Identification and characterization of HIV-1-specific CD8 super(+) T cell epitopes presented by HLA-A2601

Since HLA-A*26 is one of the most common alleles in Asia, where approximately 20% of people have this allele, identification of HIV-1-specific epitopes presented by HLA-A*26 is necessary for studies on the immunopathogenesis of AIDS and vaccine development in Asia. As presented herein, we used the r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 2005-01, Vol.23 (29), p.3783-3790
Hauptverfasser: Satoh, Manami, Takamiya, Yuji, Oka, Shinichi, Tokunaga, Katsushi, Takiguchi, Masafumi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Since HLA-A*26 is one of the most common alleles in Asia, where approximately 20% of people have this allele, identification of HIV-1-specific epitopes presented by HLA-A*26 is necessary for studies on the immunopathogenesis of AIDS and vaccine development in Asia. As presented herein, we used the reverse immunogenetics approach to identify HIV-1 epitopes presented by HLA-A*2601, one of the major HLA-A*26 subtypes. We selected 24 HLA-A*2601- binding peptides out of 110 HIV-1 peptides by using a HLA-A*2601 stabilization assay. The ability of these HLA-A*2601-binding peptides to induce peptide- specific CD8 super(+) T cells was tested by stimulating PBMCs from HIV-1-infected individuals having HLA-A*2601 with these peptides. Four HLA-A*2601-binding peptides induced peptide-specific CD8 T cells. Analysis using HIV-1 recombinant vaccinia-infected C1R-A*2601 cells indicated that these four peptides were HIV-1 epitopes endogenously presented by HLA-A*2601. Two epitope-specific CD8 super(+) T cells were predominantly detected in HIV-1 infected individuals, suggesting that these epitopes may be useful for vaccine development.
ISSN:0264-410X
DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.02.022