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Dive into the research topics where Hayley Crawford is active.

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Featured researches published by Hayley Crawford.


Nature Medicine | 2007

CD8+ T-cell responses to different HIV proteins have discordant associations with viral load

Photini Kiepiela; Kholiswa Ngumbela; Christina Thobakgale; Dhanwanthie Ramduth; Isobella Honeyborne; Eshia Moodley; Shabashini Reddy; Chantal de Pierres; Zenele Mncube; Nompumelelo Mkhwanazi; Karen Bishop; Mary van der Stok; Kriebashnie Nair; Nasreen Khan; Hayley Crawford; Rebecca Payne; Alasdair Leslie; Julia G. Prado; Andrew J. Prendergast; John Frater; Noel D. McCarthy; Christian Brander; Gerald H. Learn; David C. Nickle; Christine Rousseau; Hoosen Coovadia; James I. Mullins; David Heckerman; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder

Selection of T-cell vaccine antigens for chronic persistent viral infections has been largely empirical. To define the relationship, at the population level, between the specificity of the cellular immune response and viral control for a relevant human pathogen, we performed a comprehensive analysis of the 160 dominant CD8+ T-cell responses in 578 untreated HIV-infected individuals from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Of the HIV proteins targeted, only Gag-specific responses were associated with lowering viremia. Env-specific and Accessory/Regulatory protein–specific responses were associated with higher viremia. Increasing breadth of Gag-specific responses was associated with decreasing viremia and increasing Env breadth with increasing viremia. Association of the specific CD8+ T-cell response with low viremia was independent of HLA type and unrelated to epitope sequence conservation. These population-based data, suggesting the existence of both effective immune responses and responses lacking demonstrable biological impact in chronic HIV infection, are of relevance to HIV vaccine design and evaluation.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Fitness Cost of Escape Mutations in p24 Gag in Association with Control of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1

Javier Martinez-Picado; Julia G. Prado; Elizabeth E. Fry; K. Pfafferott; Alasdair Leslie; Senica Chetty; Christina Thobakgale; Isobel Honeyborne; Hayley Crawford; Philippa C. Matthews; Tilly Pillay; Christine Rousseau; James I. Mullins; Christian Brander; Bruce D. Walker; David I. Stuart; Photini Kiepiela; Philip J. R. Goulder

ABSTRACT Mutational escape by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) recognition is a major challenge for vaccine design. However, recent studies suggest that CTL escape may carry a sufficient cost to viral replicative capacity to facilitate subsequent immune control of a now attenuated virus. In order to examine how limitations can be imposed on viral escape, the epitope TSTLQEQIGW (TW10 [Gag residues 240 to 249]), presented by two HLA alleles associated with effective control of HIV, HLA-B*57 and -B*5801, was investigated. The in vitro experiments described here demonstrate that the dominant TW10 escape mutation, T242N, reduces viral replicative capacity. Structural analysis reveals that T242 plays a critical role in defining the start point and in stabilizing helix 6 within p24 Gag, ensuring that escape occurs at a significant cost. A very similar role is played by Thr-180, which is also an escape residue, but within a second p24 Gag epitope associated with immune control. Analysis of HIV type 1 gag in 206 B*57/5801-positive subjects reveals three principle alternative TW10-associated variants, and each is strongly linked to concomitant additional variants within p24 Gag, suggesting that functional constraints operate against their occurrence alone. The extreme conservation of p24 Gag and the predictable nature of escape variation resulting from these tight functional constraints indicate that p24 Gag may be a critical immunogen in vaccine design and suggest novel vaccination strategies to limit viral escape options from such epitopes.


Nature | 2009

Adaptation of HIV-1 to human leukocyte antigen class I

Y Kawashima; K. Pfafferott; John Frater; Philippa C. Matthews; Rebecca Payne; M. M. Addo; Hiroyuki Gatanaga; Mamoru Fujiwara; Atsuko Hachiya; Hirokazu Koizumi; Nozomi Kuse; Shinichi Oka; Anna Duda; Andrew J. Prendergast; Hayley Crawford; A Leslie; Zabrina L. Brumme; Chanson J. Brumme; Todd M. Allen; Christian Brander; Richard A. Kaslow; Jianming Tang; Eric Hunter; Susan Allen; Joseph Mulenga; S. Branch; T Roach; M. John; S. Mallal; Anthony Ogwu

