Antigen Load and Viral Sequence Diversification Determine the Functional Profile of HIV-1–Specific CD8+ T Cells
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 6 May 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Medicine
- Vol. 5 (5), e100
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050100
Abstract
Virus-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes play a key role in the initial reduction of peak viremia during acute viral infections, but display signs of increasing dysfunction and exhaustion under conditions of chronic antigen persistence. It has been suggested that virus-specific CD8+ T cells with a “polyfunctional” profile, defined by the capacity to secrete multiple cytokines or chemokines, are most competent in controlling viral replication in chronic HIV-1 infection. We used HIV-1 infection as a model of chronic persistent viral infection to investigate the process of exhaustion and dysfunction of virus-specific CD8+ T cell responses on the single-epitope level over time, starting in primary HIV-1 infection. We longitudinally analyzed the polyfunctional epitope-specific CD8+ T cell responses of 18 patients during primary HIV-1 infection before and after therapy initiation or sequence variation in the targeted epitope. Epitope-specific CD8+ T cells responded with multiple effector functions to antigenic stimulation during primary HIV-1 infection, but lost their polyfunctional capacity in response to antigen and up-regulated programmed death 1 (PD-1) expression with persistent viremic infection. This exhausted phenotype significantly decreased upon removal of stimulation by antigen, either in response to antiretroviral therapy or by reduction of epitope-specific antigen load in the presence of ongoing viral replication, as a consequence of in vivo selection of cytotoxic T lymphocyte escape mutations in the respective epitopes. Monofunctionality increased in CD8+ T cell responses directed against conserved epitopes from 49% (95% confidence interval 27%–72%) to 76% (56%–95%) (standard deviation [SD] of the effect size 0.71), while monofunctionality remained stable or slightly decreased for responses directed against escaped epitopes from 61% (47%–75%) to 56% (42%–70%) (SD of the effect size 0.18) (p < 0.05). These data suggest that persistence of antigen can be the cause, rather than the consequence, of the functional impairment of virus-specific T cell responses observed during chronic HIV-1 infection, and underscore the importance of evaluating autologous viral sequences in studies aimed at investigating the relationship between virus-specific immunity and associated pathogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heterogeneity and Cell-Fate Decisions in Effector and Memory CD8+ T Cell Differentiation during Viral InfectionImmunity, 2007
- SIV-specific CD8+ T cells express high levels of PD1 and cytokines but have impaired proliferative capacity in acute and chronic SIVmac251 infectionBlood, 2007
- Immunization with vaccinia virus induces polyfunctional and phenotypically distinctive CD8+ T cell responsesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2007
- Viral antigen and extensive division maintain virus-specific CD8 T cells during chronic infectionThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2007
- PD-1 is a regulator of virus-specific CD8+ T cell survival in HIV infectionThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- Immunology of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus infectionNature Reviews Immunology, 2005
- Inverse correlation between IL‐7 receptor expression and CD8 T cell exhaustion during persistent antigen stimulationEuropean Journal of Immunology, 2005
- Limited Durability of Viral Control following Treated Acute HIV InfectionPLoS Medicine, 2004
- HIV-1–specific cytotoxicity is preferentially mediated by a subset of CD8+ T cells producing both interferon-γ and tumor necrosis factor–αBlood, 2004
- Memory CD8 T-Cell Differentiation during Viral InfectionJournal of Virology, 2004