Design and pre-clinical evaluation of a universal HIV-1 vaccine

Sven Létourneau, Eung-Jun Im, Tumelo Mashishi, Choechoe Brereton, Anne Bridgeman, Hongbing Yang, Lucy Dorrell, Tao Dong, Bette Korber, Andrew J McMichael, Tomás Hanke, Sven Létourneau, Eung-Jun Im, Tumelo Mashishi, Choechoe Brereton, Anne Bridgeman, Hongbing Yang, Lucy Dorrell, Tao Dong, Bette Korber, Andrew J McMichael, Tomás Hanke

Abstract

Background: One of the big roadblocks in development of HIV-1/AIDS vaccines is the enormous diversity of HIV-1, which could limit the value of any HIV-1 vaccine candidate currently under test.

Methodology and findings: To address the HIV-1 variation, we designed a novel T cell immunogen, designated HIV(CONSV), by assembling the 14 most conserved regions of the HIV-1 proteome into one chimaeric protein. Each segment is a consensus sequence from one of the four major HIV-1 clades A, B, C and D, which alternate to ensure equal clade coverage. The gene coding for the HIV(CONSV) protein was inserted into the three most studied vaccine vectors, plasmid DNA, human adenovirus serotype 5 and modified vaccine virus Ankara (MVA), and induced HIV-1-specific T cell responses in mice. We also demonstrated that these conserved regions prime CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cell to highly conserved epitopes in humans and that these epitopes, although usually subdominant, generate memory T cells in patients during natural HIV-1 infection.

Significance: Therefore, this vaccine approach provides an attractive and testable alternative for overcoming the HIV-1 variability, while focusing T cell responses on regions of the virus that are less likely to mutate and escape. Furthermore, this approach has merit in the simplicity of design and delivery, requiring only a single immunogen to provide extensive coverage of global HIV-1 population diversity.

Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1. The HIV CONSV immunogen.
Figure 1. The HIVCONSV immunogen.
(A) Localization of the 14 most highly conserved regions of the HIV-1 proteome. The numbers written vertically under each fragment boundary indicate the first and last aa positions using the HXB2 reference strain numbering (http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/hiv-db/LOCATE/locate.html). (B) Predicted aa sequence of the the HIVCONSV immunogen with indicated fragment numbers. (C) Summary of the fragments including: the fragment number; the protein in which it was embedded; the clade of the consensus sequence selected for inclusion in the immunogen, alternating between clades A–D; additional clades that have identical HIVCONSV; and position numbers in the chimeric vaccine. The number of additional clades with identical consensus sequences to selected clade reflects the high level of conservation in these regions, and is encouraging in terms of the global potential of the vaccine. The consensus sequences compared were to the M group consensus, clades A–K, and three very common recombinant circulating forms CRF01 (common in Asia and Africa), CRF02 (common Africa), CRF08 (common in China) retrieved from the Los Alamos database 2004 consensus alignment (http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/hiv-db/CONSENSUS/M_GROUP/Consensus.html). (D) Schematic representation of the HIVCONSV immunogen (not drawn to scale) indicating clade anternation (above), overlapping peptide pool derivation and protein origin by colour coding. (E) Hamming distances between the HIVCONSV antigen fragments and the global circulating viral sequences. The full M group alignment, including recombinant sequences, was used for the comparison. The Los Alamos database alignment contains only one sequence person, and contains sequences from between 600 and 1000 individuals in these proteins. The Hamming distance range for 95% of the sequences relative to the vaccine immunogen is given by the vertical lines. The distances between the full length natural proteins were then calculated relative to HXB2 reference strain Env, Vif, Gag and Pol sequences for comparison. Distance measures are minimal estimates, as gaps inserted in regions where insertions and deletions occur were not counted. (F) Numbers of known CD8+ T cell epitopes (defined to within 12 aa or less in the Los Alamos HIV-1 database) in each of the 14 conserved protein fragments included in the HIVCONSV immunogen are shown. When more than one HLA class I presenting molecules can present the same HIV-1 epitope, then each is counted as a distinct epitope; if more than one sequence variant has been described as an epitope presented by the same class I molecule, then these are counted as a distinct epitopes; however, if an HLA serotype and genotype that are potentially the same are each described as presenting the same epitope (like A2 and A*0201) they are scored as a single epitope.
