Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

Structural Constraints of Vaccine-Induced Tier-2 Autologous HIV Neutralizing Antibodies Targeting the Receptor-Binding Site

Cell Reports, Volume 14, No. 1, Year 2016

Antibodies that neutralize autologous transmitted/founder (TF) HIV occur in most HIV-infected individuals and can evolve to neutralization breadth. Autologous neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) against neutralization-resistant (Tier-2) viruses are rarely induced by vaccination. Whereas broadly neutralizing antibody (bnAb)-HIV-Envelope structures have been defined, the structures of autologous nAbs have not. Here, we show that immunization with TF mutant Envs gp140 oligomers induced high-titer, V5-dependent plasma neutralization for a Tier-2 autologous TF evolved mutant virus. Structural analysis of autologous nAb DH427 revealed binding to V5, demonstrating the source of narrow nAb specificity and explaining the failure to acquire breadth. Thus, oligomeric TF Envs can elicit autologous nAbs to Tier-2 HIVs, but induction of bnAbs will require targeting of precursors of B cell lineages that can mature to heterologous neutralization. HIV-1 vaccine elicitation of antibodies against neutralization-resistant (Tier-2) viruses is rare. Bradley et al. demonstrate induction of antibodies that can neutralize a vaccine-matched Tier-2 virus in a rhesus macaque immunized with HIV trimers isolated from a HIV-1-infected individual. Structural analysis revealed the mechanism of restricted neutralization breadth.

Statistics
Citations: 28
Authors: 28
Affiliations: 9
Identifiers
Research Areas
Infectious Diseases
Maternal And Child Health