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Featured researches published by Ayub Ali.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Influenza Virus Assembly: Effect of Influenza Virus Glycoproteins on the Membrane Association of M1 Protein

Ayub Ali; Roy T. Avalos; Evgeni Ponimaskin; Debi P. Nayak

ABSTRACT Influenza virus matrix protein (M1), a critical protein required for virus assembly and budding, is presumed to interact with viral glycoproteins on the outer side and viral ribonucleoprotein on the inner side. However, because of the inherent membrane-binding ability of M1 protein, it has been difficult to demonstrate the specific interaction of M1 protein with hemagglutinin (HA) or neuraminidase (NA), the influenza virus envelope glycoproteins. Using Triton X-100 (TX-100) detergent treatment of membrane fractions and floatation in sucrose gradients, we observed that the membrane-bound M1 protein expressed alone or coexpressed with heterologous Sendai virus F was totally TX-100 soluble but the membrane-bound M1 protein expressed in the presence of HA and NA was predominantly detergent resistant and floated to the top of the density gradient. Furthermore, both the cytoplasmic tail and the transmembrane domain of HA facilitated binding of M1 to detergent-resistant membranes. Analysis of the membrane association of M1 in the early and late phases of the influenza virus infectious cycle revealed that the interaction of M1 with mature glycoproteins which associated with the detergent-resistant lipid rafts was responsible for the detergent resistance of membrane-bound M1. Immunofluorescence analysis by confocal microscopy also demonstrated that, in influenza virus-infected cells, a fraction of M1 protein colocalized with HA and associated with the HA in transit to the plasma membrane via the exocytic pathway. Similar results for colocalization were obtained when M1 and HA were coexpressed and HA transport was blocked by monensin treatment. These studies indicate that both HA and NA interact with influenza virus M1 and that HA associates with M1 via its cytoplasmic tail and transmembrane domain.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Determinants of HIV-1 Mutational Escape From Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes

Otto O. Yang; Phuong Thi Nguyen Sarkis; Ayub Ali; Jason Harlow; Christian Brander; Spyros A. Kalams; Bruce D. Walker

CD8+ class I–restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) usually incompletely suppress HIV-1 in vivo, and while analogous partial suppression induces antiretroviral drug-resistance mutations, epitope escape mutations are inconsistently observed. However, escape mutation depends on the net balance of selective pressure and mutational fitness costs, which are poorly understood and difficult to study in vivo. Here we used a controlled in vitro system to evaluate the ability of HIV-1 to escape from CTL clones, finding that virus replicating under selective pressure rapidly can develop phenotypic resistance associated with genotypic changes. Escape varied between clones recognizing the same Gag epitope or different Gag and RT epitopes, indicating the influence of the T cell receptor on pressure and fitness costs. Gag and RT escape mutations were monoclonal intra-epitope substitutions, indicating limitation by fitness constraints in structural proteins. In contrast, escape from Nef-specific CTL was more rapid and consistent, marked by a polyclonal mixture of epitope point mutations and upstream frameshifts. We conclude that incomplete viral suppression by CTL can result in rapid emergence of immune escape, but the likelihood is strongly determined by factors influencing the fitness costs of the particular epitope targeted and the ability of responding CTL to recognize specific epitope variants.


Virus Research | 2001

Transport of viral proteins to the apical membranes and interaction of matrix protein with glycoproteins in the assembly of influenza viruses

Subrata Barman; Ayub Ali; Eric Ka-Wai Hui; Lopa Adhikary; Debi P. Nayak

Influenza virus assembly and morphogenesis require transport of viral components to the assembly site at the apical plasma membrane of polarized epithelial cells and interaction among the viral components. In this report we have discussed the apical determinants present in the transmembrane domain (TMD) of influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA), and the interaction of M1 with influenza virus HA and NA. Earlier studies have shown that the NA and HA TMDs possess determinant(s) for apical sorting and raft-association (Kundu et al., 1996. J. Virol 70, 6508-6515; Lin et al., 1998. J. Cell Biol. 142, 51-57). Analysis of chimeric constructs between NA and TR (human transferring receptor) TMDs and the mutations in the NA and HA TMD sequences showed that the COOH terminus of the NA TMD and NH(2) terminus of the HA TMD encompassing the exoplasmic leaflet of the lipid bilayers were significantly involved in lipid raft-association and that apical determinants were not discrete sequences but rather dispersed within the TMD of HA and NA. These analyses also showed that although both signals for apical sorting and raft-association resided in the NA TMD, they were not identical and varied independently. Interactions of M1 protein with HA or NA, the influenza virus envelope glycoproteins, were investigated by TX-100 detergent treatment of membrane fractions and floatation in sucrose gradients. Results from these analyses showed that the interaction of M1 with mature HA and NA, which associated with the detergent-resistant lipid rafts caused an increased detergent-resistance of the membrane-bound M1 and that M1 interacted with HA and NA both in influenza virus-infected cells as well as in recombinant vaccinia virus-infected cells coexpressing M1 with HA and/or NA. Furthermore, both the cytoplasmic tail and the TMD of HA caused an increased detergent-resistance of the membrane-bound M1 supporting their interaction with M1. Immunofluorescence analysis by confocal microscopy also showed colocalization supporting the interaction of M1 with HA and NA at the cell surface and during exocytic transport both in influenza virus-infected cells as well as in coexpressing cells.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Epitope-Dependent Avidity Thresholds for Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Clearance of Virus-Infected Cells

