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Journal of Virology, July 2006, p. 6801-6809, Vol. 80, No. 14
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00070-06
Preferential Infection Shortens the Life Span of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific CD4+ T Cells In Vivo
Jason M. Brenchley,1
Laura E. Ruff,1
Joseph P. Casazza,2
Richard A. Koup,2
David A. Price,1 and
Daniel C. Douek1*
Human
Immunology Section,1
Immunology
Laboratory, Vaccine Research Center, NIAID, NIH,
Bethesda, Maryland2
Received 10 January 2006/
Accepted 1 April 2006

ABSTRACT
CD4
+
T-cell help is essential for effective immune responses
to viruses. In
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection,
CD4
+ T
cells specific for HIV are infected by the virus at higher
frequencies
than other memory CD4
+ T cells. Here, we demonstrate
that
HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells are barely detectable
in most infected
individuals and that the corresponding
CD4
+ T cells exhibit
an immature phenotype compared
to both cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific
CD4
+ T cells
and other memory CD4
+ T cells. However, in two
individuals,
we observed a rare and diametrically opposed pattern in
which
HIV-specific CD4
+ T-cell populations of large
magnitude exhibited
a terminally differentiated immunophenotype; these
cells were
not preferentially infected in vivo. Clonotypic analysis
revealed
that the HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells from
these individuals were
cross-reactive with CMV. Thus, preferential
infection can be
circumvented in the presence of cross-reactive
CD4
+ T cells
driven to maturity by coinfecting viral
antigens, and this physical
proximity rather than activation status per
se is an important
determinant of preferential infection based on
antigen specificity.
These data demonstrate that
preferential infection reduces the
life span of HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells in vivo and thereby compromises
the
generation of effective immune responses to the virus itself;
further,
this central feature in the pathophysiology of HIV
infection can be
influenced by the cross-reactivity of responding
CD4
+ T
cells.

INTRODUCTION
CD4
+ T helper cells are crucial for the maintenance
of adaptive
immunity. Specifically, CD4
+
T cells secrete cytokines that
orchestrate subsequent immune responses
and support homeostasis
and CD4
+ T cells express
costimulatory molecules that promote
antigen presentation. In addition,
CD4
+ T cells secrete cytokines
and chemokines that
have direct proinflammatory and antiviral
properties. Indeed, the
necessity of appropriate CD4
+ T-cell
responses for
control of viral replication is well documented
(
12,
19,
24).
While human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is relatively
unique compared to
other viral infections in that HIV is neither
cleared nor
controlled by the naturally elicited immune response,
there
are accumulating data suggesting that the HIV-specific
CD4
+ T-cell response is critical in controlling
viral replication.
First, CD4
+ T cells that respond
to HIV stimulation are found
at higher frequencies in individuals
classified as long-term
nonprogressors
(
32). Second, individuals
with detectable HIV-specific
CD4
+ T-cell responses
have a better prognosis after structured
antiretroviral therapy
interruptions (
29,
33). Third, HIV-infected
individuals
that maintain HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells
capable of producing
interleukin-2 (IL-2) and proliferating have a
better prognosis
than individuals that do not have HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells
capable of these effector functions
(
23,
44). Finally,
HIV-specific
CD4
+ T-cell responses are negatively
correlated with disease
progression
(
27). While HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells are paramount
in control of viral
replication, these cells are preferentially
infected by the virus at
all stages of infection
(
11,
14,
17).
The findings
that HIV-specific CD4+ T cells are preferentially
infected by the virus and that infected CD4+ T cells
are less likely to reach terminal differentiation in vivo
(5) led us to question
whether or not preferential infection impacts the ability of
HIV-specific CD4+ T cells to undergo rounds of
stimulation and proliferation required to increase precursor
frequencies to appreciable levels and reach terminal differentiation in
vivo. Indeed, earlier reports suggest functional and phenotypic
abnormalities within the HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell
pool. However, the causality of this phenomenon is unclear. Here, we
attempt to address this issue by a detailed study of phenotype and
magnitude of HIV-specific CD4+ T cells compared to
those of cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific CD4+ T cells
in a cohort of HIV-infected individuals; in doing so, we relate
observed interindividual differences to infection rates within
CD4+ T cells of defined antigen specificity. In
particular, a detailed analysis of uncommon and atypical responses
provided important clues to mechanisms underlying the ability to
circumvent preferential infection and provided insight into vaccine
modalities aimed at stimulating HIV-specific CD4+ T
cells.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects.
Twenty-three HIV- and CMV-dually
infected and 11 CMV-infected
subjects were recruited at the National
Institutes of
Health
(Table
1).Plasma HIV load was determined using either a Roche
Amplicor Monitor
assay or a Roche Ultradirect assay. Informed
consent was obtained from
all subjects prior to entry into this
study, which was approved by the
NIH Institutional Review Board.
Cell stimulation.
Peripheral
blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated and
in some instances
viably cryopreserved until later use. Antigenic
stimulation was
performed with fresh or frozen PBMC as previously
described
(
2,
28). Similar results from
cell stimulation protocols
were obtained using fresh or frozen PBMC
(
7). In every experiment,
a
negative control (anti-CD28/CD49d, 1 µg/ml final) was
included
to quantify spontaneous production of effector cytokines, and
a
positive control (staphylococcus enterotoxin B, 1 µg/ml
final;
Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was included to ensure that cells were
responsive
to in vitro stimulation. In all experiments, less than 0.1%
of
CD4
+ T cells produced effector cytokine in the
absence of specific
stimulation. Overlapping peptides were used to
stimulate HIV-specific
T cells in the presence of brefeldin A (1
µg/ml; Sigma)
for 5 h at 37°C. All cells were
surface stained for phenotypic
markers of interest and intracellularly
stained for
cytokines.
Antigens.
Fifteen-mer peptides overlapping by
11 amino acids corresponding to sequences of a clade B HXBc2/Bal R5
chimeric HIV strain (Gag, Pol, Env, and Nef) were pooled into mixtures
grouped by HIV proteins as previously described
(2). Individual peptides
were suspended in dimethyl sulfoxide at 10 mg/ml and diluted to a final
concentration of 2 µg/ml in all stimulations. CMV whole antigen
and control antigen complement fixation lysate preparations were
obtained from BioWhittaker (Walkersville, Maryland) and were used at 60
µl/ml for
stimulations.
Immunofluorescence staining.
Stimulated PBMC
were washed and then stained with directly conjugated antibodies to
surface markers (Becton Dickinson Immunocytometry Systems [BDIS], San
Jose, CA) for 20 min on ice. The cells were washed and
fixed/permeabilized for 10 min (fixation/permeabilization solution;
BDIS), stained with directly conjugated antibodies to gamma interferon
(IFN-
), tumor necrosis factor (TNF), and IL-2 all conjugated
to the same fluorochrome, and resuspended in 1% paraformaldehyde in
phosphate-buffered saline. The use of monoclonal antibodies against
three effector cytokines simultaneously increases the probability of
identifying relevant antigen-responsive CD4+ T cells
(28). Responses were
considered to be antigen specific if responding cells represented
greater than 0.1% of all CD4+ T
cells.
MHC-II tetramers.
HLA DR 15*01 soluble tetramers loaded
with either HIV p24-4 (DRFYKTLRAEQASQ) or CLIP
(PVSKMRMATPLLMQA) were prepared as previously
described and were a kind gift from Kai Wucherpfennig
(9,
38). Major
histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) multimers were then added
to at least one million lymphocytes at 10 µg/ml at 37°C
for 20 min. Cells were then washed, stained with surface markers of
interest, and analyzed immediately.
Flow cytometric analysis.
Six-parameter flow cytometric
analysis was performed using a FACSCalibur flow cytometer (BDIS).
Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), phycoerythrin (PE), peridinin
chlorophyll protein, and allophycocyanin (APC) were used as
the fluorophores. At least 100,000 live CD3+
lymphocytes were collected. Eight-parameter flow cytometric sorting and
analysis were performed using a FACS Aria flow cytometric cell sorter
(BDIS). FITC, PE, APC, Cascade Blue, and Cy7 APC were used as the
fluorophores. The list mode data files were analyzed using FlowJo
software (Tree Star, Inc., San Carlos,
CA).
Cell sorting.
Cell sorting was accomplished using a
FACS Aria cell sorter (BDIS) at 70 lb/in2. FITC, PE, Cy5 PE,
and APC were used as the fluorophores. At least 10,000 cells were
sorted for PCR and reverse transcriptase PCR analysis.
Sorted populations were consistently at least 99.8%
pure.
qPCR.
Quantification of HIV gag
DNA in sorted CD4+ T cells was performed by
quantitative PCR (qPCR) by means of a 5' nuclease (TaqMan)
assay with an ABI7700 system (PerkinElmer, Norwalk, CT) as previously
described (5,
13). To quantify cell
number in each reaction, qPCR was performed simultaneously for albumin
gene copy number as previously described
(14). Standards were
constructed for absolute quantification of gag and albumin
copy number and were validated with sequential dilutions of 8E5 cell
lysates that contain one copy of gag per cell. Duplicate
reactions were run and template copies calculated using ABI7700
software.
Clonotypic analysis.
Viable antigen-specific
CD4+ T cells were sorted based upon capture of
IFN-
following antigen-specific stimulation with a
CD45/IFN-
bispecific antibody as described previously
(13). Clonotypic analysis
was performed as described previously by using a modified template
switch anchored reverse transcriptase PCR with a 3' constant
region primer to amplify all expressed T-cell receptor ß-chain
(TCRB) gene products without bias
(13,
31).
Statistical analysis.
Statistical
significance was determined by a Mann-Whitney test using Prism 3.0
software (Prism, San Diego,
CA).

RESULTS
Small frequencies of circulating CD4+ T cells are HIV specific.
Studies suggest
that HIV-infected individuals generally do not
maintain large
populations of HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells
(
28).
This is
counterintuitive because one would expect that under
conditions of
chronic viral replication a high frequency of
antigen-specific
CD4
+ T cells should be expanded in the
memory
T-cell pool (
14,
17,
28,
44). To explore these
observations
further, we initially used intracellular cytokine staining
following
antigenic stimulation with HIV Gag, Nef, Env, or Pol or CMV
whole
antigen. Consistent with previous studies, we found that
significantly
fewer CD4
+ T cells responded to
HIV-specific stimulation than
to CMV-specific stimulation (Fig.
1). Here, individual responses
to HIV Gag, Nef, Env, and Pol are summed, as
these proteins
represent the most immunogenic HIV proteins during
chronic HIV
infection (
1).
Importantly, the frequency of responding HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells in HIV-infected individuals was also
significantly smaller
than the frequency of responding CMV-specific
CD4
+ T cells in
HIV
CMV
+ individuals, even though both cellular and free
viral
loads were higher for HIV than for CMV (Fig.
1). Furthermore,
there was
no statistical difference between the frequencies
of
CD4
+ T cells that respond to CMV when comparing the
HIV-infected
individuals to the HIV-uninfected individuals. However,
CMV
stimulation using whole antigen lysate preparations is not
necessarily
directly comparable to HIV-specific stimulations based upon
overlapping
peptide stimulations. We therefore confirmed that
significantly
lower frequencies of CD4
+ T cells
respond to HIV stimulation
than to CMV stimulation by stimulating
CD4
+ T cells from several
CMV-seropositive
individuals with 15-mer overlapping peptides
encompassing CMV pp65 and
IE1. While these proteins are immunostimulatory
in many
individuals, this stimulation protocol invariably results
in an
underrepresentation of the total CMV-specific CD4
+
T-cell
population (
40).
