By
From the * Department of Pediatrics, Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts
Medical Center, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605; and Therion Biologics Corporation, Cambridge,
Massachusetts 02142
High frequencies of cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursors (CTLp) recognizing HIV-1 laboratory strain gene products have been detected in adults within weeks of primary infection. In contrast, HIV-1-specific CTLp are uncommonly detected in infants younger than 6 mo. To address the hypothesis that the use of target cells expressing laboratory strain env gene products might limit the detection of HIV-1 env-specific CTLp in early infancy, recombinant vaccinia vectors (vv) expressing HIV-1 env genes from early isolates of four vertically infected infants were generated. The frequencies of CTLp recognizing target cells infected with vv-expressing env gene products from early isolates and HIV-1 IIIB were serially measured using limiting dilution followed by in vitro stimulation with mAb to CD3. In one infant, the detection of early isolate env-specific CTLp preceded the detection of IIIB-specific CTLp. CTLp recognizing HIV-1 IIIB and infant isolate env were detected by 6 mo of age in two infants. In a fourth infant, HIV-1 IIIB env and early isolate env-specific CTLp were simultaneously detected at 12 mo of age. These results provide evidence that young infants can generate HIV-1-specific CTL responses and provide support for the concept of neonatal vaccination to prevent HIV-1 transmission. However, the early predominance of type-specific CTL detected in some young infants suggests that the use of vaccines based on laboratory strains of HIV-1 may not protect against vertical infection.
The vertical transmission of HIV-1 from an infected
woman to her infant is the predominant mode of pediatric infection. Prospective studies estimate the rate of
vertical transmission to be 14-40% (1). Vertical HIV-1 transmission can occur in utero, during delivery (intrapartum), or
after birth through breastfeeding (1). In nonbreastfed populations, 45-70% of vertical infections occur in the intrapartum period. In developing countries, where breastfeeding is
necessary and encouraged, up to 75% of infants may be infected at or after delivery.
In recent years, the incidence of vertical HIV-1 transmission has sharply increased (2) resulting in an urgent need
to develop effective strategies to prevent vertical HIV-1
infection. Although the administration of zidovudine to
mother-infant pairs has been shown to reduce significantly
the risk of vertical HIV-1 transmission (3), the cost and intensity of the regimen render it impractical for use in developing nations, where most pediatric infections occur.
Additionally, perinatal antiretroviral therapy would not prevent the vertical transmission of HIV-1 through breastfeeding beyond the neonatal period. A safe and effective active/
passive vaccine regimen, begun at birth, therefore would
be a more attractive strategy. Better understanding of the
pathogenesis of vertical HIV-1 infection and the capability
of the young human infant to generate HIV-1-specific immune responses is crucial for the development of a vaccine
to prevent vertical HIV-1 infection.
We and others have previously reported that HIV-1-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursors (CTLp)1 are uncommonly detected in early infancy (4, 5). Viral genotype/
phenotype, early viral load, host genotype, timing of infection, and history of prior infections appear to be important factors in the generation of virus-specific CTL responses.
Two lines of evidence suggested to us that the use of labstrain vaccinia vectors (vv) to detect HIV-1-specific CTL
might underestimate the CTL repertoire in early infancy.
First, analysis of vertically transmitted HIV-1 env sequences
suggests that limited viral genotypes are transmitted or amplified after infection (6, 7). Second, Selin et al. (8) have reported higher frequencies of lymphocytic choriomeningitis
(LCMV)-specific CTLp in animals who have experienced prior heterologous viral infections than in immunologically
naive animals. Therefore, we hypothesized that type-specific responses might predominate in early infancy and that
the use of target cells expressing laboratory isolate gene products might limit the detection of HIV-1 env-specific CTLp
in early infancy.