Michael S. Bennett; Hwee L. Ng; Mirabelle Dagarag; Ayub Ali; Otto O. Yang

ABSTRACT Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are crucial for immune control of viral infections. “Functional avidity,” defined by the sensitizing dose of exogenously added epitope yielding half-maximal CTL triggering against uninfected target cells (SD50), has been utilized extensively as a measure of antiviral efficiency. However, CTLs recognize infected cells via endogenously produced epitopes, and the relationship of SD50 to antiviral activity has never been directly revealed. We elucidate this relationship by comparing CTL killing of cells infected with panels of epitope-variant viruses to the corresponding SD50 for the variant epitopes. This reveals a steeply sigmoid relationship between avidity and infected cell killing, with avidity thresholds (defined as the SD50 required for CTL to achieve 50% efficiency of infected cell killing [KE50]), below which infected cell killing rapidly drops to none and above which killing efficiency rapidly plateaus. Three CTL clones recognizing the same viral epitope show the same KE50 despite differential recognition of individual epitope variants, while CTLs recognizing another epitope show a 10-fold-higher KE50, demonstrating epitope dependence of KE50. Finally, the ability of CTLs to suppress viral replication depends on the same threshold KE50. Thus, defining KE50 values is required to interpret the significance of functional avidity measurements and predict CTL efficacy against virus-infected cells in pathogenesis and vaccine studies.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008

Cross-Clade Detection of HIV-1—Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes Does Not Reflect Cross-Clade Antiviral Activity

Michael S. Bennett; Hwee L. Ng; Ayub Ali; Otto O. Yang

The genetic divergence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 into distinct clades is a serious consideration for cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-based vaccine development. Demonstrations that CTLs can cross-recognize epitope sequences from different clades has been proposed as offering hope for a single vaccine. Cross-clade CTL data, however, have been generated by assessing recognition of exogenous peptides. The present study compares HIV-1-specific CTL cross-clade epitope recognition of exogenously loaded peptides with suppression of HIV-1-infected cells. Despite apparently broad cross-clade reactivity of CTLs against the former, CTL suppression of HIV-1 strains with corresponding epitope sequences is significantly impaired. The functional avidity of CTLs for nonautologous clade epitope sequences is diminished, suggesting that CTLs can fail to recognize levels of infected endogenously derived cell-surface epitopes despite recognizing supraphysiologic exogenously added epitopes. These data strongly support clade-specific antiviral activity of CTLs and call into question the validity of standard methods for assessing cross-clade CTL activity or CTL antiviral activity in general.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Genetic and Stochastic Influences on the Interaction of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 and Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes in Identical Twins

Otto O. Yang; Joseph A. Church; Christina M. R. Kitchen; Ryan D. Kilpatrick; Ayub Ali; Yongzhi Geng; M. Scott Killian; Rachel Lubong Sabado; Hwee L. Ng; Jeffrey Suen; Yvonne J. Bryson; Beth D. Jamieson; Paul Krogstad

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolves in vivo under selective pressure from CD8+ T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses, which are in turn determined by host and viral genetic factors, such as restricting major histocompatibility complex molecules and the available viral epitope sequences. However, CTL are derived stochastically through the random gene rearrangements to produce T-cell receptors (TCR), and the relative impact of genetic versus stochastic processes on CTL targeting of HIV and immune-driven viral evolution is unclear. Here we evaluate identical twins infected with HIV-1 as neonates from a common blood transfusion, with subsequently similar environmental exposures, thereby allowing controlled comparisons of CTL targeting and viral evolution. Seventeen years after infection, their CTL targeting of HIV-1 was remarkably similar. In contrast, their overall TCR profiles were highly dissimilar, and a dominant epitope was recognized by distinctly different TCR in each twin. Furthermore, their viral epitopes had diverged, and there was ongoing viral phylogenetic divergence between the twins between 12 and 17 years after infection. These results indicate that while CTL targeting is predominately genetically determined, stochastic influences render the interaction of HIV-1 and host immunity, and therefore viral escape and CTL efficacy, unpredictable.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Impacts of Epitope Expression Kinetics and Class I Downregulation on the Antiviral Activity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes

Ayub Ali; Rachel Lubong; Hwee L. Ng; David G. Brooks; Jerome A. Zack; Otto O. Yang

