1. Cross-clade reactivity of HIV-1-specific T-cell responses in HIV-1-infected individuals from Botswana and Cameroon
- Author
-
Gupta, SB, Mast, CT, Wolfe, ND, Novitsky, V, Dubey, SA, Kallas, EG, Schechter, M, Mbewe, B, Vardas, E, Pitisuttithum, P, Burke, D, Freed, D, Mogg, R, Coplan, PM, Condra, JH, Long, RS, Anderson, K, Casimiro, DR, Shiver, JW, Straus, WL, Gupta, SB, Mast, CT, Wolfe, ND, Novitsky, V, Dubey, SA, Kallas, EG, Schechter, M, Mbewe, B, Vardas, E, Pitisuttithum, P, Burke, D, Freed, D, Mogg, R, Coplan, PM, Condra, JH, Long, RS, Anderson, K, Casimiro, DR, Shiver, JW, and Straus, WL
- Abstract
An effective HIV type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine will likely require elicitation of broadly reactive cell-mediated immune (CMI) responses against divergent HIV-1 clades. We compared anti-HIV-1 T-cell immune responses among 363 unvaccinated adults infected with diverse HIV-1 clades. Response rates to clade B Gag and/or clade B Nef in Botswana (95%) and Cameroon (98%) were similar when compared with those in countries previously studied, including Brazil (92%), Thailand (96%), South Africa (96%), Malawi (100%), and the United States (100%). Substantial cross-clade cell-mediated immune responses in Botswana and Cameroon confirm previous findings in a larger, more genetically diverse collection of HIV-1 samples. Copyright © 2006 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
- Published
- 2006