To address this hypothesis, HIV-1 env genes from early
isolates of four vertically infected infants were PCR amplified, cloned, and used to generate recombinant vv. CTLp
frequencies recognizing target cells infected with vv-expressing env gene products from early isolates and HIV-1 IIIB
were serially measured from early to late infancy using limiting dilution followed by in vitro stimulation with mAb to
CD3; split-well analysis allowed the evaluation of crossreactivity of detected CTLp. In one infant, the detection of
CTLp recognizing target cells expressing early isolate env preceded the detection of CTLp recognizing target cells
expressing IIIB env. These type-specific CTLp detected in
early infancy were later replaced by cross-reactive groupspecific CTL. Cross-reactive env-specific CTLp recognizing
HIV-1 IIIB and infant isolate env were detected by 6 mo of
age in two infants. In a fourth infant, CTLp recognizing
target cells infected with HIV-1 IIIB env and early isolate
env were simultaneously detected at 12 mo of age. Implications for neonatal HIV-1 vaccine development are discussed.
Patients.
Four infants with defined timing of infection and
previously characterized CTL responses to HIV-1 IIIB env (4)
were chosen for these studies. HIV-1 culture and DNA PCR
were positive in blood specimens obtained at birth and in all subsequent specimens from two infants (VI-05 and VI-06), suggesting in utero infection (9). HIV-1 culture and DNA PCR were
negative on specimens obtained from two other infants (VI-08
and VI-11) at birth but were positive by 1 mo of age, suggesting
late in utero or intrapartum infection. None of the infants were
on antiretroviral therapy at the time that isolates were obtained
for use in the preparation of vv constructs.
Table 1.
Sequential Measures of Peripheral Blood HIV-1 Load and CD4 Counts of Infants Studied
Patient
Age
DNA PCR
Plasma culture*
PBMC culture
RNA§
%CD4
Absolute CD4
VI-05
Birth
Pos
0
0
ND
50
ND
1 mo
ND
1,562
625
2,533,526
2 mo
ND
62
625
297,670
20
3,015
6 mo
ND
ND
ND
ND
14
1,230
VI-06
Birth
Pos
0
25
49,000
ND
ND
1.5 mo
Pos
12.5
25
210,000
15
1,509
3 mo
ND
62.5
125
340,000
19
1,369
5 mo
ND
ND
ND
1,300.000
25
1,110
VI-08
Birth
Neg
ND
0
ND
41
1,051
20 d
Pos
63
125
ND
50
2,090
1.5 mo
ND
ND
ND
685,169
ND
ND
5 mo
Pos
0
1
321,712
36
2,547
6 mo
ND
ND
ND
57,302
ND
ND
VI-11
Birth
Neg
0
0
1,353
35
1,105
2 mo
Pos
ND
0
47,654
31
2,371
3 mo
ND
0
0
ND
34
ND
7 mo
ND
0
5
21,555
29
2,354
The ages at which env genes were amplified from infant viral isolates for cloning and insertion into vv are denoted in bold type.
*
TCID50/ml plasma.
TCID50/106 PBMC.
§
RNA copies/ml plasma.
Lymphocyte Separation and Cryopreservation. PBMC were isolated from freshly drawn heparinized blood by Ficoll-Paque (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) density centrifugation (10). PBMC were viably cryopreserved using a KRYO 10 Series cell freezer and stored in liquid nitrogen until use.
Preparation of Genomic DNA. PBMC cultures were performed according to the AIDS Clinical Trials Group virology consensus protocols (11). Supernatants from these cultures were used to establish low (1) passage viral cultures at the timepoints specified in Table 1. In brief, 107 HIV-1 seronegative donor PHA blasts cultured in complete media (CM) containing RPMI, 10% FCS, 50 µg/ml gentamicin, and 5 U/ml IL-2 were pelleted, resuspended in 1 ml of viral culture supernatant, and incubated for 1 h at 37°C in 5% ambient CO2. The cells were then washed and resuspended in CM; the p24 antigen content of the supernatant was monitored daily by enzyme immunoassay. On day 5 of culture, high molecular weight DNA was purified by a standard proteinase K digestion-isopropanol precipitation technique.
PCR Primers and Conditions.
Oligonucleotide primer sequences
were chosen from regions directly upstream and downstream of
the initiation and termination codons of the env gene, respectively. The following two primers were used: MNA, 5-GCGAAAGAGCAGAAGACAGTGGC-3
(corresponding to positions
6197-6220 of the NL4-3 genome) and MN13, 5
-CAGCTCGTCTCATTCTTTCCC-3
(positions 8836-8857). PCR mixtures consisted of 10 mM Tris (pH 8.3), 50 mM KCl, 0.2 mM
each of the four deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 2.5 mM MgCl2,
10 pmol of each primer, 200 ng of DNA, and 2.5 U of ampliTaq
polymerase (Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA), which was added
during an initial 3-min denaturation step. Amplification was conducted for 30 cycles in a thermal cycler (Perkin-Elmer). Each cycle consisted of three steps: denaturation (94°C for 60 s), primer
annealing (60°C for 90 s), and extension (72°C for 3 min), with a
final extension at 72°C for 10 min.
