Rapid Evolution of HIV-1 to Functional CD8+ T Cell Responses in Humanized BLT Mice

TE Dudek, DC No, E Seung, VD Vrbanac… - Science translational …, 2012 - science.org
TE Dudek, DC No, E Seung, VD Vrbanac, L Fadda, P Bhoumik, CL Boutwell, KA Power…
Science translational medicine, 2012science.org
The development of mouse/human chimeras through the engraftment of human immune
cells and tissues into immunodeficient mice, including the recently described humanized
BLT (bone marrow, liver, thymus) mouse model, holds great promise to facilitate the in vivo
study of human immune responses. However, little data exist regarding the extent to which
cellular immune responses in humanized mice accurately reflect those seen in humans. We
infected humanized BLT mice with HIV-1 as a model pathogen and characterized HIV-1 …
The development of mouse/human chimeras through the engraftment of human immune cells and tissues into immunodeficient mice, including the recently described humanized BLT (bone marrow, liver, thymus) mouse model, holds great promise to facilitate the in vivo study of human immune responses. However, little data exist regarding the extent to which cellular immune responses in humanized mice accurately reflect those seen in humans. We infected humanized BLT mice with HIV-1 as a model pathogen and characterized HIV-1–specific immune responses and viral evolution during the acute phase of infection. HIV-1–specific CD8+ T cell responses in these mice were found to closely resemble those in humans in terms of their specificity, kinetics, and immunodominance. Viral sequence evolution also revealed rapid and highly reproducible escape from these responses, mirroring the adaptations to host immune pressures observed during natural HIV-1 infection. Moreover, mice expressing the protective HLA-B*57 allele exhibited enhanced control of viral replication and restricted the same CD8+ T cell responses to conserved regions of HIV-1 Gag that are critical to its control of HIV-1 in humans. These data reveal that the humanized BLT mouse model appears to accurately recapitulate human pathogen–specific cellular immunity and the fundamental immunological mechanisms required to control a model human pathogen, aspects critical to the use of a small-animal model for human pathogens.
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