Adoptive Transfer of Engineered Rhesus Simian Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific CD8(+) T Cells Reduces the Number of Transmitted/Founder Viruses Established in Rhesus Macaques

作者:Ayala Victor I; Trivett Matthew T; Barsov Eugene V; Jain Sumiti; Piatak Michael Jr; Trubey Charles M; Alvord W Gregory; Chertova Elena; Roser James D; Smedley Jeremy; Komin Alexander; Keele Brandon F; Ohlen Claes; Ott David E*
来源:Journal of Virology, 2016, 90(21): 9942-9952.
DOI:10.1128/JVI.01522-16

摘要

AIDS virus infections are rarely controlled by cell-mediated immunity, in part due to viral immune evasion and immunodeficiency resulting from CD4(+) T-cell infection. One likely aspect of this failure is that antiviral cellular immune responses are either absent or present at low levels during the initial establishment of infection. To test whether an extensive, timely, and effective response could reduce the establishment of infection from a high-dose inoculum, we adoptively transferred large numbers of T cells that were molecularly engineered with anti-simian immunodeficiency virus (anti-SIV) activity into rhesus macaques 3 days following an intrarectal SIV inoculation. To measure in vivo antiviral activity, we assessed the number of viruses transmitted using SIVmac239X, a molecularly tagged viral stock containing 10 genotypic variants, at a dose calculated to transmit 12 founder viruses. Single-genome sequencing of plasma virus revealed that the two animals receiving T cells expressing SIV-specific T-cell receptors (TCRs) had significantly fewer viral genotypes than the two control animals receiving non-SIV-specific T cells (means of 4.0 versus 7.5 transmitted viral genotypes; P = 0.044). Accounting for the likelihood of transmission of multiple viruses of a particular genotype, the calculated means of the total number of founder viruses transmitted were 4.5 and 14.5 in the experimental and control groups, respectively (P = 0.021). Thus, a large antiviral T-cell response timed with virus exposure can limit viral transmission. The presence of strong, preexisting T-cell responses, including those induced by vaccines, might help prevent the establishment of infection at the lower-exposure doses in humans that typically transmit only a single virus.

  • 出版日期2016-11