Heteroduplex Formation and Sequence Diversity Determination. The V1 to V3 region of env was PCR amplified from the cloned PCR env products using primers 209 (positions 6453-6470) and 218 (positions 7382-7399). PCR conditions were identical to those described above except for a MgCl2 concentration of 4 mM, an annealing temperature of 55°C, and the absence of a hot start. After the internal labeling of PCR products with [32P]dCTP, heteroduplexes were formed between labeled and unlabeled products and DNA fragments were separated in a neutral 5% polyacrylamide gel (12). DNA fragments were separated using the Model S2 Sequencing Gel Electrophoresis Apparatus (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) at 30 mA for 12 h. Sequence comparisons and diversity estimates were determined using best-fit analysis in GCG using the Genetics Computer Group's Wisconsin Sequence Analysis Package version 8.0.1 with the use of the default program parameters.
Molecular Cloning and Recombinant vv Generation.
The entire 2.6kb coding region of env was PCR amplified from proviral DNA
at each of two early timepoints (first and 3-6-mo isolates) from
each patient; the PCR product was gel purified with Eluquick
(Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) and ligated to the plasmid
vector pCR3 (InVitrogen, San Diego, CA). After ligation, the
reaction mixture was introduced into TOP10F cells by CaCl2 transformation. Cells were plated on LB-carbenicillin agar plates and incubated overnight at 37°C; selected colonies were then expanded in 3-ml cultures containing LB-ampicillin overnight at
37°C. Clones with inserts of appropriate size, as judged by restriction enzyme digestion, were sequenced at the SP6 or T7 promoter sites within pCR3 adjacent to the insert to determine orientation using the Sequenase Version 2.0 sequencing kit (United
States Biochemicals, Cleveland, OH). Clones were then grouped
according to digestion patterns obtained with StuI, AvaI, BamHI,
KpnI BglI, and HindIII and a predominant clone was selected
from each timepoint for subcloning (Table 2).
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Limiting Dilution Assays of CTL Precursors.
HIV-1 env-specific
CTLp frequencies were estimated using previously described methods (4, 14). To minimize potential variability in assay conditions
and to allow comparison of results between the timepoints studied for each infant, all limiting dilution cultures for each infant
were set up and all CTLp assays were performed at the same time
and with the same reagents. Cryopreserved PBMC were thawed
and diluted at 16,000 to 250 lymphocytes per well in 24 replicate
wells of 96-well microtiter plates; 2.5-5.0 × 104 irradiated PHA
blasts from HIV-1-uninfected donors and mAb to CD3 (12 F6;
0.1 µg/ml; provided by Dr. J.T. Wong, Massachusetts General
Hospital, Boston, MA) were added to each well and the plates
were incubated at 37°C in R10 with 30 U/ml IL-2 for 7-10 d.
Wells were then split and assayed for cytotoxicity on 51Cr-labeled
autologous B lymphoblastoid cell lines infected either with vac
alone or with vv-expressing IIIB or patient isolate env proteins
(M.O.I. = 5:1). The fraction of nonresponding wells was defined
as the number of wells in which lysis did not exceed 10% (VI-11)
or 20% (VI-05, VI-06, VI-08). Percentage of lysis was calculated
for each well using the formula 100 × (test cpm spontaneous cpm) / (maximal cpm
spontaneous cpm); the CTLp frequency
and 95% confidence limits were calculated using the maximum
likelihood method (15) and a spreadsheet provided by Dr. S. Kalams
(Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA). Split well analysis
was used to examine the cross-reactivity of CTLp.
Quantitation of Plasma HIV-1 RNA. Plasma HIV-1 RNA levels were measured after reverse transcription and PCR amplification using a commercial assay (Roche Diagnostic Systems, Branchburg, NJ), as directed by the manufacturer.
