[HTML][HTML] Functionally active HIV-specific T cells that target Gag and Nef can be expanded from virus-naïve donors and target a range of viral epitopes: implications for a …

S Patel, S Lam, CR Cruz, K Wright, C Cochran… - Biology of blood and …, 2016 - Elsevier
S Patel, S Lam, CR Cruz, K Wright, C Cochran, RF Ambinder, CM Bollard
Biology of blood and marrow transplantation, 2016Elsevier
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) can potentially cure human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) by eliminating infected recipient cells, particularly in the
context of technologies that may confer HIV resistance to these stem cells. But, to date, the
Berlin patient remains the only case of HIV cure despite multiple attempts to eradicate
infection with HSCT. One approach to improve this is to administer virus-specific T cells, a
strategy that has proven success in preventing other infections after transplantation …
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) can potentially cure human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) by eliminating infected recipient cells, particularly in the context of technologies that may confer HIV resistance to these stem cells. But, to date, the Berlin patient remains the only case of HIV cure despite multiple attempts to eradicate infection with HSCT. One approach to improve this is to administer virus-specific T cells, a strategy that has proven success in preventing other infections after transplantation. Although we have reported that broadly HIV–specific T cells can be expanded from HIV+ patients, allogeneic transplantations only contain virus-naïve T cells. Modifying this approach for the allogeneic setting requires a robust, reproducible platform that can expand HIV-specific cells from the naïve pool. Hence, we hypothesized that HIV-specific T cells could be primed ex vivo from seronegative individuals to effectively target HIV. Here, we show that ex vivo–primed and expanded HIV-specific T cells released IFNγ in response to HIV antigens and that these cells have enhanced ability to suppress replication in vitro. This is the first demonstration of ex vivo priming and expansion of functional, multi-HIV antigen–specific T cells from HIV-negative donors, which has implications for use of allogeneic HSCT as a functional HIV cure.
Elsevier