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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(38): e2305859120, 2023 09 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37695895

RESUMO

The innate immune system is the body's first line of defense against infection. Natural killer (NK) cells, a vital part of the innate immune system, help to control infection and eliminate cancer. Studies have identified a vast array of receptors that NK cells use to discriminate between healthy and unhealthy cells. However, at present, it is difficult to explain how NK cells will respond to novel stimuli in different environments. In addition, the expression of different receptors on individual NK cells is highly stochastic, but the reason for these variegated expression patterns is unclear. Here, we studied the recognition of unhealthy target cells as an inference problem, where NK cells must distinguish between healthy targets with normal variability in ligand expression and ones that are clear "outliers." Our mathematical model fits well with experimental data, including NK cells' adaptation to changing environments and responses to different target cells. Furthermore, we find that stochastic, "sparse" receptor expression profiles are best able to detect a variety of possible threats, in agreement with experimental studies of the NK cell repertoire. While our study was specifically motivated by NK cells, our model is general and could also apply more broadly to explain principles of target recognition for other immune cell types.


Assuntos
Aclimatação , Imunidade Inata , Eritrócitos Anormais , Expressão Gênica
2.
Mol Biol Evol ; 39(10)2022 10 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36130322

RESUMO

Epistasis refers to fitness or functional effects of mutations that depend on the sequence background in which these mutations arise. Epistasis is prevalent in nature, including populations of viruses, bacteria, and cancers, and can contribute to the evolution of drug resistance and immune escape. However, it is difficult to directly estimate epistatic effects from sampled observations of a population. At present, there are very few methods that can disentangle the effects of selection (including epistasis), mutation, recombination, genetic drift, and genetic linkage in evolving populations. Here we develop a method to infer epistasis, along with the fitness effects of individual mutations, from observed evolutionary histories. Simulations show that we can accurately infer pairwise epistatic interactions provided that there is sufficient genetic diversity in the data. Our method also allows us to identify which fitness parameters can be reliably inferred from a particular data set and which ones are unidentifiable. Our approach therefore allows for the inference of more complex models of selection from time-series genetic data, while also quantifying uncertainty in the inferred parameters.


Assuntos
Epistasia Genética , Seleção Genética , Aptidão Genética , Ligação Genética , Modelos Genéticos , Mutação
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(5)2021 02 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33514660

RESUMO

An effective vaccine that can protect against HIV infection does not exist. A major reason why a vaccine is not available is the high mutability of the virus, which enables it to evolve mutations that can evade human immune responses. This challenge is exacerbated by the ability of the virus to evolve compensatory mutations that can partially restore the fitness cost of immune-evading mutations. Based on the fitness landscapes of HIV proteins that account for the effects of coupled mutations, we designed a single long peptide immunogen comprising parts of the HIV proteome wherein mutations are likely to be deleterious regardless of the sequence of the rest of the viral protein. This immunogen was then stably expressed in adenovirus vectors that are currently in clinical development. Macaques immunized with these vaccine constructs exhibited T-cell responses that were comparable in magnitude to animals immunized with adenovirus vectors with whole HIV protein inserts. Moreover, the T-cell responses in immunized macaques strongly targeted regions contained in our immunogen. These results suggest that further studies aimed toward using our vaccine construct for HIV prophylaxis and cure are warranted.


Assuntos
Vacinas contra a AIDS/imunologia , Adenoviridae/metabolismo , Vetores Genéticos/metabolismo , HIV-1/imunologia , Proteoma/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Antígenos Virais/imunologia , Feminino , Infecções por HIV/imunologia , Imunização , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Linfócitos T Citotóxicos/imunologia , Proteínas Virais/química , Proteínas Virais/metabolismo
4.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 377, 2020 01 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31953427

RESUMO

Vaccination has essentially eradicated poliovirus. Yet, its mutation rate is higher than that of viruses like HIV, for which no effective vaccine exists. To investigate this, we infer a fitness model for the poliovirus viral protein 1 (vp1), which successfully predicts in vitro fitness measurements. This is achieved by first developing a probabilistic model for the prevalence of vp1 sequences that enables us to isolate and remove data that are subject to strong vaccine-derived biases. The intrinsic fitness constraints derived for vp1, a capsid protein subject to antibody responses, are compared with those of analogous HIV proteins. We find that vp1 evolution is subject to tighter constraints, limiting its ability to evade vaccine-induced immune responses. Our analysis also indicates that circulating poliovirus strains in unimmunized populations serve as a reservoir that can seed outbreaks in spatio-temporally localized sub-optimally immunized populations.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Capsídeo/genética , Aptidão Genética , Taxa de Mutação , Mutação , Poliomielite/epidemiologia , Poliomielite/virologia , Poliovirus/genética , Antígenos Virais/genética , Proteínas do Capsídeo/classificação , Biologia Computacional , Surtos de Doenças , Evolução Molecular , HIV/genética , Humanos , Modelos Genéticos , Filogenia , Poliomielite/imunologia , Poliovirus/imunologia , Prevalência , Probabilidade , Proteínas Virais/classificação , Proteínas Virais/genética , Vacinas Virais
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(4): E564-E573, 2018 01 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29311326