Nonetheless, the frequency of CD4
+ T cells
that
respond to these two proteins of CMV is significantly higher
than the
frequency of CD4
+ T cells that respond to HIV Gag,
Env,
Nef, and Pol (Fig.
1).
Functionally defined HIV-specific CD4+ T cells are not terminally differentiated.
Under normal
circumstances, chronic viral replication should
result in clonal
expansion of antigen-specific CD4
+ T cells,
as is
the case for HIV-specific CD8
+ T cells
(
6). While the
ability of
CD4
+ T cells to reach terminal differentiation is
substantially
different from that of CD8
+ T cells
(
36,
43), it is generally
accepted
that terminally differentiated CD4
+ T cells
accumulate in situations
of chronic viral infections and in the chronic
stages of HIV
infection
(
5,
17,
22). We measured surface
CD57 expression to
determine whether or not HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells became terminally
differentiated in
vivo compared to CMV-specific CD4
+ T cells
and other
memory CD4
+ T cells (Fig.
2). HIV-specific CD4
+ T
cells reach terminal
differentiation at a significantly lower
frequency than CMV-specific
(HIV-infected or HIV-uninfected)
and other memory (HIV-infected)
CD4
+ T cells, demonstrating
that terminally
differentiated CD4
+ T cells that accumulate
in the
peripheral blood of HIV-infected individuals do not respond
to the
virus itself. Importantly, there was no difference between
the
frequencies of CMV-specific CD4
+ T cells that
reached terminal
differentiation when comparing HIV-infected and
uninfected individuals
(Fig.
2).
Physically defined HIV-specific CD4+ T cells are not terminally differentiated.
Identification of antigen-specific
CD4
+ T cells from humans
usually involves a
functional readout after antigen-specific
stimulation. However, the
recent advent of soluble MHC-II multimers
has allowed for physical
identification of antigen-specific
CD4
+ T cells
(
9,
18,
35,
38). To ensure that our
analysis was
not biased to detection of only HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells capable
of effector function, we
utilized HLA DR 15*01 tetramers to
identify antigen-specific
CD4
+ T cells from subject 9 (known
to express the
HLA DR 15*01 allele and respond to the p24-4
peptide) (Fig.
3). Lymphocytes were stained with tetramers binding
either Gag peptide or
CLIP peptide as a negative control and
then stained for surface
molecules of interest. For this individual,
no CD4
+
T cells specific for p24-4 became terminally differentiated
in vivo. We
were unable to identify HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells
with
HLA DR 15*01 tetramers for any other individuals in our cohort
due
to limiting frequencies of responses to individual peptides
and lack of
appropriate HLA haplotypes.
HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell responses can be large and composed of phenotypically mature T cells when preferential infection is avoided.
We further
explored the impact of preferential infection by
close
examination of the magnitude and corresponding phenotypes
of the
responding HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells from the
subjects
in our cohort and observed that two subjects were clearly
outliers
(Fig.
1 and
2). For these two
individuals (subjects 1 and 21),
the CD4
+ T cells
that responded to HIV antigens were of phenotype
and magnitude similar
to those of CD4
+ T cells that responded
to CMV
antigens (Fig.
4). In order to understand the unusual
circumstances that allowed these two
individuals to respond
to HIV-specific stimulation with such a large
frequency of terminally
differentiated CD4
+ T cells,
we sorted subsets of CD4
+ T cells
from these
individuals (Fig.
4) and
performed qPCR for HIV DNA,
which acts as a surrogate for in vivo
infection history (
5,
14)
(Table
2). The responding HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells sorted from
these
two individuals were infected at frequencies similar to those
of
other memory CD4
+ T cells, demonstrating that the
HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells of these two subjects were
not preferentially infected
by HIV. In contrast, and consistent with
our previous studies
and those of others
(
11,
14,
17), the HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells
from subject 19 were preferentially
infected (Table
2).
Clonotypic analysis of CMV- and HIV-specific CD4+ T cells.
Although subjects 1
and 21 both had high frequencies of terminally
differentiated,
HIV-specific CD4
+ T cells, both subjects failed
to
control viral replication. Moreover, subject 1 progressed
to AIDS
(Table
1). In any event,
the ability of these two individuals
to respond to HIV-specific
stimulation with a high frequency
of CD4
+ T cells in
the absence of preferential infection presented
an opportunity to
dissect the mechanistic basis for these anomalous
responses.
To
characterize further the nature of these CD4+ T
cells, we first used epitope mapping based on matrix analysis
(2) to determine that
subject 1 responded to a single 15-mer peptide in HIV Gag p24
(EQIGWMTNNPPIPVG). We then used this single HIV
15-mer peptide to stimulate HIV-specific CD4+ T
cells from subject 1. In addition, in a parallel experiment we
stimulated CMV-specific CD4+ T cells from the same
individual. For both antigen-specific responses, we viably sorted the
responding T cells by utilization of an antibody bispecific for
IFN-
and CD45
(13). Cells that captured
IFN-
and expressed CD69 were then separated and sorted based
on CD57 expression. We then determined the clonotypic composition of
the responding CMV- and HIV-specific CD4+ T cells by
sequencing the CDR3s of all expressed TCRB genes (Fig.
5) as previously described
(13,
31). In addition, in a
separate experiment we sorted CD57+
CD4+ T cells from this individual without regard to
their antigen specificity and performed clonotypic analysis (Fig.
5A).
From this
analysis, we were surprised to find that the HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells from subject 1 were clearly
cross-reactive with CMV.
Importantly, the bulk CD57
+
CD4
+ T-cell subset from this individual
was composed
of two dominant clonotypes (Fig.
5A). The CMV-specific
CD4
+ T cells were also dominated by these same two
clonotypes, suggesting
that all CD57
+
CD4
+ T cells from this individual were CMV specific
(Fig.
5B). One of these
predominant clonotypes also responded to HIV-specific
stimulation (Fig.
5C). This dominant
clonotype found within
HIV- and CMV-specific CD57
+
CD4
+ T cells was also found in both
HIV- and
CMV-specific CD57
CD4
+ T cells
(Fig.
5D and E).
In order
to confirm that this dominant clonotype was expressed
by a
cross-reactive T-cell clone (and not two different T-cell
clones
expressing the same TCRBV), we also sequenced the TCRA
region
and found exactly the same sequences between T cells sorted
after
stimulation with CMV or HIV (data not shown). We found no
sequence
homologies between the HIV epitope and the CMV proteome and
were
therefore unable to identify the individual CMV epitope. However,
cross-reactivity
can exist among epitopes that share no primary
structure similarities
(
42).
While we were
unable to determine the relative affinities that
these cross-reactive T
cells have for the CMV and HIV epitopes,
we were able to determine that
the T cells could respond to
the HIV epitope at concentrations as low
as 0.0125 µg/ml
(data not shown).
In addition, we
performed epitope mapping from subject 21 (the other individual that
was able to maintain HIV-specific CD4+ T cells that
avoided preferential infection). In stark contrast to subject 1,
subject 21 responded to at least six epitopes within HIV Gag (data not
shown). Unfortunately, no response was large enough to facilitate use
of viable sorting in order to perform clonotypic analysis. We therefore
stimulated CD4+ T cells with peptides encompassing
all of Gag for viable sorting of antigen-specific
CD4+ T cells followed by clonotypic analysis (Fig.
6). In a parallel experiment, we sorted
CD4+ T cells that responded to CMV-specific
stimulation followed by clonotypic analysis (Fig.
6). While the CMV-specific
CD4+ T cells from this individual were oligoclonal,
dominated by three clonotypes, the HIV-specific CD4+
T cells were extremely polyclonal, and of this polyclonal repertoire
one clone was cross-reactive with
CMV.

DISCUSSION
In the present study, we
have examined the magnitudes, maturational
phenotypes, clonotypic
structures, and HIV infection frequencies
of CD4
+
T-cell populations that respond to HIV-derived antigens.
The principal
findings were as follows: (i) in the majority
of HIV-infected
individuals, the frequency of HIV-specific CD4
+ T
cells is small and the responding cells do not reach terminal
differentiation
in vivo despite chronic exposure to high levels of
antigen;
(ii) in a rare minority of HIV-infected
individuals, high frequencies
of terminally differentiated HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells can be
detected; (iii) these
large, phenotypically mature populations
of HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells are not preferentially infected
by HIV;
and (iv) this lack of preferential infection is associated
with
HIV-specific CD4
+ T-cell clonotype cross-reactivity
with
CMV. Taken together, these data indicate that preferential
infection
adversely affects the HIV-specific CD4
+
T-cell response to a
substantial extent and provide evidence that
proximity of HIV-specific
CD4
+ T cells to
antigen-presenting cells that present HIV-derived
epitopes and perhaps
infectious HIV virions during antigen presentation
in vivo is involved
in this process.
Historically, CD4+ T-cell
responses to HIV-derived antigens have been difficult to detect in
infected individuals. While early attempts were potentially limited by
methodological constraints
(8,
41), more sensitive
techniques that can be applied directly ex vivo have generally
confirmed these initial observations
(28). However, it is also
clear that, under certain circumstances, HIV-specific
CD4+ T-cell responses of substantial magnitude can
be present in the peripheral blood of infected individuals. For
example, during primary HIV infection, vigorous CD4+
T-cell responses to HIV-derived antigens can be detected frequently
(26,
32); these can be
transient in nature or more sustained and tend to be preserved in the
short term by the early administration of highly active antiretroviral
therapy (HAART) (20,
26,
33). Similarly,
substantial HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell responses have
been observed with long-term nonprogressors
(3) and with individuals
with "discordant" responses to HAART, in whom virologic
breakthrough is associated with drug-resistant HIV typically exhibiting
impaired replicative capacity
(10,
30); in addition,
transient boosting of CD4+ T-cell responses to HIV
Gag peptides has been observed after discontinuation of antiretroviral
therapy (28). Overall,
these observations suggest that an intimate balance prevails in vivo in
which antigenic stimulation drives CD4+ T-cell
proliferation but is counteracted by destructive effects mediated by
HIV. The mechanistic basis for this destructive effect has been
attributed to the phenomenon of preferential infection
(11,
14,
15,
17). Indeed, it is clear
that HIV infects HIV-specific CD4+ T cells at a
higher frequency than CD4+ T cells of other
specificities under most circumstances
(14). Thus, the presence
of HIV-specific CD4+ T cells in infected individuals
could be either beneficial, through the provision of cognate help to
humoral and CD8+ T-cell responses, or
disadvantageous, through the provision of target cells that could serve
to amplify HIV replication in vivo. The literature reflects this level
of uncertainty, with previous studies providing evidence that could be
interpreted as being consistent with either effect
(4,
25,
27,
32,
34,
39). In either
eventuality, however, a more detailed understanding of both the
mechanisms that underlie the process of preferential infection and the
consequences of this phenomenon could reveal important insights into
HIV pathogenesis.
In the present study, we examined
CD4+ T-cell responses to overlapping peptides
spanning HIV-1 Gag, Pol, Env, and Nef in a cohort of 23 individuals
with chronic HIV infection. Consistent with previous studies,
HIV-specific CD4+ T cells in this cohort were
generally present at low frequencies (<1% of the total
CD4+ T-cell pool) in peripheral blood (Fig.
1). Notably, phenotypic
analysis revealed that these HIV-specific CD4+ T
cells were relatively immature (Fig.
