Abstract

Efforts to generate a vaccine to prevent infection by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have focused on inducing neutralizing antibodies. However, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses are a major immune defense mechanism required for recovery from many different virus infections. Since CTL epitopes can be defined by short synthetic peptides, we searched for HIV peptides that elicit a viral-specific CTL response in mice. We have developed a new method for screening CTL-inducing peptides involving a single injection into the footpad of mice to prime CTLs in the draining popliteal lymph node of mice within 10 days. Our results demonstrate that a 15-amino acid peptide (aa 315–329) derived from the V3 loop of HIV gp120 caused a rapid induction of peptide-specific and gp160-specific CD8-positive CTLs. Lysis of targets is specific since cells preincubated with unrelated peptides are resistant to lysis as are cells of a different MHC haplotype pretreated with the cognate peptide. Pretreatment of restimulated node cells with complement plus anti-CD8 but not anti-CD4 removed the lytic activity. We also successfully induced in vivo CTL activity with unmodified synthetic peptides from the influenza and Sendai virus nucleoproteins, indicating general applicability of our method for rapid screening of CTL epitopes. Because HIV replication has been reported by several labs to occur mainly in lymph nodes of infected patients, the rapid induction of HIV-specific CTLs in proximal lymph nodes by unmodified peptides emphasizes the physiological significance of our findings toward vaccine and therapeutic approaches.

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