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HIV and HLA Class I: An Evolving Relationship

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 426-440

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2012.09.005

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. Collaboration for Vaccine Discovery of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [P30 AI 060354]
  4. Harvard University Center for AIDS Research
  5. Mark and Lisa Schwartz Foundation

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Successful vaccine development for infectious diseases has largely been achieved in settings where natural immunity to the pathogen results in clearance in at least some individuals. HIV presents an additional challenge in that natural clearance of infection does not occur, and the correlates of immune protection are still uncertain. However, partial control of viremia and markedly different outcomes of disease are observed in HIV-infected persons. Here, we examine the antiviral mechanisms implicated by one variable that has been consistently associated with extremes of outcome, namely HLA class I alleles, and in particular HLA-B, and examine the mechanisms by which this modulation is likely to occur and the impact of these interactions on evolution of the virus and the host. Studies to date provide evidence for both H LA-dependent and epitope-dependent influences on viral control and viral evolution and have important implications for the continued quest for an effective HIV vaccine.

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