We began by examining the degree of diversity between infant isolate env
and IIIB env. Examination of sequences through the V3
loops suggested relative homogeneity of first isolates (data not shown). Divergence in nucleotide sequence between
HIV-1 IIIB and individual infant isolate env was then estimated using heteroduplex tracking assays and sequencing.
Fig. 1 demonstrates that heteroduplexes formed by combining individual infant isolate and IIIB env migrate at rates
between those of heteroduplexes formed by combining
IIIB and MN env or IIIB and p08-6-20D (an env clone
derived from the virus of patient VI-08). Sequence comparisons of a 946-bp region spanning V1 to V3 indicate
that IIIB and MN env differ from each other by 8.3%,
whereas IIIB and p08-6-20D differ by ~10%. Therefore, the degree of heterogeneity between individual infant isolate and IIIB env sequences is between 8-10%.
The Generation of Recombinant vv from Early Infant Viral Isolates.
The entire 2.6-kb coding region of env was amplified from proviral DNA at two early timepoints (and first 3-6-mo isolates) from each infant, ligated into pCR3 (InVitrogen), and digested with StuI, AvaI, BamHI, KpnI, BglI, and HindIII. One to four distinct patterns of restriction digests were obtained from each set of clones derived from virus from each patient at a single timepoint and were designated as groups A, B, C, and D. The group containing the largest number of clones was considered to be the predominant group and one clone was then chosen from each predominant group for subcloning (Table 2). The instability of the env gene from the viral isolate of patient VI-06 at 6 mo of age in pAbT4587A prevented its subcloning. Therefore, only one env subclone, from 1 d of age, was derived from virus of infant VI-06.
The gel isolation of multiple env genes for subcloning
could potentially result in contamination of one env gene
with another. Heteroduplex analysis was employed to ascertain whether the subcloned envs were identical to the
original clone from which they were derived. Absence of
contaminating env sequences was shown by the lack of heteroduplex formation between cloned env fragments and their identical subclone (Fig. 2). In addition, env coding sequences from pNL4-3, a molecular clone used frequently
in our laboratory, were also used to form heteroduplexes
with the env clones derived from infant viral isolates to ensure that none contained the pNL4-3 env sequence. The
formation of heteroduplexes of varying mobility between
pNL4-3 and the cloned env fragments further verified lack of contamination and demonstrated that each of the env
clones was unique.
HIV-1 env-specific CTL Responses in Early Infancy.
Beginning in early infancy, CTLp frequencies were measured sequentially in the peripheral blood of the four infants studied. In three infants, env-specific CTLp were detected by 6 mo of age (Table 3).
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HIV-1-specific CTLp recognizing autologous env gene products were detected in the peripheral blood of a second infant (VI-11) at 3, 7, and 12 mo of age and preceded the first detection of CTLp recognizing HIV-1 IIIB env gene products at 12 mo of age (Table 3). HIV-1-specific CTLp recognizing first (20-d) isolate and IIIB env gene products were detected by 4 mo in another intrapartum-infected infant (VI-08). In infant VI-06, HIV-1-specific CTLp recognizing first isolate and IIIB env gene products were detected by 6 mo of age. HIV-1-specific CTLp were not detected in the cord blood of infant VI-05, but CTLp recognizing IIIB and infant isolate env gene products were detected at 12 mo of age.
Evaluation of Cross-reactivity of HIV-1 env-specific CTLp Using Split-well Analysis.Genotypic analysis of sexually (16)
and vertically (6, 7) transmitted HIV-1 strains suggests that
limited viral genotypes appear to be transmitted or amplified after infection. After infection, diversification of viral
species may occur through reverse transcriptase error and
various selective pressures (for review see reference 17).
New populations of CTL may expand in an infected individual in response to evolving quasispecies of HIV-1, resulting
in a broadening of the HIV-1 immune response. Split-well
analysis allowed us to examine CTLp cross-reactivity on a
clonal level. Fig. 3 illustrates CTLp cross-reactivity over time.