Figure 2. HIV CONSV protein expression in…
Figure 2. HIVCONSV protein expression in human cells and basic immunogenicity.
A histochemical and DAPI staining of 293T cells transiently transfected with pTH.HIVCONSV DNA (A), or infected with MVA.HIVCONSV (B) or AdHu5.HIVCONSV (C and D). HIVCONSV protein expression was detected using mAb tag Pk at the C-terminus of the immunogen and a primary anti-Pk mAb followed by secondary FITC- (A and B) or AlexaFluor584- (C and D) conjugated detection antibodies. The AdHu5.HIVCONSV vaccine also expressed GFP, which co-localized with the HIVCONSV expression (D). (E) BALB/c mice were immunized using the regimen indicated below, and the HIVCONSV-induced T cell responses were assessed in an ELISPOT assay using the H epitope. Results are shown as a mean±SD (n = 4). U–unimmunized; D–pTH.HIVCONSV DNA; A–AdHu5.HIVCONSV; and M–MVA.HIVCONSV. For doses and timing, see Methods.
Figure 3. Breadth of HIV CONSV -induced…
Figure 3. Breadth of HIVCONSV-induced T cell responses in BALB/c mice.
Mice were immunized using the regimen and immunogen indicated above (A, B and C) or below (D) the graphs and the HIVCONSV-specific responses were determined in ex vivo ELISPOT (A and E) or ICS (B and D) assays detecting the indicated cytokines and using for restimulation overlapping peptide pools schematically shown in Fig. 1D (A and B) or individual epitope peptides (D and E). (C) Identified peptides or epitope sequences and their origin, name and T cell reactivity. In (D): white–IFN-γ; black–IL-2; stripy-IFN-γ+IL-2; and grey–TNF-α; *-responses significantly above the no-peptide background (p<0.05). In (E): white–no peptide followed from left to right by epitopes H, G1, G2, P1, P2 and P3. Results are shown as a mean±SD (n = 4). For doses and timing, see Methods.
Figure 4. HIV CONSV -induced T cell…
Figure 4. HIVCONSV-induced T cell responses in HLA-A*0201-transgenic mice, strain HHD.
(A) Mice were immunized using the DAM regimen and the vaccine-induced responses were detected in an ex vivo ELISPOT assay. Results are shown as a mean±SD (n = 4). For doses and timing, see Methods. (B) Identified epitope peptides and their origin. (C) Killing of murine EL4 A2-Kd (top) and human JK A2-Kd (bottom) target cells sensitized with the shown peptides in a 51Cr-release assay after a 5-day in vitro peptide re-stimulation. Black, grey and white bars indicated effector to target ratios of 100, 50 and 25 to 1, respectively.
Figure 5. Recognition of HIV CONSV -derived…
Figure 5. Recognition of HIVCONSV-derived peptides by PBMC from HIV-1-infected patients.
The HIVCONSV-specific memory T cells were assessed in healthy and HIV-1-infected subjects using an IFN-γ ELISPOT assay after a 10-day peptide and cytokine culture. (A) Summed frequencies of HIVCONSV-specific cells detected in healthy (n = 9) and HIV-1-infected (n = 13) subjects. The bars show the group medians of 578 SFU/106 and 8,092 SFU/106 cells for the healthy and infected subjects, respectively. (B) In five subjects indicated below, cultured PBMC were left undepleted (grey) or depleted of CD8+ cells (black) prior to the ELISPOT assay. The difference between undepleted (median = 8,092 SFU/106 cells) and CD8-depleted samples (median = 550 SFU/106 cells) was statistically significant (p = 0.0313). (C) Responses to individual HIVCONSV-derived peptide pools as shown in Fig. 1D determined for the HIV-1-infected (grey) and healthy (black) subjects shown as medians. (D) Responses to individual peptides pools for each HIV-1-infected patient indicated below. Bars show a mean±SD of three assay wells and ‘*’ indicates a positive response according to criteria set in Methods. Due to sample shortage, subject 021 was not tested.

References

    1. Burton DR, Desrosiers RC, Doms RW, Koff WC, Kwong PD, et al. HIV vaccine design and the neutralizing antibody problem. Nat Immunol. 2004;5:233–236.
