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A study of the phenotype and function of HLA-C restricted CD8 T cells in HIV-1 infectionCorrah, Tumena Wandifa January 2011 (has links)
A recent study showed that a polymorphism ~35kb upstream of the HLA-C gene (-35 SNP) correlates with host control of HIV-1 in Caucasians, with the minor allele (C) associating with significantly lower set point viral loads than the major allele (T). A link between viral load and HLA-C is suggested by linkage of the two SNP alleles with different HLA-C alleles and by the fact that HLA-C, in contrast to HLA-A and -B, is not down-regulated by HIV-1 Nef protein. In addition, the -35C variant has been shown to associate with higher HLA-C messenger RNA expression in EBV-transformed B cell lines. We initially propose that increased surface expression of HLA-C in subjects with the protective SNP leads to increased breadth and magnitude of HLA-C restricted T cell responses, explaining the decrease in viral load in these subjects. This study initially investigates whether the -35 SNP correlates with the surface level of HLA-C using the monoclonal antibodies DT9, which recognises both HLA-C and HLA-E, and 3D12, which is specific for HLA-E. The lymphocytes from -35 CC subjects expressed a significantly higher level of surface HLA-C when compared to those from -35 TT subjects, but this difference in HLA-C expression can be attributed primarily to the very low expression of a single allelic product, HLA-Cw*07. Increased surface HLA-C should translate to functional differences between CC and TT subjects. This study confirmed that HLA-C restricted CD8 T cell responses against HIV-1 do exist, even for HLA-Cw*07, but represent a minority of total T cell responses. They were detected in all -35 SNP genotypes but there were no functional differences, making it unlikely that the protective effect of this SNP on viral load set point could be accounted for solely by HLA-C restricted T cell responses. Finally, a viral suppression assay was used to investigate the capacity of CD8 T cells to suppress HIV-1 replication in Caucasian and African subjects. We provide evidence that the -35 SNP effect on viral load is indeed T cell mediated. However, we suggest that the protective effect of the -35 SNP on viral load set point manifests as a result of linkage disequilibrium of this polymorphism with both favourable and unfavourable HLA-B and HLA-C alleles.
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Imaging of HIV-1 spread from T cells and macrophages to astrocytesDo, Thao January 2014 (has links)
CD4+ T cells and macrophages are the principal targets of HIV-1. They can be productively infected with the virus and transfer virions to contacting bystander cells. It has been suggested that soon after initial infection, free virions and virus-bearing or infected T cells and macrophages can enter the brain, triggering a cascade of inflammatory signals and recruitment of other immune cells. Chronic inflammation and increased viral antigens in the brain lead to HIV-1 associated neuropathy. Once free virions or infected cells enter the central nervous system, the first type of brain cells that they are likely to encounter are astrocytes, which extend endfeet around the blood vessels. These cells have been observed to contain virions and viral products, but their permissivity to productive infection has not been clearly demonstrated. By contrast, productive infection of resident microglia and perivascular macrophages is well established. Here, I investigate the permissivity of astrocytes to HIV-1 infection and found no evidence of infection by the free route. However, I found that astrocytes intimately contact HIV-1 infected macrophages and CD4+ T cells and, in some cases, extend filopodial membrane toward the infected cell. In astrocyte-T cell contact sites, termed synapses, virions appear to move along the astrocytic filopodia from the T cell to the astrocyte. In this case, the target cell mediated viral transfer across the intercellular gap. HIV-1-infected macrophages released virus that associated with astrocytes, remaining either on the surface of the astrocytes or within intracellular compartments. HIV-1 bound to astrocytes could be transmitted efficiently to permissive cells in trans. However, astrocyte-associated virus was sensitive to inhibitors including proteases and neutralizing antibodies, suggesting a surface-accessible compartment. This work provides insight into mechanisms of HIV-1 spread in the brain from infected CD4+ T cells and macrophages to astrocytes and their potential as virus reservoirs. I also optimized high resolution, correlative focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy technology to answer fundamental biological questions. I demonstrate the application of the technology to study skeletal muscle cell differentiation mechanisms. I combine the power of genetic mapping with structural analysis to qualitatively and quantitatively describe cellular states and functions. Using semi-automatic image processing analysis, I was able to compute high volumes of data and generate statistics that relate quantitative measurements of cellular structures to functions. The toolset developed here will be instrumental in studying cells and tissues in both research and clinical applications.