ABSTRACT The determinants of CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) antiviral activity against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) remain poorly defined. Although recent technological advances have markedly enhanced the ability to detect HIV-1-specific T cells, commonly used assays do not reveal their direct interaction with virus. We investigated two determinants of CTL antiviral efficiency by manipulating HIV-1 and measuring the effects on CTL suppression of viral replication in acutely infected cells. Translocation of a Gag epitope into the early protein Nef markedly increased the activity of CTL recognizing that epitope, in comparison to HIV-1 expressing the epitope normally in the late protein Gag. Because this epitope translocation resulted not only in earlier expression but also in loss of major histocompatibility complex class I downregulation by Nef, the activities of CTL against a panel of viral constructs differing in kinetics of epitope expression and class I downmodulation were compared. The results indicated that both the timing of epitope expression and the reduction of class I have profound effects on the ability of CTL to suppress HIV-1 replication in acutely infected cells. The epitope targeting of CTL and viral control of class I therefore likely play important roles in the ability of CTL to exert pressure on HIV-1.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Broadly Increased Sensitivity to Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes Resulting from Nef Epitope Escape Mutations

Ayub Ali; Satish K. Pillai; Hwee L. Ng; Rachel Lubong; Douglas D. Richman; Beth D. Jamieson; Yan Ding; M. Juliana McElrath; John C. Guatelli; Otto O. Yang

Nef is an HIV-1 protein that is absent in most retroviruses, yet its reading frame is highly maintained despite frequent targeting by CD8+ CTL in vivo. Because Nef is not necessarily required for viral replication, this consistent maintenance suggests that Nef plays an important role(s) and substantial fitness constraints prevent its loss in vivo. The ability of Nef to down-regulate cell surface MHC class I (MHC-I) molecules and render infected cells resistant to CTL in general is likely to be an important contributing function. We demonstrate that mutational escape of HIV-1 from Nef-specific CTL in vitro leads to progeny virions that are increased in their susceptibility to CTL of specificities for proteins other than Nef. The escape mutants contain multiple nef mutations that impair the ability of the virus to down-regulate MHC-I through disruption of its reading frame as well as epitope point mutations. Given the rarity of nef frameshifts in vivo, these data support the concept that the ability to down-regulate MHC-I could be a key constraint for preservation of Nef in vivo.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2003

Half-genome human immunodeficiency virus type 1 constructs for rapid production of reporter viruses.

Ayub Ali; Beth D. Jamieson; Otto O. Yang

The use of reporter constructs of HIV-1 molecular clones has been useful in studying the effects of infection on individual cells. A strategy of producing viral half-genome constructs containing reporter genes that can be used to produce recombinant complete infectious virions is described. This approach allows rapid generation of reporter and non-reporter virions from the same genetic construct, obviating the need to produce a new reporter genetic construct for each viral change to be studied. We provide an example of the utility of this system for studying the effects of Nef on infected cells.


Journal of Virology | 2016

HIV-1-Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptors Based on Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies

Ayub Ali; Scott G. Kitchen; Irvin S. Y. Chen; Hwee L. Ng; Jerome A. Zack; Otto O. Yang

ABSTRACT Although the use of chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) based on single-chain antibodies for gene immunotherapy of cancers is increasing due to promising recent results, the earliest CAR therapeutic trials were done for HIV-1 infection in the late 1990s. This approach utilized a CAR based on human CD4 as a binding domain and was abandoned for a lack of efficacy. The growing number of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (BNAbs) offers the opportunity to generate novel CARs that may be more active and revisit this modality for HIV-1 immunotherapy. We used sequences from seven well-defined BNAbs varying in binding sites and generated single-chain-antibody-based CARs. These CARs included 10E8, 3BNC117, PG9, PGT126, PGT128, VRC01, and X5. Each novel CAR exhibited conformationally relevant expression on the surface of transduced cells, mediated specific proliferation and killing in response to HIV-1-infected cells, and conferred potent antiviral activity (reduction of viral replication in log10 units) to transduced CD8+ T lymphocytes. The antiviral activity of these CARs was reproducible but varied according to the strain of virus. These findings indicated that BNAbs are excellent candidates for developing novel CARs to consider for the immunotherapeutic treatment of HIV-1. IMPORTANCE While chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) using single-chain antibodies as binding domains are growing in popularity for gene immunotherapy of cancers, the earliest human trials of CARs were done for HIV-1 infection. However, those trials failed, and the approach was abandoned for HIV-1. The only tested CAR against HIV-1 was based on the use of CD4 as the binding domain. The growing availability of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (BNAbs) affords the opportunity to revisit gene immunotherapy for HIV-1 using novel CARs based on single-chain antibodies. Here we construct and test a panel of seven novel CARs based on diverse BNAb types and show that all these CARs are functional against HIV-1.

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Otto O. Yang

University of California

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Hwee L. Ng

University of California

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Sama Adnan

University of California

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