    1. McMichael AJ. HIV vaccines. Annu Rev Immunol. 2006;24:227–255.
    1. Duerr A, Wasserheit JN, Corey L. HIV vaccines: new frontiers in vaccine development. Clin Infect Dis. 2006;43:500–511.
    1. Hanke T, McMichael AJ, Dorrell L. Clinical experience with plasmid DNA- and modified vaccinia vaccine Ankara (MVA)-vectored HIV-1 clade A vaccine inducing T cells. J Gen Virol. 2007;88:1–12.
    1. Gaschen B, Taylor J, Yusim K, Foley B, Gao F, et al. Diversity considerations in HIV-1 vaccine selection. Science. 2002;296:2354–2360.
    1. Korber B, Gaschen B, Yusim K, Thakallapally R, Kesmir C, et al. Evolutionary and immunological implications of contemporary HIV-1 variation. Br Med Bull. 2001;58:19–42.
    1. Williamson C, Morris L, Maughan MF, Ping LH, Dryga SA, et al. Characterization and selection of HIV-1 subtype C isolates for use in vaccine development AIDS. Res Hum Retroviruses. 2003;19:133–144.
    1. Amara RR, Sharma S, Patel M, Smith JM, Chennareddi L, et al. Studies on the cross-clade and cross-species conservation of HIV-1 Gag-specific CD8 and CD4 T cell responses elicited by a clade B DNA/MVA vaccine in macaques. Virology. 2005;334:124–133.
    1. Betts MR, Krowka J, Santamaria C, Balsamo K, Gao F, et al. Cross-clade human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses in HIV-infected Zambians. J Virol. 1997;71:8908–8911.
    1. Buseyne F, Chaix ML, Fleury B, Manigard O, Burgard M, et al. Cross-clade-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in HIV-1-infected children. Virology. 1998;250:316–324.
    1. Cao H, Kanki P, Sankale JL, Dieng-Sarr A, Mazzara GP, et al. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte cross-reactivity among different human immunodeficiency virus type 1 clades: implications for vaccine development. J Virol. 1997;71:8615–8623.
    1. Ferrari G, Humphrey W, McElrath MJ, Excler JL, Duliege AM, et al. Clade B-based HIV-1 vaccines elicit cross-clade cytotoxic T lymphocyte reactivities in uninfected volunteers. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1997;94:1396–1401.
    1. Burrows SR, Silins SL, Moss DJ, Khanna R, Misko IS, et al. T cell receptor repertoire for a viral epitope in humans is diversified by tolerance to a background major histocompatibility complex antigen. J Exp Med. 1995;182:1703–1715.
    1. Dorrell L, Dong T, Ogg GS, McAdam S, Anzala o, et al. Distinct recognition of clade A HIV-1 epitopes by cytotoxic T lymphocytes generated from donors infected in Africa. J Virol. 1999;73:1708–1714.
    1. Dorrell L, Willcox BE, Jones EY, Gillespie G, Njai H, et al. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize structurally diverse, clade-specific and cross-reactive peptides in human immunodeficiency virus type-1 gag through HLA-B53. Eur J Immunol. 2001;31:1747–1756.
    1. Gotch F, McMichael A, Rothbard J. Recognition of influenza A matrix protein by HLA-A2-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Use of analogues to orientate the matrix peptide in the HLA-A2 binding site J Exp Med. 1988;168:2045–2057.
    1. Hausmann S, Biddison WE, Smith KJ, Ding YH, Garboczi DN, et al. Peptide recognition by two HLA-A2/Tax11-19-specific T cell clones in relationship to their MHC/peptide/TCR crystal structures. J Immunol. 1999;162:5389–5397.
    1. Larke N, Im E-J, Wagner R, Williamson C, Williamson A-L, et al. Combined single-clade candidate HIV-1 vaccines induce T cell responses limited by multiple forms of in vivo immune interference. Eur J Immunol. 2007;37:566–577.
    1. Lee JK, Stewart-Jones G, Dong T, Harlos K, Di Gleria K, et al. T cell cross-reactivity and conformational changes during TCR engagement. J Exp Med. 2004;200:1455–1466.
