A generalized HIV vaccine design strategy for priming of broadly neutralizing antibody responses.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published:
Abstract

Vaccine induction of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to HIV remains a major challenge. Germline-targeting immunogens hold promise for initiating the induction of certain bnAb classes; yet for most bnAbs, a strong dependence on antibody heavy chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) is a major barrier. Exploiting ultradeep human antibody sequencing data, we identified a diverse set of potential antibody precursors for a bnAb with dominant HCDR3 contacts. We then developed HIV envelope trimer-based immunogens that primed responses from rare bnAb-precursor B cells in a mouse model and bound a range of potential bnAb-precursor human naïve B cells in ex vivo screens. Our repertoire-guided germline-targeting approach provides a framework for priming the induction of many HIV bnAbs and could be applied to most HCDR3-dominant antibodies from other pathogens.

Authors
Jon Steichen, Ying-cing Lin, Colin Havenar Daughton, Simone Pecetta, Gabriel Ozorowski, Jordan Willis, Laura Toy, Devin Sok, Alessia Liguori, Sven Kratochvil, Jonathan Torres, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Eleonora Melzi, Daniel Kulp, Sebastian Raemisch, Xiaozhen Hu, Steffen Bernard, Erik Georgeson, Nicole Phelps, Yumiko Adachi, Michael Kubitz, Elise Landais, Jeffrey Umotoy, Amanda Robinson, Bryan Briney, Ian Wilson, Dennis Burton, Andrew Ward, Shane Crotty, Facundo Batista, William Schief
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS