H IV-specific T cells play an important role in the containment of infection as evidenced by the concurrent drop of viral load and the appearance of HIV-specific CD8 T cells in acute infection, T cell-driven immune pressure leading to predictable HLA-restricted HIV mutations, and the association between specific HLAs and epitopes or immune responses to specific proteins and spontaneous control of HIV. However, the lack of clear correlates of immune protection hampers efficient vaccine design (1).Screening and functional studies of T cells from HIV-infected persons or vaccinees use high nonphysiological concentrations of long HIV peptides exogenously pulsed onto cells or soluble major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide multimers presenting peptides of optimal size (2, 3). These approaches bypass all steps required for intracellular antigen processing and presentation of HIV peptides by MHC class I (MHC-I) molecules (4). Determination of the amounts and sequences of peptides presented by an infected cell remains largely elusive despite the role of the peptides in immune recognition.Direct mass spectrometry (MS)-based sequencing has become a preferred and yet difficult approach for the unbiased identification and characterization of peptides naturally presented by MHC-I molecules displayed by healthy and cancerous cells or in the context of pathogen infection. However, considering the relatively low number of MHC-peptide complexes per cell and the