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Immunodominant CD8+ T cell responses to HIV-1 infection : 'the good and the bad'Culshaw, Abigail January 2011 (has links)
Many lines of evidence indicate that CD8+ T cells are important in the control of HIV-1 infection and this has led to much vaccine research focused at eliciting virus specific CTL. However to date, the few large-scale trials of HIV-1 vaccines designed to elicit CD8+ T cells have produced disappointing results. This has highlighted our incomplete knowledge of the factors that determine if such cells are capable of viral control. The aim of this thesis is to further characterise qualitative aspects of HIV-1 specific CTL that are associated with both good and bad anti-viral activity. HIV-1 specific CTL responses were investigated in three ways. Firstly, by longitudinally analysing an immunodominant HLA-B*08 restricted CD8+ T cell response in a single rapid progression patient. Secondly, HLA-B*40 restricted CTL responses to HIV-1 where characterised within a Chinese slow progressor cohort. Lastly, factors that affect the processing and presentation of certain overlapping HIV-1 specific CD8+ T cell epitopes were examined. The results of these studies reveal that subtle variations in both host and viral proteins can have a substantial impact on virus specific CTL and in turn may impact on the outcome of disease. The generation of HIV-1 specific CD8+ T cells is a complex process affected by many variables including the viral sequence of epitope flanking regions as well as polymorphisms in the proteins involved in antigen processing and presentation. To add a further layer of complexity, it appears that HIV-1 virus specific CTL can modulate their functionality throughout the course of infection. Such factors should therefore be taken into account during HIV-1 vaccine design.
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Natural and therapy-induced immune control of HIV-1Yager, Nicole Leanne January 2011 (has links)
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) response is important in the control of HIV-1 infection. Due to the virus having a high rate of mutation, immune pressure can select for variants that are no longer recognised by CTLs to dominate the viral quasispecies. This is similar to how antiretroviral resistance emerges. HIV-1 is therefore adapting to both human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-restricted immune responses and antiretroviral therapy. This thesis initially focused on the natural CTL response to an HLA-B*51-restricted epitope in integrase. This HLA class I allele is associated with slow progression to AIDS; however, as no CTL-driven escape mutation has been fully defined within this integrase epitope, we cannot determine what contributes to the association of HLA-B*51 and natural control of infection. By longitudinally studying a cohort of early HIV-infected individuals, we observed the emergence of polymorphisms that abrogate a CTL response to this epitope. CTL escape may also prove to be the downfall of current immunotherapy strategies attempting to combat HIV infection. T cell receptors (TCRs) have been genetically modified to enhance their binding affinity to an HLA-A*02-peptide complex and transduced into CD8+ cells to create an HIV adoptive therapy. We demonstrate through in vitro selection pressure assays that escape from these cells may be a difficult task for the virus given that the TCR is able to recognise the majority of variants of this epitope. Antigen processing mutations may represent the only option for escape. How this may translate clinically will only be determined through in vivo studies, which must be meticulously monitored. Finally, when this high affinity TCR was fused to an anti-CD3 single chain variable fragment to create proteins capable of redirecting non-HIV-specific CTLs to HIV-infected cells, we found that the result was specific lysis. These proteins may supersede the use of TCR-transduced cells when used in synergy with antiretroviral therapy.
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The impact of HIV-1 disease and its treatment on mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific immunityMurray, Lyle W. January 2014 (has links)
Human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) and tuberculosis (TB) are significant global health issues today and the immunological correlates of protection to both diseases remain poorly defined. HIV-1 is the greatest risk factor for the development of TB and HIV-associated TB contributes significantly to the global TB burden, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. The host T cell response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is critical for control and is weakened in HIV-1 disease. However, the extent and precise mechanisms remain incompletely elucidated. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV-1 reduces TB risk in treated individuals significantly, although not to levels seen in HIV-uninfected individuals. This thesis studies HIV- and Mtb-specific T cell responses in 2 cohorts of individuals from a community with high HIV-1 and TB prevalence in Bloemfontein, South Africa. An analysis of HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses in Chapter 4, confirms the superior role of HIV-1 Gag-specific CD8 responses in controlling HIV-1 viraemia and demonstrates that the loss of such responses contributes to HIV-1 disease progression and likely susceptibility to opportunistic infection. I investigated the impact of HIV-1 infection on the Mtb-specific T cell response through a cross-sectional comparison of T cell responses in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected individuals (Chapters 5 and 6). HIV-infected individuals had a significant depletion of both Th1 and Th17 CD4 responses to Mtb-specific antigens as well inhibition of Mtb-specific CD8 T cell responses, in comparison to those uninfected with HIV-1. PPD- and Rv2031c-specific responses were particularly reduced in HIV-infected individuals. Over a 12 month period of therapy, ART partially restored the Mtb-specific CD4 T cell response (Chapters 5 and 7). This effect was greater for Th1 than Th17 responses and had no detectable effect on the Mtb-specific CD8 response. However, despite some evident restoration, there remains a significant quantitative deficit in individuals on ART that is likely to contribute to persistent elevated TB risk. Overall, these data contribute to a better understanding of the mechanisms of susceptibility to TB during HIV-1 disease and ART, as well as of the correlates of protective immune responses to both pathogens.
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Contribution of monocytes to immunopathology during influenza A virus infectionCole, Suzanne Lois January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Understanding the link between interleukin 17 and vaccine-induced protection in tuberculosisGriffiths, Kristin Lisa January 2012 (has links)
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb), remains a global health problem and although BCG offers some protection against childhood disseminated disease and other mycobacterial infections, its efficacy against pulmonary TB varies between 0 and 80%. Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara expressing antigen 85A (MVA85A) is a novel TB vaccine designed to boost mycobacterium-specific CD4+ T cell response primed by BCG. MVA85A induces strong interferon (IFN)-γ responses, a cytokine known to be essential for protection following M.tb infection. A strong IFN-γ response is not a correlate of protection and in terms of the adaptive response, interleukin (IL)-17 is emerging as an important cytokine following vaccination as it is thought to help boost IFN-γ production by CD4+ T cells. This thesis shows that MVA85A induces IL-17 in PBMC and whole blood of human BCG – MVA85A vaccinees. This is replicated in mice receiving BCG – MVA85A intranasally. The administration of cholera toxin (CT) with BCG enhances IL-17 and confers improved protection following M.tb challenge, which is partially dependent on IL-17 and on the mucosal route of administration. Since CT is not a suitable adjuvant in humans, an alternative IL-17-inducing pathway was investigated. In human BCG – MVA85A-vaccinated volunteers, blocking the hydrolysing ability of the CD39, an apyrase responsible for hydrolysing pro-inflammatory ATP, enhances IL-17 production. Challenge of BCG – MVA85A-vaccinated CD39-/- mice with M.tb slightly improved the protective capacity of the vaccine, suggesting that a pathway dependent on ATP-driven inflammation may be a target for improving the immunogenicity of a vaccine against M.tb disease. Overall, this thesis has confirmed the important role of IL-17 in vaccine-induced protection against TB disease and identifies a possible target pathway for improvement of a novel vaccine.
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Epitope dominance studies with serotype O foot-and-mouth diseaseBorley, Daryl W. January 2012 (has links)
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) is an economically devastating and highly contagious livestock pathogen. It exists as seven serotypes, comprising numerous antigenically distinct subtypes. The large amount of antigenic heterogeneity has confounded attempts at developing broadly reactive vaccines. In order to overcome this issue the fundamentals of the interactions between the virus and the host humoral immune response must first be understood. Previous work in this area using monoclonal antibody (mAb) escape mutants has identified five antigenic sites for the O serotype and efforts have been made to quantify their relative importance. However, this does not represent a complete picture of serotype O antigenicity. The work conducted in this thesis demonstrates the role of a limited number of dominant substitutions in mediating the antigenic diversity of serotype O Foot-and-Mouth disease virus. Two alternative but complementary methods for identifying epitopes were developed. The first used a mathematical model to analyse newly generated serological and sequence data from 105 viruses, cultured for this purpose (and cross-reacted to 5 reference antisera), in the context of an existing crystallographic structure to identify and quantify the antigenic importance of sites on the surface of the virus. The second approach was purely structural, using existing B cell epitope prediction tools to develop a method for predicting FMDV epitopes using existing crystallographic structures of FMDV. These techniques were validated by the use of reverse genetics, which confirmed the impact on cross reactivity of two predicted novel serotype O antigenic residues, with a further four novel residues identified by looking in depth at the interactions between two genetically close, but antigenically distant viruses. This increased knowledge of the antigenic composition of serotype O FMDV contributes to our understanding of the nature of vaccine efficacy and the breadth of protection, which, in the longer term, will aid in the goal of developing vaccines to better protect livestock from such a highly antigenically variable disease.
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Hepcidin regulation in malariaSpottiswoode, Natasha January 2015 (has links)
Epidemiological observations have linked increased host iron with malaria susceptibility. At the same time, blood-stage malaria infection is associated with potentially life-threatening anemia. To improve our understanding of these relationships, this work presents an examination of the mechanisms controlling the upregulation of the hormone hepcidin, the master regulator of iron metabolism, in malaria infection. Chapter 2 presents data from a mouse model of malaria infection which indicate that hepcidin upregulation in malaria infection is associated with increased activity of the sons of mothers against decapentaplegic (Smad) signaling pathway. Although the canonical Smad pathway activators, bone morphogenetic proteins (Bmp) are not increased at the message level following infection, activin B, which has been recently shown to increase hepcidin through the Smad signaling pathway in conditions of inflammation and infection, is upregulated in the livers of malaria-infected mice. Chapter 3 shows that both activin B and the closely related protein activin A upregulate hepcidin in vitro and in vivo. Chapter 3 also explores the effects of the activin-binding protein follistatin in both systems and in the same malaria-infected mouse model as presented in Chapter 2. The work presented in Chapter 4 extends these studies to human infections by demonstrating that activin A protein co-increases with hepcidin in human serum during malaria infection. Taken together, these findings are consistent with a novel role for activin proteins in controlling hepcidin upregulation in the context of malaria infection. This work may form a basis for the development of novel therapeutics that speed recovery from malarial anemia by inhibiting activins’ actions. Chapter 5 examines the role of infected red blood cell-derived microparticles in the initial recognition of a P. falciparum malaria infection, and subsequent hepcidin upregulation. Microparticles stimulate production of cytokines from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), which also upregulate activin A message in response to both microparticles and whole infected red blood cells. These data are consistent with a model in which malaria-derived stimuli such as microparticles trigger the systemic release of activin proteins, which then act on the liver to upregulate hepcidin. Evidence has shown that cytokine levels at birth are related to malaria risk. In Chapter 6, hepcidin is measured in cord blood samples from participants in a large-scale clinical study in a malaria-endemic area, and shown to be elevated in cord blood from neonates with a clinical history of placental malaria. Cord blood hepcidin is also compared to birth levels of iron markers and other cytokines, and future clinical outcomes. Finally, the contributions of DNA methylation levels to cord hepcidin and cytokine levels are assessed by comparison of CpG methylation, at sites in genes encoding hepcidin and cytokines, to the serum concentrations of the genes’ protein products. Several intriguing associations are noted which indicate a possible novel role for DNA methylation in the determination of birth cytokine and hepcidin levels. Chapter 7 synthesizes the data presented in this thesis, interprets the possible significance of the major findings, and offers suggestions for future work.
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T-cell receptor (TCR) usage in HIV-2 infectionMoysi, Eirini January 2012 (has links)
Long-term non-progressors (LTPNs) in HIV infection target the structural protein Gag more frequently than individuals who progress to disease. However, the targeting of Gag per se does not always distinguish these two groups. Various factors have been put forth as likely explanations for this discrepancy including differences in the breadth and magnitude of observed responses, the HLA type of the host, the nature of the individual epitopes targeted and the ability of the virus to mutate these antigenic regions. The purpose of this thesis was to examine, using PBMCs isolated from HIV-2 infected LTNPs and CTL clones established in vitro, the clonotypic architecture and quality of an immunodominant HIV-2 Gag-specific response directed towards the HLA-B*3501-restricted epitope NPVPVGNIY (NY9: Gag245-253). The data presented in this thesis show that in spite of the expression of multiple inhibitory receptors on the surface of NY9-specific CD8+ T-cells, the NY9-response, which is a clonotypically 'private' response, bears a signature characterised by an increased cytotoxic sensitivity and the production of an array of cytokines, most notably IFN-γ and MIP-1β. Moreover, the results of this thesis indicate that the NY9-specific CD8+ T-cells are able to cross-recognise and lyse target B-cells pulsed with the corresponding HIV epitope PY9 and its variants at functional avidities (EC50) that are close to those exhibited by PY9-specific T-cells. However, not all mobilised TCR clonotypes are equally sensitive or equally cross-reactive. When individual CTL clones were studied it emerged that dominant clonotypes within the NY9-specific CD8+ T-cell memory pool possessed a higher avidity for tetramer and sensitivity for antigen than subdominant ones and demonstrated a better cross-reactive potential towards variants of the HIV-2 epitope. Hence, future HIV vaccine strategies may benefit from the inclusion of epitopes like NY9, the presentation of which appears to mobilise CD8+ T-cells with superior functional profiles.
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