Frontiers in Immunology (Jun 2021)

Reliable Estimation of CD8 T Cell Inhibition of In Vitro HIV-1 Replication

  • Yinyan Xu,
  • Ann Marie Weideman,
  • Ann Marie Weideman,
  • Maria Abad-Fernandez,
  • Katie R. Mollan,
  • Katie R. Mollan,
  • Sallay Kallon,
  • Shahryar Samir,
  • Joanna A. Warren,
  • Genevieve Clutton,
  • Nadia R. Roan,
  • Nadia R. Roan,
  • Adaora A. Adimora,
  • Adaora A. Adimora,
  • Adaora A. Adimora,
  • Nancie Archin,
  • JoAnn Kuruc,
  • Cynthia Gay,
  • Michael G. Hudgens,
  • Michael G. Hudgens,
  • Nilu Goonetilleke,
  • Nilu Goonetilleke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.666991
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The HIV-1 viral inhibition assay (VIA) measures CD8 T cell-mediated inhibition of HIV replication in CD4 T cells and is increasingly used for clinical testing of HIV vaccines and immunotherapies. The VIA has multiple sources of variability arising from in vitro HIV infection and co-culture of two T cell populations. Here, we describe multiple modifications to a 7-day VIA protocol, the most impactful being the introduction of independent replicate cultures for both HIV infected-CD4 (HIV-CD4) and HIV-CD4:CD8 T cell cultures. Virus inhibition was quantified using a ratio of weighted averages of p24+ cells in replicate cultures and the corresponding 95% confidence interval. An Excel template is provided to facilitate calculations. Virus inhibition was higher in people living with HIV suppressed on antiretroviral therapy (n=14, mean: 40.0%, median: 43.8%, range: 8.2 to 73.3%; p < 0.0001, two-tailed, exact Mann-Whitney test) compared to HIV-seronegative donors (n = 21, mean: -13.7%, median: -14.4%, range: -49.9 to 20.9%) and was stable over time (n = 6, mean %COV 9.4%, range 0.9 to 17.3%). Cross-sectional data were used to define 8% inhibition as the threshold to confidently detect specific CD8 T cell activity and determine the minimum number of culture replicates and p24+ cells needed to have 90% statistical power to detect this threshold. Last, we note that, in HIV seronegative donors, the addition of CD8 T cells to HIV infected CD4 T cells consistently increased HIV replication, though the level of increase varied markedly between donors. This co-culture effect may contribute to the weak correlations observed between CD8 T cell VIA and other measures of HIV-specific CD8 T cell function.

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