RESUMO

HIV is a highly mutable virus, and over 30 years after its discovery, a vaccine or cure is still not available. The isolation of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) from HIV-infected patients has led to renewed hope for a prophylactic vaccine capable of combating the scourge of HIV. A major challenge is the design of immunogens and vaccination protocols that can elicit bnAbs that target regions of the virus's spike proteins where the likelihood of mutational escape is low due to the high fitness cost of mutations. Related challenges include the choice of combinations of bnAbs for therapy. An accurate representation of viral fitness as a function of its protein sequences (a fitness landscape), with explicit accounting of the effects of coupling between mutations, could help address these challenges. We describe a computational approach that has allowed us to infer a fitness landscape for gp160, the HIV polyprotein that comprises the viral spike that is targeted by antibodies. We validate the inferred landscape through comparisons with experimental fitness measurements, and various other metrics. We show that an effective antibody that prevents immune escape must selectively bind to high escape cost residues that are surrounded by those where mutations incur a low fitness cost, motivating future applications of our landscape for immunogen design.


Assuntos
Aptidão Genética , Proteína gp160 do Envelope de HIV/genética , Evasão da Resposta Imune/genética , Modelos Genéticos , Mutação , Anticorpos Neutralizantes/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação de Anticorpos/genética , Antígenos CD4/genética , Antígenos CD4/metabolismo , Simulação por Computador , Proteína gp160 do Envelope de HIV/imunologia
6.
Rep Prog Phys ; 80(3): 032601, 2017 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28059778

RESUMO

Vaccination has saved more lives than any other medical procedure. Pathogens have now evolved that have not succumbed to vaccination using the empirical paradigms pioneered by Pasteur and Jenner. Vaccine design strategies that are based on a mechanistic understanding of the pertinent immunology and virology are required to confront and eliminate these scourges. In this perspective, we describe just a few examples of work aimed to achieve this goal by bringing together approaches from statistical physics with biology and clinical research.


Assuntos
Vacinas contra a AIDS/farmacologia , Vacinas contra a AIDS/uso terapêutico , Animais , HIV/genética , HIV/metabolismo , HIV/patogenicidade , Infecções por HIV/metabolismo , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Infecções por HIV/virologia , Humanos , Vacinação
7.
Nat Commun ; 7: 11660, 2016 05 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27212475

RESUMO

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves within infected persons to escape being destroyed by the host immune system, thereby preventing effective immune control of infection. Here, we combine methods from evolutionary dynamics and statistical physics to simulate in vivo HIV sequence evolution, predicting the relative rate of escape and the location of escape mutations in response to T-cell-mediated immune pressure in a cohort of 17 persons with acute HIV infection. Predicted and clinically observed times to escape immune responses agree well, and we show that the mutational pathways to escape depend on the viral sequence background due to epistatic interactions. The ability to predict escape pathways and the duration over which control is maintained by specific immune responses open the door to rational design of immunotherapeutic strategies that might enable long-term control of HIV infection. Our approach enables intra-host evolution of a human pathogen to be predicted in a probabilistic framework.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Aptidão Genética , Infecções por HIV/virologia , HIV/genética , Proteínas do Vírus da Imunodeficiência Humana/genética , Feminino , HIV/imunologia , Infecções por HIV/imunologia , Humanos , Imunidade Celular , Masculino , Modelos Genéticos , Poliproteínas/genética
8.
Phys Rev E ; 93(2): 022412, 2016 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26986367

RESUMO

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) evolves with extraordinary rapidity. However, its evolution is constrained by interactions between mutations in its fitness landscape. Here we show that an Ising model describing these interactions, inferred from sequence data obtained prior to the use of antiretroviral drugs, can be used to identify clinically significant sites of resistance mutations. Successful predictions of the resistance sites indicate progress in the development of successful models of real viral evolution at the single residue level and suggest that our approach may be applied to help design new therapies that are less prone to failure even where resistance data are not yet available.


Assuntos
Farmacorresistência Viral/genética , Evolução Molecular , HIV/efeitos dos fármacos , HIV/genética , Mutação , Interações Medicamentosas , HIV/enzimologia , Protease de HIV/genética , Inibidores da Protease de HIV/farmacologia , Humanos
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(7): 1965-70, 2015 Feb 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25646424

RESUMO

The enormous genetic diversity and mutability of HIV has prevented effective control of this virus by natural immune responses or vaccination. Evolution of the circulating HIV population has thus occurred in response to diverse, ultimately ineffective, immune selection pressures that randomly change from host to host. We show that the interplay between the diversity of human immune responses and the ways that HIV mutates to evade them results in distinct sets of sequences defined by similar collectively coupled mutations. Scaling laws that relate these sets of sequences resemble those observed in linguistics and other branches of inquiry, and dynamics reminiscent of neural networks are observed. Like neural networks that store memories of past stimulation, the circulating HIV population stores memories of host-pathogen combat won by the virus. We describe an exactly solvable model that captures the main qualitative features of the sets of sequences and a simple mechanistic model for the origin of the observed scaling laws. Our results define collective mutational pathways used by HIV to evade human immune responses, which could guide vaccine design.


Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/virologia , HIV/fisiologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , HIV/isolamento & purificação , Humanos
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