Modulation of TCR avidity of primary HIV-1-specific CD8 T-cell responses by early and potent antiviral therapy responses

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_4ED69DA1DA17
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Modulation of TCR avidity of primary HIV-1-specific CD8 T-cell responses by early and potent antiviral therapy responses
Title of the conference
AIDS Vaccine 2010
Author(s)
Harari A., Vlgano S., Bellutti Enders F., Cellerai C., Castro E., Cavassini M., Bart P., Pantaleo G.
Address
Atlanta, Georgia, September 28-October 1, 2010
ISBN
0889-2229
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2010
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
26
Series
Aids Research And Human Retroviruses
Pages
A7-A8
Language
english
Notes
Meeting Abstract
Abstract
Background: CD8 T-cells play a critical role in antiviral immunity. However, mechanisms of virus control and immune correlates of protection are still not fully understood. Among other factors, TCR avidity (antigen sensitivity) is thought to play a critical role. Whereas there is a large consensus that high TCR avidity T-cell responses are correlated to higher efficacy against cancer and acute viral infections, it may be not the case in chronic persistent viral infections. Methods: TCR avidity (measured by the effect concentration 50% [EC50]) of HIV-1-specific CD8 T-cell responses directed against optimal epitopes was investigated in different cohorts of HIV-1- infected subjects (n¼114) including early acute and chronic (progressive and non-progressive) HIV-1-infection. Overall, TCR avidity was investigated in 245 HIV-1-specific CD8 T-cell responses. The relationships between TCR avidity, T-cell differentiation and functional profile including cytokine secretion, proliferation and cytotoxic potential (determined by polychromatic flow cytometry) were analyzed. Results: HIV-1-specific CD8 T-cell responses from patients with acute infection had significantly lower TCR avidity as compared to patients with chronic (progressive or non-progressive) HIVinfection (P¼0.03 and 0.003, respectively). These differences
remained significant when the analyses were restricted to common epitopes (same epitopes restricted by the same class I HLA). Interestingly, some patients treated during acute infection underwent spontaneous treatment interruption. Re-exposure to high viral load induced two major effects: a) the increase in TCR avidity of pre-existing high avidity (EC50<0.01) T-cell responses (P<0.02) and b) the generation of new T-cell responses with higher TCR avidity as compared to the average pre-existing T-cell responses.
Conclusion: These results suggest that high TCR avidity T-cell responses are selected during the course of HIV-1 infection and that one of the potential driving mechanisms is continuous exposure to HIV-1 antigens. These results advance our understanding of the relationship between TCR avidity and Ag exposure of antiviral memory CD8 T-cells.
Keywords
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Web of science
Create date
20/01/2011 11:58
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:04
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