Identification of subdominant cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes encoded by autologous HIV type 1 sequences, using dendritic cell stimulation and computer-driven algorithm

Xia Jin, C. G.P. Roberts, D. F. Nixon, J. T. Safrit, L. Q. Zhang, Y. X. Huang, N. Bhardwaj, B. Jesdale, A. S. DeGroot, R. A. Koup

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Conventional analysis of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to HIV-1 may underestimate the true breadth of CTL epitopes recognized. This underestimation could be due to several reasons, including (1) the use of laboratory-adapted stains of HIV or consensus sequences, which would lead to the identification of only highly conserved epitopes, (2) the use of EBV- transformed B cells (B-LCLs) and vaccinia virus constructs in standard assays that may obscure low level CTL responses due to high EBV or vaccinia reactivity, and (3) relatively insensitive assays wherein PBMCs instead of professional APCs are used to stimulate CTL responses. To address these problems, we first identified an immunodominant HLA-B7-restricted CTL epitope, by standard cloning methods, in a long-term nonprogressor (LTNP). To determine whether the patient had CTLs specific for autologous viral sequences other than the dominant epitope, proviral DNA was cloned and sequenced. A matrix-based epitope algorithm (EpiMatrix) was used to identify the top 2% of peptides from the viral sequences with the highest likelihood of binding to HLA-B7. These 55 peptides were synthesized and tested for HLA- B7 binding in a T2/B7 cell line; 10 peptides were able to stabilize HLA-B7 on the cell surface. By using peptide-pulsed autologous dendritic cells as a more sensitive method of CTL stimulation, we found three additional subdominant CTL epitopes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)67-76
Number of pages10
JournalAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2000
Externally publishedYes

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