HIV-1 env-specific CTLp detected in VI-11 in early infancy exclusively recognized early infant isolate env, whereas HIV-1-specific CTLp detected in later infancy were primarily cross-reactive. In VI-06 and VI-08, cross-reactive CTLp recognizing early infant isolate and IIIB env were detected as early as 6 and 4 mo of age, respectively. At 6 mo of age, only CTLp recognizing target cells infected with vv expressing the 20-d isolate were detected in VI-08, while cross-reactive CTLp were detected again at 19 mo. Since virus-independent in vitro stimulation was used to expand CTLp, the CTLp frequencies detected are likely reflective of the CTLp frequencies in vivo. However, at the relatively low CTLp frequencies detected at 6 mo, sampling error might explain the sole detection of type-specific CTLp.
HIV-1-specific CTLp Activity Detected in Early Infancy Is CD8 T Cell Mediated.HIV-1 env-specific cytolysis may be CD8 T cell mediated and HLA class I-restricted or NK cell-mediated cytolysis through ADCC (18). Unfortunately, the limited PBMC repository available from early infancy precluded the use of CD4, CD8, or NK-depleted PBMC populations in the limiting dilution assays. To determine the phenotype of the effector cells in the limiting dilution assays, we performed limiting dilution assays in which a bispecific (anti-CD3, CD8) mAb was used instead of mAb to CD3 (19). Use of this antibody led to the depletion of CD8 T cells from the LDA wells (<1% CD8 T cells compared with 45% CD8 T cells in the wells treated with mAb to CD3 alone) and a 55-90% reduction in env-specific CTLp frequency compared with wells treated with mAb to CD3 alone. These studies suggest that the env-specific CTLp detected in the assays were mediated by CD8 T cells.
Detection of HIV-1 Env-specific CTLp in Early Vertical Infection, Viral Load, and Clinical Disease Progression.In three infants, HIV-1-specific CTL recognizing early infant isolate gene products were detected before 6 mo of age. Infant VI-11, in whom HIV-1 gag- and early isolate env-specific CTL were detected by 3 mo of age, has remained only mildly symptomatic without evidence of immune suppression (CDC A1; reference 20) at 3 yr of age. However, as previously described (4), infant VI-06 experienced a rapid increase in viral load and a rapid decline in peripheral blood CD4 T cell numbers after birth despite the detection of HIV-1 gag- and env-specific CTL in cord blood and 3-wk specimens. While env-specific CTLp were detected in infant VI-08 by 4 mo of age, this infant developed HIV-1 encephalopathy and severe CD4 depletion (CDC C3) by 3 yr of age. The early detection of HIV-1 env-specific CTLp in the latter two infants suggest that HIV-1-specific CTL alone may not protect against CD4 depletion or disease progression.
In assays using target cells expressing laboratory strain HIV-1 gene products, HIV-1-specific CTLp have been uncommonly detected in early infancy. This study addressed the hypothesis that type-specific responses might predominate in early infancy and that the use of target cells expressing laboratory isolate gene products might limit the detection of HIV-1-specific CTL in early infancy. To address this hypothesis, HIV-1 env genes from early isolates of four vertically infected infants were PCR amplified, cloned, and used to generate recombinant vv. The frequencies of CTLp recognizing target cells infected with vv-expressing env gene products from early isolates and HIV-1 IIIB were serially measured from early to late infancy using limiting dilution followed by in vitro stimulation with mAb to CD3. HIV-1-specific CTLp were detected before 6 mo of age in three infants. In one infant, the detection of CTLp recognizing target cells expressing early isolate env preceded the detection of CTLp recognizing target cells expressing IIIB env; these type-specific CTLp detected in early infancy were later replaced by cross-reactive group-specific CTL. In two other infants, early group-specific responses were detected. In a fourth infant, CTLp recognizing target cells infected with HIV-1 IIIB env and early isolate env were simultaneously detected at 12 mo of age. These results reconfirm that young infants can generate HIV-1-specific CTL responses and provide support for the concept of perinatal vaccination to prevent HIV-1 transmission.
The generation of vv-expressing infecting strain gene products was central to our studies. To minimize the chance of amplifying defective HIV-1 env sequences, we chose to use env genes amplified from cultured virus to construct the env-expressing recombinant vv. Whereas several studies have demonstrated the outgrowth of variant strains of limited diversity in viral coculture that did not predominate in vivo at the timepoint at which the culture was established (21, 22), several lines of evidence suggest that the isolates used were representative of the in vivo population of viruses. First, studies that have compared the selection of variants in culture to those present in vivo have maintained these viral cultures up to at least 28 d. The env genes used to generate recombinant vv in our studies were amplified from minimally passaged virus cultured for less than 1 wk. Second, the absence of anti-retroviral therapy in these patients at each of the timepoints from which the env vaccinia recombinants were generated supports the notion that these variants were not suppressed in vivo and expanded in vitro in the absence of drug. Third, the ability of CTL precursors from these patients to recognize env protein products from the env sequences derived from cultured virus suggests that these sequences were present in vivo.