The rapid and extensive spread of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic provides a rare opportunity to witness host–pathogen co-evolution involving humans. A focal point is the interaction between genes encoding human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and those encoding HIV proteins. HLA molecules present fragments (epitopes) of HIV proteins on the surface of infected cells to enable immune recognition and killing by CD8+ T cells; particular HLA molecules, such as HLA-B*57, HLA-B*27 and HLA-B*51, are more likely to mediate successful control of HIV infection. Mutation within these epitopes can allow viral escape from CD8+ T-cell recognition. Here we analysed viral sequences and HLA alleles from >2,800 subjects, drawn from 9 distinct study cohorts spanning 5 continents. Initial analysis of the HLA-B*51-restricted epitope, TAFTIPSI (reverse transcriptase residues 128–135), showed a strong correlation between the frequency of the escape mutation I135X and HLA-B*51 prevalence in the 9 study cohorts (P = 0.0001). Extending these analyses to incorporate other well-defined CD8+ T-cell epitopes, including those restricted by HLA-B*57 and HLA-B*27, showed that the frequency of these epitope variants (n = 14) was consistently correlated with the prevalence of the restricting HLA allele in the different cohorts (together, P < 0.0001), demonstrating strong evidence of HIV adaptation to HLA at a population level. This process of viral adaptation may dismantle the well-established HLA associations with control of HIV infection that are linked to the availability of key epitopes, and highlights the challenge for a vaccine to keep pace with the changing immunological landscape presented by HIV.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Compensatory Mutation Partially Restores Fitness and Delays Reversion of Escape Mutation within the Immunodominant HLA-B*5703-Restricted Gag Epitope in Chronic Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection

Hayley Crawford; Julia G. Prado; Alasdair Leslie; Stéphane Hué; Isobella Honeyborne; Sharon Reddy; Mary van der Stok; Zenele Mncube; Christian Brander; Christine Rousseau; James I. Mullins; Richard A. Kaslow; Paul A. Goepfert; Susan Allen; Eric Hunter; Joseph Mulenga; Photini Kiepiela; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder

ABSTRACT HLA-B*5703 is associated with effective immune control in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Here we describe an escape mutation within the immunodominant HLA-B*5703-restricted epitope in chronic HIV-1 infection, KAFSPEVIPMF (Gag 162-172), and demonstrate that this mutation reduces viral replicative capacity. Reversion of this mutation following transmission to HLA-B*5703-negative recipients was delayed by the compensatory mutation S165N within the same epitope. These data may help explain the observed association between HLA-B*5703 and long-term control of viremia.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009

Evolution of HLA-B*5703 HIV-1 escape mutations in HLA-B*5703–positive individuals and their transmission recipients

Hayley Crawford; Wendy Lumm; Alasdair Leslie; Malinda Schaefer; Debrah I. Boeras; Julia G. Prado; Jianming Tang; Paul Farmer; Thumbi Ndung'u; Shabir Lakhi; Jill Gilmour; Paul A. Goepfert; Bruce D. Walker; Richard A. Kaslow; Joseph Mulenga; Susan Allen; Philip J. R. Goulder; Eric Hunter

HLA-B*57 is the class I allele most consistently associated with control of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication, which may be linked to the specific HIV peptides that this allele presents to cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), and the resulting efficacy of these cellular immune responses. In two HIV C clade–infected populations in South Africa and Zambia, we sought to elucidate the role of HLA-B*5703 in HIV disease outcome. HLA-B*5703–restricted CTL responses select for escape mutations in three Gag p24 epitopes, in a predictable order. We show that the accumulation of these mutations sequentially reduces viral replicative capacity in vitro. Despite this, in vivo data demonstrate that there is ultimately an increase in viral load concomitant with evasion of all three HLA-B*5703–restricted CTL responses. In HLA-B*5703–mismatched recipients, the previously described early benefit of transmitted HLA-B*5703–associated escape mutations is abrogated by the increase in viral load coincident with reversion. Rapid disease progression is observed in HLA-matched recipients to whom mutated virus is transmitted. These data demonstrate that, although costly escape from CTL responses can progressively attenuate the virus, high viral loads develop in the absence of adequate, continued CTL responses. These data underline the need for a CTL vaccine against multiple conserved epitopes.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Central Role of Reverting Mutations in HLA Associations with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Set Point

Philippa C. Matthews; Andrew J. Prendergast; Alasdair Leslie; Hayley Crawford; Rebecca Payne; Christine Rousseau; Morgane Rolland; Isobella Honeyborne; Jonathan M. Carlson; Carl M. Kadie; Christian Brander; Karen Bishop; Nonkululeko Mlotshwa; James I. Mullins; Hoosen Coovadia; Thumbi Ndung'u; Bruce D. Walker; David Heckerman; Philip J. R. Goulder

ABSTRACT Much uncertainty still exists over what T-cell responses need to be induced by an effective human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine. Previous studies have hypothesized that the effective CD8+ T-cell responses are those driving the selection of escape mutations that reduce viral fitness and therefore revert posttransmission. In this study, we adopted a novel approach to define better the role of reverting escape mutations in immune control of HIV infection. This analysis of sequences from 710 study subjects with chronic C-clade HIV type 1 infection demonstrates the importance of mutations that impose a fitness cost in the control of viremia. Consistent with previous studies, the viral set points associated with each HLA-B allele are strongly correlated with the number of Gag-specific polymorphisms associated with the relevant HLA-B allele (r = −0.56, P = 0.0034). The viral set points associated with each HLA-C allele were also strongly correlated with the number of Pol-specific polymorphisms associated with the relevant HLA-C allele (r = −0.67, P = 0.0047). However, critically, both these correlations were dependent solely on the polymorphisms identified as reverting. Therefore, despite the inevitable evolution of viral escape, viremia can be controlled through the selection of mutations that are detrimental to viral fitness. The significance of these results is in highlighting the rationale for an HIV vaccine that can induce these broad responses.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Control of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Is Associated with HLA-B*13 and Targeting of Multiple Gag-Specific CD8+ T-Cell Epitopes

Isobella Honeyborne; Andrew J. Prendergast; Florencia Pereyra; Alasdair Leslie; Hayley Crawford; Rebecca Payne; Shabashini Reddy; Karen Bishop; Eshia Moodley; Kriebashnie Nair; Mary van der Stok; Noel D. McCarthy; Christine Rousseau; Marylyn M. Addo; James I. Mullins; Christian Brander; Photini Kiepiela; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder

ABSTRACT To better understand relationships between CD8+ T-cell specificity and the immune control of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), we analyzed the role of HLA-B*13, an allele associated with low viremia, in a cohort of 578 C clade-infected individuals in Durban, South Africa. Six novel B*13-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes were defined from analyses of 37 B*13-positive subjects, including three Gag epitopes. These B*13-restricted epitopes contribute to a broad Gag-specific CD8+ response that is associated with the control of viremia. These data are consistent with data from studies of other HLA-class I alleles associated with HIV control that have shown that the targeting of multiple Gag epitopes is associated with relative suppression of viremia.


Journal of Virology | 2008

HLA Class I-Driven Evolution of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Subtype C Proteome: Immune Escape and Viral Load

Christine Rousseau; Marcus Daniels; Jonathan M. Carlson; Carl M. Kadie; Hayley Crawford; Andrew J. Prendergast; Philippa C. Matthews; Rebecca Payne; Morgane Rolland; Dana N. Raugi; Brandon Maust; Gerald H. Learn; David C. Nickle; Hoosen Coovadia; Thumbi Ndung'u; Nicole Frahm; Christian Brander; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; David Heckerman; Bette Korber; James I. Mullins

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) mutations that confer escape from cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) recognition can sometimes result in lower viral fitness. These mutations can then revert upon transmission to a new host in the absence of CTL-mediated immune selection pressure restricted by the HLA alleles of the prior host. To identify these potentially critical recognition points on the virus, we assessed HLA-driven viral evolution using three phylogenetic correction methods across full HIV-1 subtype C proteomes from a cohort of 261 South Africans and identified amino acids conferring either susceptibility or resistance to CTLs. A total of 558 CTL-susceptible and -resistant HLA-amino acid associations were identified and organized into 310 immunological sets (groups of individual associations related to a single HLA/epitope combination). Mutations away from seven susceptible residues, including four in Gag, were associated with lower plasma viral-RNA loads (q < 0.2 [where q is the expected false-discovery rate]) in individuals with the corresponding HLA alleles. The ratio of susceptible to resistant residues among those without the corresponding HLA alleles varied in the order Vpr > Gag > Rev > Pol > Nef > Vif > Tat > Env > Vpu (Fishers exact test; P ≤ 0.0009 for each comparison), suggesting the same ranking of fitness costs by genes associated with CTL escape. Significantly more HLA-B (χ2; P = 3.59 × 10−5) and HLA-C (χ2; P = 4.71 × 10−6) alleles were associated with amino acid changes than HLA-A, highlighting their importance in driving viral evolution. In conclusion, specific HIV-1 residues (enriched in Vpr, Gag, and Rev) and HLA alleles (particularly B and C) confer susceptibility to the CTL response and are likely to be important in the development of vaccines targeted to decrease the viral load.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Effective T-Cell Responses Select Human Immunodeficiency Virus Mutants and Slow Disease Progression

