Bibliographic Details
Title: |
Parenteral exposure to high HIV viremia leads to virus-specific T cell priming without evidence of infection. |
Authors: |
Missale, Gabriele, Papagno, Laura, Penna, Amalia, Pilli, Massimo, Zerbini, Alessandro, Vitali, Piero, Pieroni, Giovanni, Urbani, Simona, Uggeri, Jacopo, Pinheiro, Susana, Rowland-Jones, Sarah, Ferrari, Carlo |
Source: |
European Journal of Immunology; Nov2004, Vol. 34 Issue 11, p3208-3215, 8p |
Abstract: |
Previous studies on CTL responses in HIV-exposed uninfected individuals assumed that the patients were exposed to replicating HIV, but the possibility that the immune responses detected were primed by exposure to a defective virus or viral antigen could not be excluded. Epidemiological and laboratory analysis of a nosocomial outbreak of acute hepatitis B unequivocally allowed the identification of an HIV-1- and HBV-co-infected patient with high plasma levels of both viruses, as the source case of the epidemics. This clinical setting provided a natural model for testing the HIV-specific T cell response in patients exposed to blood from a patient with highly replicating HIV. Parenteral exposure to both viruses led to acute hepatitis B in five subjects without evidence of HIV-1 infection. Cryopreserved lymphocytes derived from three exposed patients were tested ex vivo in an ELISPOT assay for IFN-γ release upon stimulation with peptides from structural and non-structural HIV proteins; one of the patients was also tested with four HLA/class I tetramers. Circulating HIV-specific CD8 cells were detected by tetramer staining and a high frequency of T cells were able to release IFN-γ upon stimulation with HIV peptides, showing in vivo T cell priming by HIV. These results unequivocally demonstrate a HIV-specific cell-mediated immune response in the absence of infection after exposure to highly replicating HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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Database: |
Complementary Index |