Vaccination induces HIV broadly neutralizing antibody precursors in humans.

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

Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) can protect against HIV infection but have not been induced by human vaccination. A key barrier to bnAb induction is vaccine priming of rare bnAb-precursor B cells. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 1 clinical trial, the HIV vaccine-priming candidate eOD-GT8 60mer adjuvanted with AS01B had a favorable safety profile and induced VRC01-class bnAb precursors in 97% of vaccine recipients with median frequencies reaching 0.1% among immunoglobulin G B cells in blood. bnAb precursors shared properties with bnAbs and gained somatic hypermutation and affinity with the boost. The results establish clinical proof of concept for germline-targeting vaccine priming, support development of boosting regimens to induce bnAbs, and encourage application of the germline-targeting strategy to other targets in HIV and other pathogens.

Authors
David Leggat, Kristen Cohen, Jordan Willis, William Fulp, Allan Decamp, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Christopher Cottrell, Sergey Menis, Greg Finak, Lamar Ballweber Fleming, Abhinaya Srikanth, Jason Plyler, Torben Schiffner, Alessia Liguori, Farhad Rahaman, Angela Lombardo, Vincent Philiponis, Rachael Whaley, Aaron Seese, Joshua Brand, Alexis Ruppel, Wesley Hoyland, Nicole Yates, Latonya Williams, Kelli Greene, Hongmei Gao, Celia Mahoney, Martin Corcoran, Alberto Cagigi, Alison Taylor, David Brown, David Ambrozak, Troy Sincomb, Xiaozhen Hu, Ryan Tingle, Erik Georgeson, Saman Eskandarzadeh, Nushin Alavi, Danny Lu, Tina-marie Mullen, Michael Kubitz, Bettina Groschel, Janine Maenza, Orpheus Kolokythas, Nadia Khati, Jeffrey Bethony, Shane Crotty, Mario Roederer, Gunilla Karlsson Hedestam, Georgia Tomaras, David Montefiori, David Diemert, Richard Koup, Dagna Laufer, M Mcelrath, Adrian Mcdermott, William Schief
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS