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Journal of Virology, August 1999, p. 6721-6728, Vol. 73, No. 8
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Levels of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type
1-Specific Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Effector and Memory Responses Decline
after Suppression of Viremia with Highly Active
Antiretroviral Therapy
Spyros A.
Kalams,1,*
Philip J.
Goulder,1
Amy K.
Shea,1
Norman G.
Jones,1
Alicja K.
Trocha,1
Graham S.
Ogg,2 and
Bruce D.
Walker1
Partners AIDS Research Center and Infectious
Disease Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114,1 and
Nuffield Department of Medicine, Institute of Molecular Medicine,
Oxford OX3 9DS, United Kingdom2
Received 18 February 1999/Accepted 7 May 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Therapeutic suppression of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication may help elucidate interactions between the host
cellular immune responses and HIV-1 infection. We performed a detailed
longitudinal evaluation of two subjects before and after the start of
highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Both subjects had
evidence of in vivo-activated and memory cytotoxic T-lymphocyte
precursor (CTLp) activity against multiple HIV-1 gene products. After
the start of therapy, both subjects had declines in the levels of in
vivo-activated HIV-1-specific CTLs and had immediate increases in
circulating HIV-1-specific CTL memory cells. With continued therapy,
and continued suppression of viral load, levels of memory CTLps
declined. HLA A*0201 peptide tetramer staining demonstrated that
declining levels of in vivo-activated CTL activity were associated with
a decrease in the expression of the CD38+ activation
marker. Transient increases in viral load during continued therapy were
associated with increases in the levels of virus-specific CTLps in both
individuals. The results were confirmed by measuring CTL responses to
discrete optimal epitopes. These studies illustrate the dynamic
equilibrium between the host immune response and levels of viral
antigen burden and suggest that efforts to augment HIV-1-specific immune responses in subjects on HAART may decrease the incidence of
virologic relapse.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is associated with an extremely vigorous
virus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) response that declines with
disease progression (3, 17). Several studies have found
evidence for high levels of CTL precursors (CTLp) in subjects with
control of HIV-1 replication, suggesting that CTLs may control viremia
(11, 17, 28). However, the presence of high levels of CTLs
has also been documented in some subjects with high viral loads,
suggesting that levels of HIV-specific CTLs may be driven by high
levels of HIV-1 replication (7). These observations are not
necessarily mutually exclusive. Although the level of HIV-specific CTLs
in an individual may be dependent on some degree of viral antigen
persistence, it is likely that subjects able to generate more-vigorous
CTL responses with smaller antigenic burdens may have more effective
immune-mediated control of viral replication. Recent studies would
support this interpretation. A study of the CTL response directed
against a dominant HLA-A2-restricted Gag epitope demonstrated that the
number of CTLs directed against this epitope, as measured with
HLA-A2-peptide tetramers, negatively correlates with levels of plasma
viremia. This study also demonstrated that the numbers of CTLs declined
after initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
(22).
If the viral set-point is the result of an equilibration between immune
responses directed against the virus and the rate of viral replication,
the level of immune responses would be expected to decline with
drug-induced viral suppression. We performed detailed longitudinal
studies of two subjects with evidence of in vivo-activated and memory
HIV-specific CTL activity and followed the evolution of these immune
responses before and after HAART to evaluate the effect that
therapeutic suppression of HIV-1 replication had on the level of immune
activation in these individuals. Both subjects responded to HAART with
sharp declines in plasma HIV-1 RNA levels. Functional assays of
HIV-specific CTL activity measured with recombinant vaccinia viruses
and epitopic peptides showed that direct CTL lysis declined to
undetectable levels in both subjects shortly after initiation of HAART.
In contrast, the levels of memory CTLs initially increased after HAART
was started and then steadily declined. The results of tetramer
staining in these individuals corroborated the results obtained with
direct CTL assays and precursor frequency analysis and demonstrate the
dynamic relationship between plasma viremia and virus-specific CTL responses.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects.
Subject 115i is an individual with
well-characterized virus-specific CTL responses against multiple viral
epitopes (13, 14, 16). This subject has been infected at
least since 1987 and was started on zidovudine, lamivudine, and
indinavir in 1996. At the time of initiation of therapy, subject 115i
had a CD4 T-cell count of 269. Subject 221l has been infected since
before 1985 and at the time of initiation of therapy in 1996 had a CD4
T-cell count of 457. This subject's drug regimen consisted of
stavudine, lamivudine, and indinavir. Both subjects gave written
informed consent.
Viral load measurements.
HIV-1 plasma RNA levels were
quantitated by reverse transcriptase (RT) PCR with the UltraDirect
assay (Roche Molecular Systems, Branchburg, N.J.) according to the
manufacturer's instructions.
Synthetic peptides.
The nine amino acid peptides p17/77-85
and gp41/584-592 were synthesized as COOH-terminal acids on a Synergy
432A peptide synthesizer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.). The
amino acid numbering is according to the HXB2 sequence.
Recombinant vaccinia viruses.
Recombinant vaccinia viruses
constructed from the HIV-1 IIIb isolate included those expressing Gag
(vAbT141) (18), RT (vCF21) (30), and Envelope
(vPE11) (26). The recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the
Nef protein was constructed from the HIV-1 SF2 isolate and was the
generous gift of T. Yilma. The NYCBH strain of vaccinia virus or
vaccinia virus expressing the Escherichia coli
-galactosidase protein (4) was used as a control.
In vivo-activated CTL assays.
Peripheral blood mononuclear
cells (PBMC) were isolated by Ficoll separation and directly incubated
with chromium-labeled target cells infected with recombinant vaccinia
virus expressing Lac, Gag, RT, Env, or Nef or sensitized with epitopic
peptides. Assays were performed at designated effector-to-target cell
(E/T) ratios in a 6-h cytotoxicity release assay as previously
described (16).
CTLp frequency assays.
CTLp assays were performed as
previously described (10, 15). PBMC were cultured at 250 to
16,000 per well in 24 replicate wells of a 96-well microtiter plate. To
each well was added 2.5 × 104 gamma-irradiated (30 Gy) PBMC from an HIV-1-seronegative donor and the monoclonal antibody
12F6. Ten to 14 days later, the wells were split and assayed for
cytotoxicity on 51Cr-labeled autologous B-LCL infected with
vaccinia virus expressing HIV-1 gene products. The percent lysis for
each well was determined from the formula 100 × [(experimental
release
spontaneous release)/(maximum release
spontaneous release)]. A well was scored as positive in this assay if
the lysis was >8%. Using 8% lysis rather than 3 standard deviations
was more stringent (3 standard deviations above background on average
represented 5% lysis) and gave more consistent results. In subject
115i background levels of CTLp were <20/106 PBMC in 20 of
21 assays and 74/106 PBMC in 1 assay. In subject 221l,
background CTLp frequencies were <50/106 PBMC in 17 of 18 assays and 73/106 PBMC in 1 assay. Background CTLp
frequencies were subtracted from frequencies against HIV-1 gene
products. Based on 95% confidence intervals, 50 CTLp/106
PBMC above background was a positive result. Activated cell frequency was estimated by the maximum likelihood method (3, 6).
Spontaneous release was <30% for all reported assays.
Major histocompatibility complex-tetramer synthesis.
Peptide-major histocompatibility complex tetrameric complexes were
synthesized as previously described (1). Purified HLA heavy
chain and
2m were synthesized by means of a prokaryotic expression
system (pETR+D). The heavy chain was modified by deletion of the
transmembrane cytosolic tail and COOH-terminal addition of a sequence
containing the BirA enzymatic biotinylation site. Heavy chain,
2m,
and peptide were refolded by dilution. The 45-kDa refolded product was
isolated by fast protein liquid chromatography and then biotinylated by
BirA in the presence of biotin (Sigma)-adenosine 5'-triphosphate
(Sigma). Streptavidin-phycoerythrin conjugate (Sigma) was added in a
1:4 molar ratio, and the tetrameric product was concentrated to 1 mg/ml. Cryopreserved PBMC were simultaneously stained with HLA class
I-peptide tetramers as described by Ogg et al. (22),
anti-CD8, and anti-CD38.
 |
RESULTS |
Effect of antiretroviral therapy on viral burden and CD4 cell
numbers.
Antiretroviral therapy was first initiated in subject
115i at a viral burden of 35,518 copies/ml and a CD4 cell number of 269/mm3. This was followed by a rapid decline in the plasma
HIV-1 RNA level after the initiation of therapy, with a half-life
(t1/2) of 8.5 days, and by day 71 of therapy the
viral burden was <50 copies/ml of plasma (Fig.
1). Viral-load measurements were not available frequently enough to delineate separate phases of decay; thus, this value represents the summation of what is likely a multiphasic process (12, 25, 31). The viral burden remained undetectable at this threshold through day 231 of therapy.
Subsequently, there were small increases in plasma RNA levels on days
260, 323, and 504 with corresponding values of 522, 99, and 58 copies/ml, respectively, and these increases could not be attributed to
lapses in adherence to the prescribed antiretroviral regimen. There was a corresponding gradual increase in CD4 cell numbers on therapy to
nearly 900 CD4 cells/mm3 on day 560 of therapy (Fig.
2).

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FIG. 1.
Longitudinal plasma HIV-1 RNA levels in subjects 115i
(a) and 221l (b). All assays were performed on plasma with the Amplicor
assay (Roche).
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Subject 221l had a substantially higher viral burden of 586,000 copies/ml of plasma at the initiation of therapy and a CD4
cell number
of 457 cells/mm
3. Despite the higher initial level of
plasma HIV-1 RNA, this subject
had a similarly good response to HAART,
with a 3-log
10 unit reduction
in viral load to a nadir of
76 copies/ml at day 105 (
t1/2, 9.6
days) (Fig.
1). However, this subject maintained a persistently
detectable viral
load with the UltraDirect assay until day 574
after therapy, when it
was undetectable at <50 copies/ml. After
the initial nadir of 76 copies/ml was reached at day 105, there
was a small increase in viral
load to 2,462 copies/ml on day 298
of therapy. The CD4 cell count of
this subject steadily increased
to values in the 800 to 1,100 range
(Fig.
2).
Effect of antiretroviral therapy on direct CTL lysis.
Prior to
the initiation of therapy, both subjects consistently demonstrated
evidence of in vivo-activated HIV-specific CTL activity, as shown with
fresh PBMC and target cells infected with vaccinia-HIV-1 recombinants
(Fig. 3 and
4). Subject 115i demonstrated fluctuating
responses to Gag, Env, and RT (Fig. 3). Subject 221l demonstrated
direct activity against Gag-expressing target cells on multiple
occasions prior to the initiation of therapy; however, this subject did
not have consistent recognition of target cells expressing Env, RT, or
Nef (Fig. 4). CTL responses were then monitored with initiation of
potent antiretroviral therapy with fresh PBMC in direct assays and in
precursor frequency assays.

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FIG. 3.
Longitudinal in vivo-activated CTL lysis of vaccinia
virus-expressed HIV-1 proteins or peptides representing optimal HLA
class I-restricted CTL epitopes by subject 115i. Freshly isolated PBMC
were incubated with vaccinia virus-infected autologous B-LCL or
peptide-pulsed B-LCL at an E/T ratio of 100:1. Background lysis against
NYCBH vaccinia virus-infected target cells was <12% at all time
points except on day 20 after the start of therapy, when it was 24%.
In each case background lysis was subtracted. Background lysis against
unpulsed B-LCL targets was always <5%. The targets used were Vac-Gag
(a), Vac-RT (b), Vac-Env (c), Vac-Nef (d), SLYNTVATL (HLA A2
restricted) (e), and ERYLKDQQL (HLA B14 restricted) (f).
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FIG. 4.
Longitudinal direct CTL lysis of vaccinia
virus-expressed HIV-1 proteins by subject 221l. The mean background
lysis against NYCBH-infected target cells was 19% (range 2.3 to 42%)
and was subtracted. The targets used were Vac-Gag (a), Vac-RT (b),
Vac-Env (c), and Vac-Nef (d).
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In subject 115i direct Gag-specific CTL activity remained detectable
throughout the period of decline in viral load to undetectable
levels
over the first 71 days of therapy. Despite some initial
fluctuations in
the levels of direct lysis through this period,
from day 71 through day
260 there was a steady decline in direct
Gag-specific lysis. By day 260 direct Gag and RT CTL activities
were undetectable (<10% above
background lysis at an E/T ratio
of 100:1), and on day 260 there was a
small breakthrough in viremia
(viral load, 522 copies/ml); however, the
next time that direct
CTL activity was measured (day 294), Gag-specific
lysis was just
detectable at 11.3%. This value remained elevated at
11.4% above
background lysis on day 323 then subsequently declined to
undetectable
levels through day 514 of therapy. Direct CTL lysis
against RT
and Env similarly showed transient elevations that declined
to
background levels over this same period (Fig.
3a to
c).
The levels of in vivo-activated CTL activity in subject 221l were lower
than those found in subject 115i, but CTL activity
against Gag was
detectable in each assay prior to the initiation
of therapy. This
patient's viral burden was also much higher than
that of subject 115i
and took much longer to become undetectable
once therapy was initiated.
Although a nadir of 76 copies/ml was
reached by day 105, it took until
day 574 of therapy to reach
<50 copies/ml. By day 36 after therapy,
direct CTL activity against
Gag was no longer detectable, and it was
not detected again after
the start of therapy, even in the face of a
small peak of viremia
to 2,462 copies/ml on day 298 of therapy (despite
no documented
lapses in drug adherence). Direct responses to RT and Env
waned
prior to therapy, and responses to Nef were always negative. On
day 13 after initiation of therapy, in vivo-activated CTL activity
against Gag, RT, and Nef targets was the highest ever observed.
However, the CTL activity quickly decayed. On the next assay (day
22 of therapy) Nef direct lysis had declined to 11% above
background
and no lysis against RT or Env was present; by day 36 of therapy,
no in vivo-activated CTLs were detectable (Fig.
4).
In summary, both subjects showed evidence of in vivo-activated
HIV-specific CTLs prior to the initiation of HAART, with higher
levels
in the person with the lower viral load (115i). Although
in
vivo-activated CTL decreased after initiation of HAART, a small
rebound
in viremia in subject 115i was associated with a return
of in
vivo-activated CTL, but a resurgence of lytic activity was
not evident
in subject 221l despite a higher rebound in viremia.
These data
indicate that control of viremia with HAART is associated
with a
decline in in vivo-activated CTL activity and that subjects
may have
different viral thresholds associated with the presence
of this immune
response.
Effect of antiretroviral therapy on epitope-specific direct CTL
responses.
In subject 115i we had previously characterized CTL
responses to a dominant epitope in the envelope protein. Thus, the
effects of HAART on epitope-specific lysis were measured as well.
Similar to the data from target cells expressing recombinant HIV-1
antigens, epitope-specific CTL assays showed that after therapy was
initiated, in vivo-activated CTL lysis declined. A direct CTL response
against an A2-restricted Gag epitope in p17 that is recognized by the majority of HLA-A2-positive individuals (2, 9) declined after the initiation of therapy, and by day 112 of therapy it was
negative (<10% at an E/T ratio of 100:1). Activity against an
envelope epitope previously shown to be immunodominant in this individual (15, 16) remained detectable throughout day 200, well beyond the period after the viral load had declined to <50 copies/ml. As observed for the response against vaccinia virus-infected target cells, this response also rose again after a transient rise in
viral load at day 294, when direct activity was present at 11% above
background (Fig. 3e and f).
Effect of antiretroviral therapy on CTLp frequency.
The
antiviral CTL response consists of not only in vivo-activated effector
cells but also memory CTLs directed against viral antigens. Prior to
therapy, both subjects had detectable CTLp against several HIV-1
antigens. In both subjects the levels of memory CTLs increased shortly
after the initiation of therapy, at a time when in vivo-activated CTLs
were declining. In subject 115i Gag-specific CTLp frequency rose over
the first 46 days of therapy to a peak of 1,921/106 PBMC, a
full log10 higher than ever previously recorded in this person over 10 years of follow-up (Fig.
5a and data not shown). During this time,
direct CTL activity fluctuated, reaching a peak by day 46 of therapy,
but then steadily declined (Fig. 3). CTLp declined to a nadir of
105/106 PBMC by day 231 of therapy (Fig. 5a). Viral burden
from day 71 through day 231 was undetectable at <50 copies/ml. A small
subsequent peak of viremia on day 260 to 522 copies/ml was associated
with a corresponding peak in circulating Gag CTLp. For the remainder of
the study (days 261 to 504) viremia was generally <50 copies/ml and
CTLp were not detectable in our assay (sensitivity, 50 CTLp/106 PBMC).

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FIG. 5.
Longitudinal CTLp frequency in subject 115i. The targets
used were Vac-Gag (a), Vac-RT (b), Vac-Env (c), and Vac-Nef (d).
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The patterns of CTLp frequencies against RT, Env, and Nef mirrored
those directed against Gag for subject 115i. On day 139
of therapy,
CTLp against RT, Env, and Nef were at their nadirs
of 21, 1, and
10/10
6 PBMC, respectively. With the increase in viral load
to 522 copies/ml
(day 260), increases in RT and Env CTLp can be seen
that were
even greater than those directed against Gag (Fig.
5b to d),
consistent
with the relative levels prior to the initiation of
therapy.
Although CTLp frequencies in subject 221l were lower than those of 115i
at the start of therapy, the pattern of responses
after therapy showed
a similar rise and then decline. Gag CTLp
frequency rose to a peak of
466/10
6 PBMC on day 36 after the start of therapy (Fig.
6a). Although
CTLp to Env, RT, and Nef
also appeared to rise after the start
of therapy, Env activity showed
the most consistent increase,
to a peak of 232/10
6 on day
36 of therapy (Fig.
6b to d). Gag CTLp reached another
small peak of
113/10
6 on day 243 of therapy, which coincided with a late
rise in viremia
to 2,462 on day 298 of therapy. Subsequently, the viral
load declined
to the 100- to 400-copy/ml range, and Gag CTLp likewise
fell to
levels just at the limit of detection.

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FIG. 6.
Longitudinal CTLp frequency in subject 221l. The targets
used were Vac-Gag (a), Vac-RT (b), Vac-Env (c), and Vac-Nef (d).
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Together, the data on these two subjects show that CTLp frequencies
increase after the initiation of HAART and then decrease
with sustained
suppression of viral replication. Small subsequent
increases in viral
burden while on therapy can be associated with
detectable increases in
the CTLp frequency, suggesting that the
immune responses directed
against the virus are maintained by
continued exposure to viral
antigen.
Effect of HAART on SL9-specific CTL tetramer staining.
Recent
studies have described a negative correlation between levels of HIV-1
viremia and the number of CD8+ cells that stain with
tetramer-peptide complexes (22). The tetramers used in the
present study were specific for CTL clones that recognize an
HLA-A2-restricted epitope in p17 (SLYNTVATL) that is recognized by the
majority of HLA-A2-positive subjects (2, 9). The ability of
PBMC from subject 115i to lyse B-LCL pulsed with this peptide is
demonstrated in Fig. 3e. Subject 221l never demonstrated direct lysis
of peptide-pulsed B-LCL above 10% at an E/T ratio of 100:1 (data not
shown). Cryopreserved PBMC from each subject were simultaneously
stained with tetramer, anti-CD8+, and anti-CD38 antibodies.
The CD38 molecule has been shown to be an activation marker that is
up-regulated in HIV-infected subjects with high levels of CTL activity
(8); therefore, the effect of HAART on the activation state
of tetramer-positive (tet+) cells could be determined.
Subject 115i had a gradual decline in the number of tet
+
CD8
+ cells over the 600 days prior to the initiation of
therapy, at
the same time that the viral load was gradually increasing.
Over
this same period the proportion of CD38
+ cells
remained relatively constant at 40 to 60%, indicating a
high
percentage of activated cells (Fig.
7).
At these times direct
CTL activity against the SL9 epitope was also
present. After the
initiation of therapy the number of tet
+
CD8
+ cells continued to decrease at a low rate
(
t1/2, 392 days); however,
in contrast to the
pretherapy values, the percentage of tet
+ CD38
+
cells dramatically decreased to 11 to 12%, with a shorter
t1/2 of 155 days. This decay in the percentage
of activation marker
expressing tet
+ CD8
+ cells
was closer to the decay rate of direct SLYNTVATL-pulsed
115i B-LCL (54 days) (Fig.
7).

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FIG. 7.
Longitudinal flow cytometric visualization of
A*0201-restricted, SLYNTVATL-specific CTL in subjects 115i and 221l.
PBMC were stained with HLA-A*0201/SLYNTVATL tetramers and monoclonal
antibodies specific for CD8 and CD38. The limit of detection was 0.02%
of CD8+ T cells, and the lowest value obtained in either
subject was 0.1%. (a) Percentage of tet+ CD8+
T cells in subject 115i. (b) Percentage of CD38+
tet+ cells in subject 115i. (c) Percentage of
tet+ CD8+ T cells in subject 221l. (d)
Percentage of CD38+ tet+ cells in subject
221l.