Minimal diversity in env sequences of HIV-1 strains isolated from adults and infants early in primary infection has been reported (6, 7, 16). Although HIV-1-specific CTL expand in response to a homogeneous population of variants in both populations of infected individuals, group-specific CTL appear to be detected more commonly in adult primary infection than in vertical primary infection (23, 24). Therefore, the type specificity of early infant CTL responses is not likely due to a homogeneous starting population of virus.
Adults possess memory CTL that may cross-react with HIV-1 proteins and expand in response to HIV-1 infection in concert with antigen-naive CTL precursors. CTL expansion upon acute HIV-1 infection in adults may be similar to that observed by Selin et al. (8) in mice. They observed that acute Pichinde virus infection in LCMV immune mice resulted in expansion of CTL that were cross-reactive with both LCMV and Pichinde virus. Crossreactive memory CTL originally expanded in response to a previous non-HIV-1 antigenic encounter may possess TCRs with lower affinity for HIV-1 antigen. A lower affinity interaction may allow for a greater degree of promiscuity in recognition of epitopes of HIV-1 gene products on various HIV-1 strains. The group-specific CTL responses detected in infected adults during or shortly after seroconversion may be due in part to the contribution of this expanded non-HIV-1-specific memory pool of CTL.
In contrast, HIV-1 infection occurs in infants whose immune systems have not been primed by previous antigenic exposure. Therefore, potentially cross-reactive memory CTL may not exist. Diversification of the viral variant population over time may eventually result in the expansion of CTLp populations recognizing a greater number of viral epitopes with the concomitant ability to recognize these epitopes on more than one strain of HIV-1.
Alternatively, type-specific responses detected in some young HIV-1 vertically infected infants may be due to partial tolerance. Vertical HIV-1 infection occurs at a time when the cellular immune system is being vigorously edited on the basis of its ability to discriminate between self and nonself. HIV-1 antigen may be viewed as self-antigen during this process and HIV-1-reactive CTL may be deleted or anergized. The ability of HIV-1 to infect and replicate within professional antigen presenting cells such as macrophages and its presence on dendritic cells may allow for activation of a small population of HIV-1-reactive CTL that escape tolerance induction. This partial break in tolerance may originally be directed at a limited array of viral epitopes, resulting in a type-specific CTL response. Recognition of these initial epitopes by CTL may lead to an expansion of CTL responsiveness in which a progressively greater number of viral epitopes may be recognized. Expansion in epitope recognition may subsequently result from the phenomenon of epitope spreading (25) in concert with a diversification of HIV-1 variants toward viral gene products whose sequences bear less resemblance to the original tolerizing variants. The group-specific CTL responses detected by 12 mo of age may evolve in this manner.
In summary, our studies indicate that young infants are capable of generating virus-specific CTL in response to viral infection and some support the development of a neonatal HIV-1 vaccine. However, the detection of type-specific immunity in some young infants suggests that a vaccine based upon laboratory strains of HIV-1 may not be protective. For optimal efficacy, it will likely be necessary to use gene products from viral strains isolated from patients in targeted geographical regions as immunogens.
Address correspondence to K. Luzuriaga, M.D., Department of Pediatrics, Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, BioTech II, Suite 318, 373 Plantation Street, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605.
Received for publication 26 July 1996 and in revised form 27 January 1997.
Support for this work was provided by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants AI-32907, AI-32391, AI26507, and NIH training grant 5T32-AI07349.We would like to thank G. Viglianti, G. Mazzara, and P. Greenhalgh for helpful advice; Dr. J.T. Wong for provision of the anti-CD3 and anti-CD3, CD8 antibodies; H. Huggett and M. Sicard for technical help; M. McManus for data management and figure preparation; and M. Gromack for manuscript preparation.
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