    1. Goulder PJ, Watkins DI. HIV and SIV CTL escape: implications for vaccine design. Nat Rev Immunol. 2004;4:630–640.
    1. Klenerman P, Wu Y, Phillips R. HIV: current opinion in escapology. Curr Opin Microbiol. 2002;5:408–413.
    1. Walker BD, Goulder PJ. AIDS. Escape from the immune system. Nature. 2000;407:313–314.
    1. McMichael A, Mwau M, Hanke T. HIV T cell vaccines, the importance of clades. Vaccine. 2002;20:1918–1921.
    1. Blay WM, Gnanakaran S, Foley B, Doria-Rose NA, Korber BT, et al. Consistent patterns of change during the divergence of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope from that of the inoculated virus in simian/human immunodeficiency virus-infected macaques. J Virol. 2006;80:999–1014.
    1. Gao F, Korber BT, Weaver E, Liao HX, Hahn BH, et al. Centralized immunogens as a vaccine strategy to overcome HIV-1 diversity. Expert Rev Vaccines. 2004;3:S161–168.
    1. Gao F, Weaver EA, Lu Z, Li Y, Liao HX, et al. Antigenicity and immunogenicity of a synthetic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 group m consensus envelope glycoprotein. J Virol. 2005;79:1154–1163.
    1. Kothe DL, Decker JM, Li Y, Weng Z, Bibollet-Ruche F, et al. Antigenicity and immunogenicity of HIV-1 consensus subtype B envelope glycoproteins. Virology. 2007;360:218–234.
    1. Kothe DL, Li Y, Decker JM, Bibollet-Ruche F, Zammit KP, et al. Ancestral and consensus envelope immunogens for HIV-1 subtype C. Virology. 2006;352:438–449.
    1. Weaver EA, Lu Z, Camacho ZT, Moukdar F, Liao HX, et al. Cross-subtype T-cell immune responses induced by a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 group m consensus env immunogen. J Virol. 2006;80:6745–6756.
    1. Dorrell L, Yang H, Ondondo B, Dong T, di Gleria K, et al. Expansion and diversification of HIV-1-specific T cells following immunisation of HIV-1-infected individuals with a recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara/HIV-1 gag vaccine. J Virol. 2006;80:4705–4716.
    1. Goonetilleke N, Moore S, Dally L, Winstone N, Mahmoud N, et al. Prime-boost vaccination with recombinant DNA and MVA expressing HIV-1 Clade A gag and immunodominant CTL epitopes induces multi-functional HIV-1-specific T cells in healthy subjects. J Virol. 2006;80:4717–4728.
    1. Slyker JA, Lohman BL, Mbori-Ngacha DA, Reilly M, Wee EG, et al. Modified vaccinia Ankara expressing HIVA antigen stimulates HIV-1-specific CD8 T cells in ELISpot assays of HIV-1 exposed infants. Vaccine. 2005;23:4711–4719.
    1. Altfeld M, Addo MM, Shankarappa R, Lee PK, Allen TM, et al. Enhanced detection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1-specific T-cell responses to highly variable regions by using peptides based on autologous virus sequences. J Virol. 2003;77:7330–7340.
    1. Catanzaro AT, Koup RA, Roederer M, Bailer RT, Enama ME, et al. Phase 1 safety and immunogenicity evaluation of a multiclade HIV-1 candidate vaccine delivered by a replication-defective recombinant adenovirus vector. J Infect Dis. 2006;194:1638–1649.
    1. Graham BS, Koup RA, Roederer M, Bailer RT, Enama ME, et al. Phase 1 safety and immunogenicity evaluation of a multiclade HIV-1 DNA candidate vaccine. J Infect Dis. 2006;194:1650–1660.
    1. Seaman MS, Xu L, Beaudry K, Martin KL, Beddall MH, et al. Multiclade human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope immunogens elicit broad cellular and humoral immunity in rhesus monkeys. J Virol. 2005;79:2956–2963.
    1. Bertoletti A, Sette A, Chisari FV, Penna A, Levrero M, et al. Natural variants of cytotoxic epitopes are T-cell receptor antagonists for antiviral cytotoxic. T cells Nature. 1994;369:407–410.
