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A CD8+ cell-mediated host defense relies on cognate killing of infected target cells and on local inflammation induced by the secretion of IFN-g. Using assays of single cell resolution, it was studied to what extent these two effector function of CD8+ cells are linked. Granzyme B (GzB) is stored in cytolytic granules of CD8+ cells and its secretion is induced by antigen recognition of these cells. Following entry into the cytosol GzB induces apoptosis in the target cells. It was measured whether GzB release by individual CD8+ cells is accompanied by the secretion of IFN-gƒnƒnand of other cytokines. HIV peptide libraries were tested on bulk peripheral blood mononuclear cells and on purified CD4+ and CD8+ cells obtained from HIV infected individuals. The library included a panel of previously defined HLA class I restricted HIV peptides and an overlapping 20-mer peptide-series that covered the entire gp120 molecule. To characterize the in vivo differentiation state of the T-cells, freshly isolated lymphocytes were tested in assays of 24h duration. The data showed that only ~20% of the peptides triggered the release of both GzB and IFN-g from CD8+ cells. The majority of the HIV peptides induced either GzB or IFN-g, ~40% in each category. The GzB positive, IFN-g negative CD8+ cells did not produce IL-4 or IL-5, which suggests that they do not correspond to Tc2 cells but represent a novel Tc1 subclass, which was termed Tc1c. Also the IFN-g positive, GzB negative CD8+ cell subpopulation represents a yet undefined CD8+ effector cell lineage that was termed Tc1b. Tc1b and Tc1c cells are likely to make different, possibly antagonistic contributions to the control of HIV infection. Since IFN-g activates HIV replication in latently infected macrophages, the secretion of this cytokine by Tc1b cells in the absence of killing may have adverse effects on the host defense. In contrast, cytolysis by Tc1c cells in the absence of IFN-g production might represent the protective class of response. Further studies in the field of Tc1 effector cell diversity should lead to valuable insights for management of infections and developing rationales for vaccine design.
The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is currently the most infectious disease worldwide. It is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). At the moment there are ~33.3 million people infected with HIV. Sub-Saharan Africa, with ~22.5 million people infected accounts for 68% of the global burden. In most African countries antiretroviral therapy (ART) is administered in limited-resource settings with standardised first- and second-line ART regimens. During this study I analysed the therapy-naïve population of Cape Town, South Africa and Mwanza, Tanzania for any resistance associated mutations (RAMs) against protease inhibitors, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. My results indicate that HIV-1 subtype C accounts for ~95% of all circulating strains in Cape Town, South Africa. I could show that ~3.6% of the patient derived viruses had RAMs, despite patients being therapy-naïve. In Mwanza, Tanzania the HIV drug resistance (HIVDR) prevalence in the therapy-naïve population was 14.8% and significantly higher in the older population, >25 years. Therefore, the current WHO transmitted HIVDR (tHIVDR) survey that is solely focused on the transmission of HIVDR and that excludes patients over 25 years of age may result in substantial underestimation of the prevalence of HIVDR in the therapy-naïve population. Based on the prevalence rates of tHIVDR in the study populations it is recommended that all HIV-1 positive individuals undergo a genotyping resistance test before starting ART. I also characterized vif sequences from HIV-1 infected patients from Cape Town, South Africa as the Vif protein has been shown to counteract the antiretroviral activity of the cellular APOBEC3G/F cytidine deaminases. There is no selective pressure on the HIV-1 Vif protein from current ART regimens and vif sequences was used as an evolutionary control. As the majority of phenotypic resistance assays are still based on HIV-1 subtype B, I wanted to design an infectious HIV-1 subtype C proviral molecular clone that can be used for in vitro assays based on circulating strains in South Africa. Therefore, I characterized an early primary HIV-1 subtype C isolate from Cape Town, South Africa and created a new infectious subtype C proviral molecular clone (pZAC). The new pZAC virus has a significantly higher transient viral titer after transfection and replication rate than the previously published HIV-1 subtype C virus from Botswana. The optimized proviral molecular clone, pZAC could be used in future cell culture and phenotypic HIV resistance assays regarding HIV-1 subtype C.
