Multiple Pathways of Escape from HIV Broadly Cross-Neutralizing V2-Dependent Antibodies
Autor: | Tandile Hermanus, Elin S. Gray, Lynn Morris, Salim S. Abdool Karim, Daniel J. Sheward, Nthabeleng Ranchobe, Penny L. Moore, Molati Nonyane, Carolyn Williamson |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
medicine.drug_class
Immunology Molecular Sequence Data HIV Infections Cross Reactions HIV Antibodies HIV Envelope Protein gp120 Monoclonal antibody Gp41 Microbiology Epitope Neutralization Virus Virology medicine Humans Amino Acid Sequence HIV vaccine Phylogeny biology Antibodies Neutralizing Insect Science Viral evolution biology.protein HIV-1 Pathogenesis and Immunity Antibody Sequence Alignment |
Popis: | Broadly cross-neutralizing (BCN) antibodies are likely to be critical for an effective HIV vaccine. However, the ontogeny of such antibodies and their relationship with autologous viral evolution is unclear. Here, we characterized viral evolution in CAP256, a subtype C-infected individual who developed potent BCN antibodies targeting positions R166 and K169 in the V2 region. CAP256 was superinfected at 3 months postinfection with a virus that was highly sensitive to BCN V2-dependent monoclonal antibodies. The autologous neutralizing response in CAP256 was directed at V1V2, reaching extremely high titers (>1:40,000) against the superinfecting virus at 42 weeks, just 11 weeks prior to the development of the BCN response targeting the same region. Recombination between the primary and superinfecting viruses, especially in V2 and gp41, resulted in two distinct lineages by 4 years postinfection. Although neutralization of some CAP256 clones by plasma from as much as 2 years earlier suggested incomplete viral escape, nonetheless titers against later clones were reduced at least 40-fold to less than 1:1,000. Escape mutations were identified in each lineage, either at R166 or at K169, suggesting that strain-specific and BCN antibodies targeted overlapping epitopes. Furthermore, the early dependence of CAP256 neutralizing antibodies on the N160 glycan decreased with the onset of neutralization breadth, indicating a change in specificity. These data suggest rapid maturation, within 11 weeks, of CAP256 strain-specific antibodies to acquire breadth, with implications for the vaccine elicitation of BCN V2-dependent antibodies. Overall these studies demonstrate that ongoing viral escape is possible, even from BCN antibodies. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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