[HTML][HTML] AT Cell Receptor Sequencing-Based Assay Identifies Cross-Reactive Recall CD8+ T Cell Clonotypes Against Autologous HIV-1 Epitope Variants

HY Chan, J Zhang, CC Garliss, AK Kwaa… - Frontiers in …, 2020 - frontiersin.org
HY Chan, J Zhang, CC Garliss, AK Kwaa, JN Blankson, KN Smith
Frontiers in immunology, 2020frontiersin.org
HIV-1 positive elite controllers or suppressors control viral replication without antiretroviral
therapy, likely via CTL-mediated elimination of infected cells, and therefore represent a
model of an HIV-1 functional cure. Efforts to cure HIV-1 accordingly rely on the existence or
generation of antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to eradicate infected cells upon
reversal of latency. Detecting and quantifying these HIV-1-specific CTL responses will be
crucial for developing vaccine and T cell-based immunotherapies. A recently developed …
HIV-1 positive elite controllers or suppressors control viral replication without antiretroviral therapy, likely via CTL-mediated elimination of infected cells, and therefore represent a model of an HIV-1 functional cure. Efforts to cure HIV-1 accordingly rely on the existence or generation of antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to eradicate infected cells upon reversal of latency. Detecting and quantifying these HIV-1-specific CTL responses will be crucial for developing vaccine and T cell-based immunotherapies. A recently developed assay, called MANAFEST, uses T cell receptor (TCR) Vβ sequencing of peptide-stimulated cultures followed by a bioinformatic pipeline to identify neoantigen-specific T cells in cancer patients. This assay is more sensitive than conventional immune assays and therefore has the possibility to identify HIV-1 antigenic targets that have not been previously explored for vaccine or T cell immunotherapeutic strategies. Here we show that a modified version of the MANAFEST assay, called ViraFEST, can identify memory CD8+ T cell responses against autologous HIV-1 Gag and Nef epitope variants in an elite suppressor. Nine TCR Vβ clonotypes were identified and 6 of these were cross-reactive for autologous variants or known escape variants. Our findings are a proof of principle that the ViraFEST assay can be used to detect and monitor these responses for downstream use in immunotherapeutic treatment approaches.
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