Cytotoxic T-cell antagonism in HIV-1

Paul Klenerman, Rodney Phillips, Andrew McMichael
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

The cytotoxic T-cell (CTL) response to human immunodeficiency virus Type 1 (HIV-1) is vigorous and sustained, but despite this, the virus persists. Natural variation arising within CTL epitopes may affect CTL recognition of infected targets and allow viral escape. Some of these variant epitopes appear to engage T-cell receptors but fail to activate the CTL normally. This can interfere with recognition of the unmutated epitope — a phenomenon known as T-cell antagonism. We discuss the evidence for this in HIV-1 using CTL and epitope variants derived from infected donors, and discuss its possible relevancein vivo.

HIV-1细胞毒性t细胞的拮抗作用
细胞毒性t细胞(CTL)对人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)的反应是强烈和持续的,但尽管如此,病毒仍然存在。CTL表位内发生的自然变异可能影响CTL对受感染靶标的识别并使病毒逃逸。这些变异表位中的一些似乎与t细胞受体结合,但不能正常激活CTL。这可能会干扰对未突变表位的识别,这种现象被称为t细胞拮抗。我们使用来自受感染供体的CTL和表位变体讨论了HIV-1中这一点的证据,并讨论了其在体内可能的相关性。
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