Abstract
The immune response in individuals co-infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) and the human immunodeficiency virus (MTB/HIV) gradually deteriorates, particularly in the cellular compartment. Adoptive transfer of functional effector T cells can confer protective immunity to immunodeficient MTB/HIV co-infected recipients. However, few such effector T cells exist in vivo, and their isolation and amplification to sufficient numbers is difficult. Therefore, enhancing immune responses against both pathogens is critical for treating MTB/HIV co-infected patients. One approach is adoptive transfer of T cell receptor (TCR) gene-modified T cells for the treatment of MTB/HIV co-infections because lymphocyte numbers and their functional avidity is significantly increased by TCR gene transfer. To generate bispecific CD8+ T cells, MTB Ag85B199–207 peptide-specific TCRs (MTB/TCR) and HIV-1 Env120–128 peptide-specific TCRs (HIV/TCR) were isolated and introduced into CD8+ T cells simultaneously using a retroviral vector. To avoid mispairing among exogenous and endogenous TCRs, and to improve the function and stability of the introduced TCRs, several strategies were employed, including introducing mutations in the MTB/TCR constant (C) regions, substituting part of the HIV/TCR C regions with CD3ζ, and linking gene segments with three different 2A peptides. Results presented in this report suggest that the engineered T cells possessed peptide-specific specificity resulting in cytokine production and cytotoxic activity. This is the first report describing the generation of engineered T cells specific for two different pathogens and provides new insights into TCR gene therapy for the treatment of immunocompromised MTB/HIV co-infected patients.
Highlights
Mycobacterium tuberculosis/human immunodeficiency virus (MTB/ HIV) co-infections are a challenge to the prevention and control of tuberculosis and AIDS
T cell-mediated immune responses are essential to the control of infections caused by intracellular pathogens, including MTB and HIV
HIV infection, which substantially reduce the CD4+ T cell numbers in peripheral tissues resulting in loss of granuloma integrity and MTB containment thereby facilitating MTB/HIV co-infections [38, 39]
Summary
Mycobacterium tuberculosis/human immunodeficiency virus (MTB/ HIV) co-infections are a challenge to the prevention and control of tuberculosis and AIDS. HIV infection represents the most significant risk factor for acquiring tuberculosis (TB) infection and TB is the lead-. Because MTB and HIV are intracellular pathogens humoural responses are largely ineffective compared to cellular immune responses that represent the primary protective mechanisms against infection. In MTB/HIV co-infected patients cellular immunity (critical to the control of MTB infection) is significantly impaired.
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