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Episode Summary

A very small proportion of people infected with HIV do not develop AIDS. Mark Connors talks about 2 patient populations that his lab studies, the elite controllers and the elite neutralizers, who control HIV infection with their respective T cell or B cell responses. Connors hopes his work on killer T cells and broadly neutralizing antibodies will help scientists develop better HIV therapies or an effective HIV vaccine.

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Julie’s Biggest Takeaways:

Dr. G ArunkumarHIV infection results in a largely ineffective CD8 Killer T cell response, which is one of the reasons HIV is hard for the immune system to control.

The first group of HIV-infected long-term nonprogressor patients, identified in the late 1980s/early 1990s, were very heterogeneous. Some developed AIDS after many years, which led some scientists to believe no patients would be able to control the disease forever. This turned out not to be true, and a very, very small proportion (0.3%) of people seem to control HIV replication for the duration of their life.

Passive transfer of patient cells into immunodeficient mice confirmed that some patients can control HIV infection. The ability to control infection was diminished only when the CD8 T cells were depleted, first demonstrating that this cell type is responsible for infection control in these patients.

There are 2 populations of people who maintain healthy immune systems despite HIV infection: those deemed ‘elite controllers’ and those deemed ‘elite neutralizers.’ The elite controllers have a strong CD8 T cell response whereas the elite neutralizers generate broadly neutralizing antibodies through their B cell response. There are more people who fall into the elite neutralizer population than the elite controller nonprogressor populations.

Featured Quotes:

“We don’t see compelling evidence that [elite controllers] are infected with attenuated viruses; we do have compelling evidence that they have a superior CD8 T cell response to HIV infection.”

“Broadly neutralizing antibodies are antibodies that are capable of neutralizing 40, 50, 60, up to 97 or 98% of HIV isolates we investigate in our 218-virus panels. These antibodies recognize conserved epitoppieces of the sruface envelope glycoprotein of HIV which is how they mediate this breadth.”

“Patients from whom we get broadly neutralizing antibodies from are completely different from the elite controller population. Some people have called them elite neutralizers, similar to elite controllers - we’ve had nothing to do with the introduction of the ‘elite’ terminology!”

“If you have less than 50 HIV copies/ml, the chances of you transmitting the virus are slim-to-zero. It’s been studied very well with antiretrovirals that the transmission actually is zero.”

“HIV has been such a tough target that to talk about beating it sounds a little crazy to some people. I have no fear of that. I think that we will in the coming years see both therapies and particularly I think we’ll see an efficacious vaccine. This is a solvable problem.”

“HIV felt like the polio of our generation; this is a disease with tremendous implications worldwide.”

Links for This Episode:

  • Immunity article:
  • Immunity commentary:
  • Science article:
  • (Smithsonian Worlds AIDS Day Event (Live Dec 4th at 6:45pm)
  • HOM Tidbit: