Adaptation of HIV-1 to Human Leukocyte Antigen Class I

  • Yuka Kawashima ,
  • Katja Pfafferott ,
  • John Frater ,
  • Philippa Matthews ,
  • Rebecca Payne ,
  • Marylyn Addo ,
  • Hiroyuki Gatanaga ,
  • Mamoru Fujiwara ,
  • Atsuko Hachiya ,
  • Hirokazu Koizumi ,
  • Nozomi Kuse ,
  • Shinichi Oka ,
  • Anna Duda ,
  • Andrew Pendergast ,
  • Hayley Crawford ,
  • Alasdair Leslie ,
  • Zabrina Brumme ,
  • Chanson Brumme ,
  • Todd Allen ,
  • Christian Brander ,
  • Richard Kaslow ,
  • James Tang ,
  • Eric Hunter ,
  • Susan Allen ,
  • Joseph Mulenga ,
  • Songee Branch ,
  • Tim Roach ,
  • Mina John ,
  • Simon Mallal ,
  • Anthony Ogwu ,
  • Roger Shapiro ,
  • Julia G. Prado ,
  • Sarah Fidler ,
  • Jonathan Weber ,
  • Oliver G. Pybus ,
  • Paul Klenerman ,
  • Thumbi Ndung'u ,
  • Rodney Phillips ,
  • ,
  • P. Richard Harrigan ,
  • Bruce D. Walker ,
  • Masafumi Takiguchi ,
  • Philip Goulder

Nature | , Vol 458: pp. 641-645

Publication

The rapid and extensive spread of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic provides a rare opportunity to witness host–pathogen co-evolution involving humans. A focal point is the interaction between genes encoding human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and those encoding HIV proteins. HLA molecules present fragments (epitopes) of HIV proteins on the surface of infected cells to enable immune recognition and killing by CD8+ T cells; particular HLA molecules, such as HLA-B*57, HLA-B*27 and HLA-B*51, are more likely to mediate successful control of HIV infection1. Mutation within these epitopes can allow viral escape from CD8+ T-cell recognition. Here we analysed viral sequences and HLA alleles from >2,800 subjects, drawn from 9 distinct study cohorts spanning 5 continents. Initial analysis of the HLA-B*51-restricted epitope, TAFTIPSI (reverse transcriptase residues 128–135), showed a strong correlation between the frequency of the escape mutation I135X and HLA-B*51 prevalence in the 9 study cohorts (P = 0.0001). Extending these analyses to incorporate other well-defined CD8+ T-cell epitopes, including those restricted by HLA-B*57 and HLA-B*27, showed that the frequency of these epitope variants (n = 14) was consistently correlated with the prevalence of the restricting HLA allele in the different cohorts (together, P < 0.0001), demonstrating strong evidence of HIV adaptation to HLA at a population level. This process of viral adaptation may dismantle the well-established HLA associations with control of HIV infection that are linked to the availability of key epitopes, and highlights the challenge for a vaccine to keep pace with the changing immunological landscape presented by HIV.