spelling pubmed-96830602022-11-24 Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele Zhang, Yu Chikata, Takayuki Kuse, Nozomi Murakoshi, Hayato Gatanaga, Hiroyuki Oka, Shinichi Takiguchi, Masafumi J Virol Pathogenesis and Immunity Rare HLA alleles such as HLA-B57 are associated with slow progression to AIDS. However, the evidence for the advantage of rare protective alleles is limited, and the mechanism is still unclear. Although the prevalence of HLA-B*67:01 is only 1.2% in Japan, HLA-B*67:01-positive (HLA-B*67:01(+)) individuals had the lowest plasma viral load (pVL) and highest CD4 count in HIV-1 clade B-infected Japanese individuals. We investigated the mechanism of immunological control of HIV-1 by a rare protective allele, HLA-B*67:01. We identified six novel HLA-B*67:01-restricted epitopes and found that T cells specific for four epitopes were significantly associated with good clinical outcomes, pVL and/or CD4 count. The wild type or cross-reactive sequences of three protective and immunodominant Pol and Gag epitopes were found in around 95% of the circulating HIV-1, indicating that T cells specific for three conserved or cross-reactive epitopes contributed to good clinical outcomes. One escape mutation (Nef71K) in the Nef protective epitope, which was selected by T cells restricted by either HLA allele in the HLA-B*67:01-C*07:02 haplotype, affected the HLA-B*67:01-restricted RY11-specific T-cell recognition. These results imply that the further accumulation of the Nef71K mutation in the population will negatively affect the control of HIV-1 replication by RY11-specific CD8(+) T cells in HIV-1-infected HLA-B*67:01(+) individuals. The present study demonstrated that conserved or cross-reactive epitope-specific T cells mainly contribute to control of HIV-1 by a rare protective allele, HLA-B*67:01. IMPORTANCE HLA-B57 is a relatively rare allele around world and the strongest protective HLA allele in Caucasians and African black individuals infected with HIV-1. Previous studies suggested that the advantage of this allele in HIV-1 disease progression is due to a strong functional ability of HLA-B57-restricted Gag-specific T cells and lower fitness of mutant viruses selected by the T cells. HLA-B*57 is a very rare allele and has not been reported as a protective allele in Asian countries, whereas a rare allele, HLA-B*67:01, was shown to be a protective allele in Japan. Therefore, the analysis of HLA-B*67:01-restricted T cells is important to clarify the mechanism of immunological control of HIV-1 by a rare protective HLA allele in Asia. We found that HLA-B*67:01-restricted T cells specific for three conserved or cross-reactive Gag and Pol epitopes are associated with good clinical outcomes in HLA-B*67:01(+) individuals. It is expected that T cells specific for conserved or cross-reactive epitopes contribute to a curing treatment. American Society for Microbiology 2022-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9683060/ /pubmed/36326273 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01248-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Zhang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Pathogenesis and Immunity
Zhang, Yu
Chikata, Takayuki
Kuse, Nozomi
Murakoshi, Hayato
Gatanaga, Hiroyuki
Oka, Shinichi
Takiguchi, Masafumi
Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title_full Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title_fullStr Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title_full_unstemmed Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title_short Immunological Control of HIV-1 Disease Progression by Rare Protective HLA Allele
title_sort immunological control of hiv-1 disease progression by rare protective hla allele
topic Pathogenesis and Immunity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9683060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36326273
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01248-22
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