High titer HIV-1 V3-specific antibodies with broad reactivity but low neutralizing potency in acute infection and following vaccination.
Date
2008
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Identifying the earliest neutralizing antibody specificities that are elicited following infection or vaccination
by HIV-1 is an important objective of current HIV/AIDS vaccine research. We have shown previously that
transplantation of HIV-1 V3 epitopes into an HIV-2 envelope (Env) scaffold provides a sensitive and specific
means to detect and quantify HIV-1 V3 epitope specific neutralizing antibodies (Nabs) in human sera. Here,
we employ this HIV-2/HIV-1 V3 scaffolding strategy to study the kinetics of development and breadth of V3-
specific Nabs in longitudinal sera from individuals acutely infected with clade C or clade B HIV-1 and in
human subjects immunized with clade B HIV-1 immunogens. HIV-2/HIV-1 chimeras containing V3
sequences matched to virus type (HIV-2 or HIV-1), subtype (clade B or C), or strain (autologous or
heterologous) were used as test reagents. We found that by 3–8 weeks post infection, 12 of 14 clade C
subjects had a median IC50 V3-specific Nab titer of 1:700 against chimeric viruses containing a heterologous
clade C V3. By 5 months post-infection, all 14 subjects were positive for V3-specific Nabs with median titers
of 1:8000 against heterologous clade C V3 and 1:1300 against clade B V3. Two acutely infected clade B
patients developed heterologous clade B V3-specific Nabs at titers of 1:300 and 1:1800 by 13 weeks of
infection and 1:5000 and 1:11000 by 7 months of infection. Titers were not different against chimeras
containing autologous clade B V3 sequences. Each of 10 uninfected normal human volunteers who were
immunized with clade B HIV-1 Env immunogens, but none of five sham immunized control subjects,
developed V3-specific Nabs titers as high as 1:3000 (median 1:1300; range 1:700–1:3000). None of the HIV-
1 infected or vaccinated subjects had antibodies that neutralized primary HIV-1 virus strains. These results
indicate that high-titer, broadly reactive V3-specific antibodies are among the first to be elicited during acute
and early HIV-1 infection and following vaccination but these antibodies lack neutralizing potency against
primary HIV-1 viruses, which effectively shield V3 from antibody binding to the functional Env trimer.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Davis, K.L., Gray, E.S., Moore, P.L., et al. 2009. High titer HIV-1 V3-specific antibodies with broad reactivity but low neutralizing potency in acute infection and following vaccination. Virology. 387, pp. 414–426.