    1. Klenerman P, Rowland-Jones S, McAdam S, Edwards J, Daenke S, et al. Cytotoxic T-cell activity antagonized by naturally occurring HIV-1 Gag variants. Nature. 1994;369:403–407.
    1. Basu D, Williams CB, Allen PM. In vivo antagonism of a T cell response by an endogenously expressed ligand. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998;95:14332–14336.
    1. Gilbert SC, Plebanski M, Gupta S, Morris J, Cox M, et al. Association of malaria parasite population structure, HLA, and immunological antagonism. Science. 1998;279:1173–1177.
    1. Lau LL, Jiang J, Shen H. In vivo modulation of T cell responses and protective immunity by TCR antagonism during infection. J Immunol. 2005;174:7970–7976.
    1. Plebanski M, Lee EA, Hannan CM, Flanagan KL, Gilbert SC, et al. Altered peptide ligands narrow the repertoire of cellular immune responses by interfering with T-cell priming. Nat Med. 1999;5:565–571.
    1. Fischer W, Perkins S, Theiler J, Bhattacharya T, Yusim K, et al. Polyvalent vaccines for optimal coverage of potential T-cell epitopes in global HIV-1 variants. Nat Med. 2007;13:100–106.
    1. Rolland M, Jensen MA, Nickle DC, Yan J, Learn GH, et al. Reconstruction and function of Ancestral Center-Of-Tree (COT) HIV-I Proteins J Virol. 2007
    1. Hanke T, Schneider J, Gilbert SC, Hill AVS, McMichael A. DNA multi-CTL epitope vaccines for HIV and Plasmodium falciparum: Immunogenicity in mice. Vaccine. 1998;16:426–435.
    1. Nkolola JP, Wee EG-T, Im E-J, Jewell CP, Chen N, et al. Engineering RENTA, a DNA prime-MVA boost HIV vaccine tailored for Eastern and Central Africa. Gene Ther. 2004;11:1068–1080.
    1. Allen TM, Sidney J, del Guercio M-F, Glickman RL, Lensmeyer GL, et al. Characterization of the peptide-binding motif of a rhesus MHC class I molecule (Mamu-A*01) that binds an immunodominant CTL epitope from SIV. J Immunol. 1998;160:6062–6071.
    1. Hanke T, Szawlowski P, Randall RE. Construction of solid matrix-antibody-antigen complexes containing simian immunodeficiency virus p27 using tag-specific monoclonal antibody and tag-linked antigen. J-Gen-Virol. 1992;73:653–660.
    1. Takahashi H, Cohen J, Hosmalin A, Cease KB, Houghten R, et al. An immunodominant epitope of the human immunodeficiency virus envelope glycoprotein gp160 recognized by class I major histocompatibility molecule-restricted murine cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1988;85:3105–3109.
    1. Andre S, Seed B, Eberle J, Schraut W, Bultmann A, et al. Increased immune response elicited by DNA vaccination with a synthetic gp120 sequence with optimized codon usage. J Virol. 1998;72:1497–1503.
    1. Kozak M. An analysis of 5′-noncoding sequences from 699 vertebrate messenger RNAs. Nucleic Acids Res. 1987;15:8125–8148.
    1. Hanke T, McMichael AJ. Design and construction of an experimental HIV-1 vaccine for a year-2000 clinical trial in Kenya. Nat Med. 2000;6:951–955.
    1. Im E-J, Hanke T. Pre-clinical evaluation of candidate HIV type 1 vaccines in inbred strains and an outbred stock of mice. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2007;23:857–862.
    1. Hanke T, Blanchard TJ, Schneider J, Ogg GS, Tan R, et al. Immunogenicities of intravenous and intramuscular administrations of MVA-based multi-CTL epitope vaccine for HIV in mice. J Gen Virol. 1998;79:83–90.
    1. Kmieciak D, Bednarek I, Takiguchi M, Wasik TJ, Bratosiewicz J, et al. The effect of epitope variation on the profile of cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses to the HIV envelope glycoprotein. Int Immunol. 1998;10:1789–1799.
    1. Goulder PJ, Altfeld MA, Rosenberg ES, Nguyen T, Tang Y, et al. Substantial differences in specificity of HIV-specific cytotoxic T cells in acute and chronic HIV infection. J Exp Med. 2001;193:181–194.