Despite intense research efforts, a safe and effective HIV-1/AIDS vaccine still remains far away. HIV-1 escapes the humoral immune response through various mechanisms and until now, only a few nAbs have been identified. A promising strategy to identify new epitopes that may elicit such nAbs is to dissect and analyze the humoral immune response of sera with broadly reactive nAbs. The identified epitopes recognized by these antibodies might then be incorporated into a vaccine to elicit similar nAbs and thus provide protection from HIV-1 infection. Using random peptide phage display libraries, the Ruprecht laboratory has identified the epitopes recognized by polyclonal antibodies of a rhesus monkey with high-titer, broadly reactive nAbs that had been induced after infection with a SHIV encoding env of a recently transmitted HIV-1 clade C. The laboratory analyzed phage peptide inserts for conformational and linear homology with computational assistance. Several of the identified peptides mimicked domains of the original HIV-1 clade Env, such as conformational V3 loop epitopes and the conserved linear region of the gp120 C-terminus. As part of this work, these mimotopes were analyzed for cross-reactivity with other sera obtained from rhesus monkeys with nAbs and antibody recognition was shown for several mimotopes, particularly those representing the V3 loop. In addition, these mimotopes were incorporated into a novel DNA prime/phage boost strategy to analyze the immunogenicity of such phage-displayed peptides. Mice were primed only once with HIV-1 clade C gp160 DNA and subsequently boosted with mixtures of recombinant phages. This strategy was designed to focus the humoral immune response on a few, selected Env epitopes (immunofocusing) and induced HIV-1 clade C gp160 binding antibodies and cross-clade nAbs. Furthermore, the C-terminus of gp120, a conserved HIV Env region, was linked to the induction of nAbs for the first time. The identification of such conserved antigens may lead to the development of a vaccine that is capable of inducing broadly reactive nAbs that might confer protection form HIV-1 infection.
Background: Integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) are the latest addition to the array of antiretroviral compounds used to treat an infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). Due to their high efficacy and increased tolerability, INSTIs have become an integral part of first-line therapy in most high-income countries over the past years. However, little is known about HIV-1’s genetic inter- and intra-subtype diversity on the Integrase (IN)-gene and its impact on the emergence of INSTI-resistance. In the absence of a functional cure, long-term efficacy of first-line compounds remains paramount for reducing virological failure and curbing on-going HIV transmissions. South Africa, harbouring more than 20% of the global HIV burden (7.7 / 37.9 million people), requires international attention in order to globally pursue UNAIDS’ (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS) 90-90-90 goals and the road to ending the HIV/AIDS (Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) pandemic by 2030.
Methods: In this study, the prevalence of INSTI-resistance associated mutations (RAM) was investigated in a cohort of 169 archived drug-naïve blood samples from multiple collection sites around Cape Town, South Africa. Viral RNA was isolated from plasma samples, the integrase fragment amplified by RT-PCR and subsequently sequenced by Sanger-sequencing. Additionally, all publicly available drug-naïve, South African IN sequences, isolated before the availability of the first INSTIs in 2007, were retrieved from the Los Alamos HIV sequence database (n=284). All sequences were analysed for RAMs using the Stanford HIV Drug resistance database. The identification of polymorphism in the South African subtype C IN consensus sequence allowed for comparative analyses with global subtype B, as well as subtype C sequences, from countries other than South Africa.
Results: The IN gene could be amplified and sequenced in 95/169 samples (56%). Phylogenetic inference revealed close homology between three sequence-pairs, warranting the exclusion of 3/95 sequences from further analyses. Of the 92 samples used for mutational analyses, 86/92 (93.5%) belonged to subtype C, 5/92 (5.4%) to subtype B and 1/92 (1.1%) to subtype A. The prevalence of major and accessory INSTI RAMs was 0/92 (0%) and 1/91 (1.1%), respectively, similar to the observed rates of 8/284 (2.8%) and 8/284 (2.8%) in the database sequences (p = 0.2076 and p = 0.6944, Fisher’s exact test). Compared to subtype B IN sequences, 15 polymorphisms were significantly enriched in South African subtype C sequences (corrected p<0.0015. Fisher’s exact test, Bonferroni post-hoc procedure).
Compared to subtype C IN sequences isolated outside South Africa, four polymorphisms were significantly enriched in this study cohort (corrected p<0.0014, Fisher’s exact test, Bonferroni post-hoc procedure). The highest prevalence margin was observed for the polymorphism Met50Ile being present in 60.1% of South African subtype C sequences, compared to 37% in non-South African subtype C sequences.
Conclusions: The low prevalence of major and minor RAMs in all South African Integrase sequences predicts a high susceptibility to INSTIs, however, the presence of natural polymorphisms, in particular Met50Ile, in the majority of sequences warrants further monitoring under therapeutic pressure, as their role in mutational pathways leading to INSTI- resistance is yet to be determined. Additionally, this study revealed the presence of substantial inter- and intra-subtype diversity within the HIV-1 Subtype C IN-gene. These results implicate the need for more research on a regional, potentially patient-specific level, as mutational insights from other diverse backgrounds may not accurately represent the South African context. The implementation of a national pre-treatment INSTI-resistance screening program may provide necessary insights into the development of mutational pathways leading to INSTI-resistance under therapeutic pressure for the South African context and thereby bring South Africa one step closer to achieving UNAIDS 90-90-90 goals and ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030.