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Subject 221l had a lower initial frequency of tet
+
CD8
+ cells prior to the initiation of therapy (highest
pretherapy value,
0.37%, compared to 1.8% for subject 115i). The
frequency of these
cells similarly declined over the 400 days prior to
the start
of therapy. There was no further decline in the already low
frequency
of these cells posttherapy. Prior to and just after the start
of therapy, the percentage of these cells expressing the activation
marker CD38 was >90%, and it declined to <60% after 340 days of
therapy. The higher percentage of cells expressing CD38 suggests
ongoing antigenic stimulation, as is consistent with both the
persistent low-level plasma viremia and persistent detection of
tet
+ CD8
+ cells.
Thus, the direct quantitation of these CD8
+
antigen-specific cells indicates a gradual decrease in their frequency
as the viral
load increased prior to therapy. In both subjects a
decrease in
the activation of these cells, reflected by down-regulation
of
the CD38
+ marker, was observed with continued
suppression of viral
replication.
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DISCUSSION |
In this study we have examined the effect of HAART on both in
vivo-activated and memory CTLs. We find that suppression of viral
replication results in a decrease in in vivo-activated CTLs that
precedes the decline in memory CTLs. Remarkably, CTLp in both
individuals studied increased shortly after the initiation of therapy.
This increase in activity was polyclonal, as evidenced by assays of CTL
activity with target cells infected with vaccinia virus constructs
expressing HIV-1 viral gene products or sensitized with epitopic
peptides. Changes in the quantity and activation state of CTLs were
further verified by direct flow cytometric visualization of CTLs with
HLA-peptide tetramers directed against an HLA A*0201-restricted epitope
in p17.
This study has further defined the interaction between the
virus-specific CTL response and viral burden. Few studies have evaluated HIV-specific CTL responses longitudinally after the initiation of HAART. These previous studies did not include multiple evaluations of CTL activity with direct CTL assays of HIV-1 gene products and specific viral epitopes and memory CTL assays prior to and
after the initiation of therapy (5, 23). We had the benefit
of studying two individuals followed for almost 2 years before and
after the initiation of HAART. Both individuals had excellent virologic
responses to therapy and sustained increases in CD4 cell numbers.
Likewise, in both subjects direct CTL activity declined shortly after
the initiation of HAART. Interestingly, CTLp frequencies against
multiple HIV-1 antigens increased initially even as direct CTL activity
declined. Both subjects showed marked decreases in the expression of
the CD38 activation marker on the tet+ CD8+
cells after the initiation of HAART. These changes in the quantity and
quality of immune reactivity in response to an abrupt decrease in
plasma viremia highlight the dependence of immune activation on
exposure to antigen.
The magnitude of CTL responses in these HLA A*0201-positive subjects
prior to the initiation of HAART, as measured by tetramer analysis, is
consistent with what had been observed in an earlier study
(22). Ogg et al. found in a cross-sectional study that the
level of HIV-1 plasma viremia was negatively correlated with the
percentage of CD8+ cells that stained with HLA A*0201
peptide tetramers. They also found that the frequency of
tetramer-positive CTLs declined after the initiation of therapy. A more
recent study has calculated that the "decay"
t1/2 of tetramer-positive cells was on average 45 days after the initiation of HAART (23). We were able to prospectively follow our subjects with direct CTL assays performed with
freshly isolated PBMC as well as with tetramer staining. Tetramer-positive cells were detectable in each subject and, consistent with prior results, were higher in the subject with the lower pretreatment viral load. In both subjects the frequency of these cells
declined as the viral burden was increasing prior to therapy (with a
t1/2 of 335 days in subject 115i and 247 days in
subject 221l). This emphasizes the inverse relation between the
frequency of virus-specific CTLs and viral burden. The low frequency of tet+ CD8+ cells in subject 221l is consistent
with the low level of direct lysis against the p17/77-85 epitope (data
not shown). However, other CTL responses were present, as evidenced by
direct lysis of vaccinia virus-Gag-infected target cells. In subject
115i there was a continued decline in the number of these cells after
therapy was started. Decay in tet+ CD8+ cells
was not observed in subject 221l after the start of therapy, probably
due to a lack of sustained suppression of viral load in this
individual. Both subjects showed marked decreases in the expression of
the CD38 activation marker on the tet+ CD8+
cells after the initiation of HAART, which is consistent with the
observed decline of direct lytic activity after the initiation of
HAART. Only subject 115i had significant direct CTL effector responses
to the SLYNTVATL peptide; however, the decay rate of direct effector
activity was closer to that of the CD38 activation marker than it was
to that of the absolute frequency of tet+ CD8+ cells.