Alexander J. Frater; Helen Brown; Annette Oxenius; Huldrych F. Günthard; Bernard Hirschel; Nicola Robinson; Alasdair Leslie; Rebecca Payne; Hayley Crawford; Andrew J. Prendergast; Christian Brander; P. Kiepiela; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder; Angela R. McLean; Rodney E. Phillips

ABSTRACT The possession of some HLA class I molecules is associated with delayed progression to AIDS. The mechanism behind this beneficial effect is unclear. We tested the idea that cytotoxic T-cell responses restricted by advantageous HLA class I molecules impose stronger selection pressures than those restricted by other HLA class I alleles. As a measure of the selection pressure imposed by HLA class I alleles, we determined the extent of HLA class I-associated epitope variation in a cohort of European human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive individuals (n = 84). We validated our findings in a second, distinct cohort of African patients (n = 516). We found that key HIV epitopes restricted by advantageous HLA molecules (B27, B57, and B51 in European patients and B5703, B5801, and B8101 in African patients) were more frequently mutated in individuals bearing the restricting HLA than in those who lacked the restricting HLA class I molecule. HLA alleles associated with clinical benefit restricted certain epitopes for which the consensus peptides were frequently recognized by the immune response despite the circulating viruss being highly polymorphic. We found a significant inverse correlation between the HLA-associated hazard of disease progression and the mean HLA-associated prevalence of mutations within epitopes (P = 0.028; R2 = 0.34). We conclude that beneficial HLA class I alleles impose strong selection at key epitopes. This is revealed by the frequent association between effective T-cell responses and circulating viral escape mutants and the rarity of these variants in patients who lack these favorable HLA class I molecules, suggesting a significant pressure to revert.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Differential selection pressure exerted on HIV by CTL targeting identical epitopes but restricted by distinct HLA alleles from the same HLA supertype

Alasdair Leslie; David A. Price; Pamela Mkhize; Karen Bishop; Almas Rathod; Cheryl L. Day; Hayley Crawford; Isobella Honeyborne; Tedi E. Asher; Graz Luzzi; Anne Edwards; Christine M. Rosseau; James I. Mullins; Gareth Tudor-Williams; Vas Novelli; Christian Brander; Photini Kiepiela; Bruce D. Walker; Philip J. R. Goulder

HLA diversity is seen as a major challenge to CTL vaccines against HIV. One current approach focuses on “promiscuous” epitopes, presented by multiple HLA alleles from within the same HLA supertype. However, the effectiveness of such supertype vaccines depends upon the functional equivalence of CTL targeting a particular epitope, irrespective of the restricting HLA. In this study, we describe the promiscuous HIV-specific CTL epitopes presented by alleles within the B7 supertype. Substantial differences were observed in the ability of CTL to select for escape mutation when targeting the same epitope but restricted by different HLA. This observation was common to all six promiscuous B7 epitopes identified. Moreover, with one exception, there were no significant differences in the frequency, magnitude, or immunodominance of the CTL responses restricted by different HLA alleles to explain these discrepancies. This suggests that the unique peptide/MHC complexes generated by even closely related HLA induce CTL responses that are qualitatively different. This hypothesis is supported by additional differences observed between CTL targeting identical epitopes but restricted by different HLA: first, the occurrence of distinct, HLA-specific escape mutation; second, the recruitment of distinct TCR repertoires by particular peptide/MHC complexes; and, third, significant differences in the functional avidity of CTL. Taken together, these data indicate that significant functional differences exist between CTL targeting identical epitopes but restricted by different, albeit closely related HLA. These findings are of relevance to vaccine approaches that seek to exploit HLA supertypes to overcome the problem of HLA diversity.

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Alasdair Leslie

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Photini Kiepiela

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Andrew J. Prendergast

Queen Mary University of London

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Julia G. Prado

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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