    1. Frahm N, Kiepiela P, Adams S, Linde CH, Hewitt HS, et al. Control of human immunodeficiency virus replication by cytotoxic T lymphocytes targeting subdominant epitopes. Nat Immunol. 2006;7:173–178.
    1. Gallimore A, Dumrese T, Hengartner H, Zinkernagel RM, Rammensee HG. Protective immunity does not correlate with the hierarchy of virus-specific cytotoxic T cell responses to naturally processed peptides. J Exp Med. 1998;187:1647–1657.
    1. Makki A, Weidt G, Blachere NE, Lefrancois L, Srivastava PK. Immunization against a dominant tumor antigen abrogates immunogenicity of the tumor. Cancer Immun. 2002;2:4.
    1. Bhattacharya T, Daniels M, Heckerman D, Foley B, Frahm N, et al. Founder effects in the assessment of HIV polymorphisms and HLA allele associations. Science. 2007;315:1583–1586.
    1. Moore CB, John M, James IR, Christiansen FT, Witt CS, et al. Evidence of HIV-1 adaptation to HLA-restricted immune responses at a population level. Science. 2002;296:1439–1443.
    1. Streeck H, Lichterfeld M, Alter G, Meier A, Teigen N, et al. Recognition of a defined region within p24 Gag by CD8+ T cells during primary HIV-1 infection in individuals expressing protective HLA class I alleles J Virol. 2007
    1. Gilbert SC, Schneider J, Hannan CM, Hu JT, Plebanski M, et al. Enhanced CD8 T cell immunogenicity and protective efficacy in a mouse malaria model using a recombinant adenoviral vaccine in heterologous prime-boost immunisation regimes. Vaccine. 2002;20:1039–1045.
    1. Johnson RP, Hammond SA, Trocha A, Siliciano RF, Walker BD. Induction of a major histocompatibility complex class I-restricted cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response to a highly conserved region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) gp120 in seronegative humans immunized with a candidate HIV-1 vaccine. J Virol. 1994;68:3145–3153.
    1. Johnson RP, Trocha A, Buchanan TM, Walker BD. Identification of overlapping HLA class I-restricted cytotoxic T cell epitopes in a conserved region of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein: definition of minimum epitopes and analysis of the effects of sequence variation. J Exp Med. 1992;175:961–971.
    1. Johnson RP, Trocha A, Yang L, Mazzara GP, Panicali DL, et al. HIV-1 gag-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize multiple highly conserved epitopes. Fine specificity of the gag-specific response defined by using unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells and cloned effector cells. J Immunol. 1991;147:1512–1521.
    1. Harrer E, Harrer T, Barbosa P, Feinberg M, Johnson RP, et al. Recognition of the highly conserved YMDD region in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase by HLA-A2-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes from an asymptomatic long-term nonprogressor. J Infect Dis. 1996;173:476–479.
    1. Johnson RP, Trocha A, Buchanan TM, Walker BD. Recognition of a highly conserved region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120 by an HLA-Cw4-restricted cytotoxic T-lymphocyte clone. J Virol. 1993;67:438–445.
    1. Rowland-Jones SL, Dong T, Fowke KR, Kimani J, Krausa P, et al. Cytotoxic T cell responses to multiple conserved epitopes in HIV-resistant prostitutes in Nairobi. J Clin Inv. 1998;102:1758–1765.
    1. Wilson CC, Palmer B, Southwood S, Sidney J, Higashimoto Y, et al. Identification and antigenicity of broadly cross-reactive and conserved human immunodeficiency virus type 1-derived helper T-lymphocyte epitopes. J Virol. 2001;75:4195–4207.
    1. Wilson CC, McKinney D, Anders M, MaWhinney S, Forster J, et al. Development of a DNA vaccine designed to induce cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses to Multiple conserved epitopes in HIV-1. J Immunol. 2003;171:5611–5623.
    1. Ferrari G, Kostyu DD, Cox J, Dawson DV, Flores J, et al. Identification of highly conserved and broadly cross-reactive HIV type 1 cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes as candidate immunogens for inclusion in Mycobacterium bovis BCG-vectored HIV vaccines. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2000;16:1433–1443.

Source: PubMed

Подписаться