Cellular immunity in HIV-1 infection is believed to play a key role in immunopathogenesis, and has become an important focus in vaccine development. Recent technological advances have revolutionized the accuracy and precision of HIV-1-specific CTL detection in infected persons and vaccinees. However, insight into the antiviral function of these cells is not provided by these measures. Basic questions about the interaction of HIV-1-specific CTL with infected cells remain unaddressed by correlative studies in vivo. We have developed in vitro systems to approach experimentally some of these issues. Our studies thus far have indicated that CTL clones vary in their ability to recognized infected cells and inhibit viral replication. Epitope specificity appears to have an important influence on the efficiency of CTL against HIV-1, as well as the ability of the virus to escape from immune pressure. These issues have potentially important implications in the immunopathogenesis of infection and vaccine development. We propose to pursue further studies of the mechanisms by which CTL targeting influences function. Specifically, we intend: (1) To build panels of CTL clones and target cells for further functional studies; (2) To evaluate the factors involved in epitope-dependence of efficiency of HIV-1 inhibition by CTL; and (3) To evaluate HIV-1 escape from CTL of varying epitope specificities.
The first Aim will expand the availability of the CTL, including those of previously unavailable specificities(e.g. Tat, Vif), for these studies, utilizing new technologies that markedly increase the efficiency of mapping and isolating CTL. New approaches will also be undertaken to produce HLA matched virus-permissive cell lines, to overcome the other major hurdle in studies of this nature.
The second Aim will evaluate the impact of CTL specificity on antiviral function, including a detailed dissection of viral replicative kinetic events in relation to CTL susceptibility, and examination of protein levels and their impact.
The third Aim will expand studies begun in the last funding period, examining the propensity of HIV-1 to escape from CTL clones, allowing a controlled evaluation of factors that determine the ability of escape to occur, with particular attention to T cell receptor properties of individual clones and epitope specificity.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AI043203-10
Application #
7027011
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-AARR-2 (03))
Program Officer
Finzi, Diana
Project Start
1998-04-01
Project End
2008-03-31
Budget Start
2006-04-01
Budget End
2007-03-31
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$372,291
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Ding, Ke; Zhang, Xing; Mrazek, Jan et al. (2018) Solution Structures of Engineered Vault Particles. Structure 26:619-626.e3
Balamurugan, Arumugam; Claiborne, Deon; Ng, Hwee L et al. (2017) HIV-1 Epitope Variability Is Associated with T Cell Receptor Repertoire Instability and Breadth. J Virol 91:
Babad, J; Mukherjee, G; Follenzi, A et al. (2015) Generation of ? cell-specific human cytotoxic T cells by lentiviral transduction and their survival in immunodeficient human leucocyte antigen-transgenic mice. Clin Exp Immunol 179:398-413
De La Cruz, Justin; Vollbrecht, Thomas; Frohnen, Patricia et al. (2014) Ineffectual targeting of HIV-1 Nef by cytotoxic T lymphocytes in acute infection results in no functional impairment or viremia reduction. J Virol 88:7881-92
Al-Mawsawi, Laith Q; Wu, Nicholas C; De La Cruz, Justin et al. (2014) Short communication: HIV-1 gag genetic variation in a single acutely infected participant defined by high-resolution deep sequencing. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 30:806-11
Wu, Nicholas C; De La Cruz, Justin; Al-Mawsawi, Laith Q et al. (2014) HIV-1 quasispecies delineation by tag linkage deep sequencing. PLoS One 9:e97505
Harris, D T; Badowski, M; Balamurugan, A et al. (2013) Long-term human immune system reconstitution in non-obese diabetic (NOD)-Rag (-)-? chain (-) (NRG) mice is similar but not identical to the original stem cell donor. Clin Exp Immunol 174:402-13
Bhattacharya, Debika; Lewis, Martha J; Lassmann, Britta et al. (2013) Combination of allele-specific detection techniques to quantify minority resistance variants in hepatitis B infection: a novel approach. J Virol Methods 190:34-40
Yeghiazarian, Lilit; Cumberland, William G; Yang, Otto O (2013) A stochastic multi-scale model of HIV-1 transmission for decision-making: application to a MSM population. PLoS One 8:e70578
Balamurugan, Arumugam; Ali, Ayub; Boucau, Julie et al. (2013) HIV-1 gag cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes vary in presentation kinetics relative to HLA class I downregulation. J Virol 87:8726-34

Showing the most recent 10 out of 52 publications