2 and
3); again, this is
consistent with previous observations
(17,
45). These data suggest
that HIV-specific CD4+ T cells have a shortened life
span in vivo compared to CD4+ T cells with other
antigen specificities. However, it is important to appreciate that
antigen-induced activation per se could lead to CD4+
T-cell death; thus, the low frequency of phenotypically immature
CD4+ T cells specific for HIV could simply reflect
the consequences of immune activation rather than any direct effects of
the virus itself (16).
Observations from the two atypical responders in our cohort helped to
distinguish between these possible explanations.
The HIV-specific
CD4+ T-cell responses in donors 21 and 1 were
substantial (>1% of the total CD4+ T-cell
pool) and exhibited a mature phenotype exemplified by the expression of
CD57, which defines terminal differentiation and replicative senescence
in peripheral-blood T cells
(5) (Fig.
4). Further, in contrast
to findings with the vast majority of infected individuals, the
HIV-specific CD4+ T cells of these two donors were
not preferentially infected by HIV (Table
2). These observations
indicate that HIV-specific CD4+ T cells can accrue
to substantial levels in vivo and differentiate fully in the absence of
preferential infection. In addition, differences in plasma virus load
overall did not appear to account for the profoundly unusual nature of
the HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell responses in these two
donors compared with responses of the other individuals in the cohort
(Table 1). Thus,
preferential infection shortens the life span of HIV-specific
CD4+ T cells irrespective of other effects related
to viral replication.
To elucidate the mechanistic basis by which
preferential infection was circumvented in subjects 21 and 1, we
undertook a fine mapping study of individual epitope specificities
within the dominant HIV-specific responses and compared the clonotypic
architecture of the responding CD4+ T cells to the
contemporaneous CMV-specific CD4+ T-cell responses.
Remarkably, within a relatively oligoclonal HIV-specific
CD4+ T-cell population that was focused almost
exclusively on a single Gag-derived epitope, the dominant clonotype
also appeared as the dominant CMV-specific CD4+
T-cell clonotype in subject 1 (Fig.
5). This applied to both
CD57+ and CD57
CD4+ T-cell subsets for each specificity; since
individual T-cell clonotypes, by definition, are progeny of a single
precursor, these data are consistent with a linear maturation process.
Similar findings pertained to subject 21, although in this case the
responding HIV-specific CD4+ T-cell population was
more polyclonal and targeted multiple Gag-derived epitopes (Fig.
6). As most individuals
are exposed to CMV within the first 16 years of life, it seems likely
that this prevalent clonotype was initially selected and driven to
terminal differentiation in the periphery in response to CMV infection
even before HIV infection had occurred; the observed cross-reactivity
with HIV-1 Gag is, presumably, coincidental. These data suggest,
therefore, that preferential infection of HIV-specific
CD4+ T cells can be circumvented in the presence of
cross-reactive CD4+ T-cell clonotypes driven to
maturity by coinfecting viral antigens; this is consistent with
previous studies in which it has been shown that terminally
differentiated CD4+ T cells are less likely to
become infected by HIV in vivo
(5). In a broader context,
these data demonstrate a biological relevance for T-cell
cross-reactivity in humans, a phenomenon that has been reported
previously only with murine models
(21,
37).
In summary, we
have provided strong evidence that the process of preferential
infection reduces the life span of HIV-specific CD4+
T cells in vivo. Furthermore, the data indicate that the clonotypic
nature of the responding T cells, influenced by the infection history
of the individual, can affect this process. While it is clear that a
high frequency of terminally differentiated HIV-specific
CD4+ T cells is not sufficient in itself to control
viral replication, these findings illuminate a basic pathophysiological
process that likely impacts the outcome of HIV
infection.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
D.A.P. is a Medical Research
Council (United Kingdom) Clinician
Scientist.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: VRC, NIH, Bldg. 40, Rm. 3509, 40 Convent
Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892. Phone: (301) 594-8484. Fax: (301) 480-2565.
E-mail:
ddouek{at}mail.nih.gov.


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