Browsing by Author "Self, Steven G."
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Item Considerations for biomarker-targeted intervention strategies for tuberculosis disease prevention.(Elsevier., 2018) Fiore-Gartland, Andrew.; Carpp, Lindsay N.; Naidoo, Kogieleum.; Thompson, Ethan.; Zak, Daniel E.; Self, Steven G.; Churchyard, Gavin J.; Walzl, Gerhard.; Penn-Nicholson, Adam.; Scriba, Thomas J.; Hatherill, Mark.Abstract available in pdf.Item Initial B-Cell responses to transmitted human immunodeficiency virus type 1: virion-binding immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG antibodies followed by plasma anti-gp41 antibodies with ineffective control of initial viremia.(American Society for Microbiology., 2008) Tomaras, Georgia D.; Yates, Nicole L.; Liu, Pinghuang.; Qin, Li.; Fouda, Genevieve Giny.; Chavez, Leslie L.; Decamp, Allan C.; Parks, Robert J.; Ashley, Vicki C.; Lucas, Judith T.; Cohen, Myron S.; Eron, Joseph J.; Hick, Charles B.; Liao, Hua-Xin.; Self, Steven G.; Landucci, Gary.; Forthal, Donald N.; Weinhold, Kent J.; Keele, Brandon F.; Hahn, Beatrice H.; Greenberg, Michael L.; Morris, Lynn.; Abdool Karim, Salim Safurdeen.; Blattner, William A.; Montefiori, David Charles.; Shaw, George M.; Perelson, Alan S.; Haynes, Barton F.A window of opportunity for immune responses to extinguish human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exists from the moment of transmission through establishment of the latent pool of HIV-1-infected cells. A critical time to study the initial immune responses to the transmitted/founder virus is the eclipse phase of HIV-1 infection (time from transmission to the first appearance of plasma virus), but, to date, this period has been logistically difficult to analyze. To probe B-cell responses immediately following HIV-1 transmission, we have determined envelope-specific antibody responses to autologous and consensus Envs in plasma donors from the United States for whom frequent plasma samples were available at time points immediately before, during, and after HIV-1 plasma viral load (VL) ramp-up in acute infection, and we have modeled the antibody effect on the kinetics of plasma viremia. The first detectable B-cell response was in the form of immune complexes 8 days after plasma virus detection, whereas the first free plasma anti-HIV-1 antibody was to gp41 and appeared 13 days after the appearance of plasma virus. In contrast, envelope gp120-specific antibodies were delayed an additional 14 days. Mathematical modeling of the earliest viral dynamics was performed to determine the impact of antibody on HIV replication in vivo as assessed by plasma VL. Including the initial anti-gp41 immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgM, or both responses in the model did not significantly impact the early dynamics of plasma VL. These results demonstrate that the first IgM and IgG antibodies induced by transmitted HIV-1 are capable of binding virions but have little impact on acute-phase viremia at the timing and magnitude that they occur in natural infection.Item Vertical T cell immunodominance and epitope entropy determine HIV-1 escape.(American Society for Clinical Investigation., 2012) Liu, Michael K. P.; Hawkins, Natalie.; Ritchie, Adam J.; Ganusov, Vitaly.; Whale, Victoria.; Brackenridge, Simon.; Li, Hui.; Pavlicek, Jeffrey W.; Cai, Fangping.; Abrahams, Melissa-Rose.; Treurnicht, Florette K.; Hraber, Peter.; Riou, Catherine.; Gray, Clive M.; Ferrari, Guido.; Tanner, Rachel.; Ping, Li-Hua.; Anderson, Jeffrey A.; Swanstrom, Ronald.; Cohen, Myron S.; Abdool Karim, Salim Safurdeen.; Haynes, Barton F.; Borrow, Persephone.; Perelson, Alan S.; Shaw, George M.; Hahn, Beatrice H.; Williamson, Carolyn.; Korber, Bette T. M.; Gao, Feng.; Self, Steven G.; McMichael, Andrew.; Goonetilleke, Nilu.HIV-1 accumulates mutations in and around reactive epitopes to escape recognition and killing by CD8+ T cells. Measurements of HIV-1 time to escape should therefore provide information on which parameters are most important for T cell–mediated in vivo control of HIV-1. Primary HIV-1–specific T cell responses were fully mapped in 17 individuals, and the time to virus escape, which ranged from days to years, was measured for each epitope. While higher magnitude of an individual T cell response was associated with more rapid escape, the most significant T cell measure was its relative immunodominance measured in acute infection. This identified subject-level or “vertical” immunodominance as the primary determinant of in vivo CD8+ T cell pressure in HIV-1 infection. Conversely, escape was slowed significantly by lower population variability, or entropy, of the epitope targeted. Immunodominance and epitope entropy combined to explain half of all the variability in time to escape. These data explain how CD8+ T cells can exert significant and sustained HIV-1 pressure even when escape is very slow and that within an individual, the impacts of other T cell factors on HIV-1 escape should be considered in the context of immunodominance.