These studies extend previous studies by showing the relationship
between HAART and functional CTLp and direct CTL activities. The
standard measurement of memory CTLp has been through limiting-dilution assays that require several rounds of in vitro replication before expansion of a single memory cell sufficient to detect lysis in a
chromium release assay occurs. It has been hypothesized that activated
effector cells that mediate lysis in direct killing assays are not able
to expand in precursor frequency assays (20). In both
subjects studied here, levels of memory CTLs as measured by a standard
CTLp frequency assay arose to their highest levels after HAART was
initiated, and these rises occurred as the level of direct CTL activity
declined. These results are consistent with the generalized finding
that shortly after the initiation of HAART levels of memory CD8 cells
rise, followed by a slow decline to baseline levels (19). A
possible explanation for the concurrent drop in levels of CTL effector
activity and increase in the number of CTLp after HAART is a reversion
of activated CTL effector cells to a resting-cell phenotype (27,
29). The decline in the percentage of CD38+
tet+ cells as the number of CTLp rises would also support
this hypothesis. Alternatively, these results may arise from a
perturbation of steady-state production of activated CTL from CTLp.
Another possible explanation is that CTLp redistribute from lymph node
sites when the antigen load is decreased.
With continued therapy, and continued declines in the antigenic burden,
levels of memory CTLs also declined. This phenomenon has also been
described by Dalod et al. (5). These investigators used a
bulk-stimulation technique (21) to generate CTL responses and used lytic unit calculations to determine the magnitude of the
responses. In that study, subjects with good control of viremia (6 of
13) to undetectable levels showed a decrease in HIV-specific CTL
activity. It has also been documented that in general, overall levels
of memory CD8+ T cells decline after 12 weeks of HAART
(24), consistent with the HIV-1-specific CTLp results shown here.
We also found that small increases in viremia, once an initial nadir of
plasma HIV-1 RNA viremia was reached, were accompanied by proportional
increases in CTLp in each subject. Subject 115i had a much higher
elevation of the number of CTLp (a peak of 439 CTLp/million) in
response to a very small increase in viral load (to 522 copies/ml on
day 260), while subject 221l had a much smaller peak of 113 CTLp/million in response to a viral-load peak of 2,462 copies/ml. The
higher-magnitude immune response to a lower antigen burden may be one
explanation for the more effective control of viral replication in this
subject. It is interesting to note that subject 115i had the higher
pretreatment CTL response and lower pretreatment viral load. The
subsequent decline in viral burden in each subject was possibly driven
by the increase in detectable CTLp. Although this is an attractive
explanation, transient unreported nonadherence to the HAART regimen or
a subclinical illness that transiently elevated the viral burden cannot
be ruled out.
This study has several implications for vaccine development and
immunity-based therapy protocols. Prior studies have shown that higher
frequencies of HIV-1-specific CTLs are associated with lower viral
burdens in chronically infected subjects (22). This study
demonstrates a dynamic equilibrium between these effector cells and the
viral burden, with rises in CTLs in response to increases in viremia
after therapy. The brisk response to a small increase in viral load
suggests that the immune system maintains the ability to rapidly
respond, even as CTLp fall to low levels. Since the nature of the
immune system is to respond to an invading pathogen, it is not
surprising that in the presence of HAART, and a subsequent decline in
the antigenic burden, levels of virus-specific CTLs fall precipitously.
If these effector cells are playing a protective role, then efforts to
increase their numbers through therapeutic vaccination in subjects on
HAART may decrease the rate of virologic relapse in these subjects by
driving the levels of viral replication below the threshold required
for drug resistance mutations to accumulate.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by NIH grants R01 AI39966, R01 AI40873,
R01 AI28568, and CA12464.
We thank M. Gately and Hoffman-LaRoche for the generous gift of
interleukin-2.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Massachusetts
General Hospital, AIDS Research Center, 149 13th St., Room 5217, Charlestown, MA 02129. Phone: (617) 724-4958. Fax: (617) 726-4691. E-mail: Kalams{at}helix.mgh.harvard.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, August 1999, p. 6721-6728, Vol. 73, No. 8
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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