Antibodies of symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected individuals are directed to the V3 domain of noninfectious and not of infectious virions present in autologous serum
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 68 (6) , 3908-16
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.68.6.3908-3916.1994
Abstract
The present study was designed to determine the antibody specificity for the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) V3 domains of infectious and noninfectious virions present in the serum of AIDS patients. To accomplish this, HIV-1 was isolated in the presence of autologous antibodies from the serum samples of six AIDS patients in HIV-1-negative donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells by short-term cultivation. The isolated virus, defined as the infectious cell-free virus (iCFV), was characterized by sequence analysis of the proviral DNA coding for the third hypervariable (V3) region of the external glycoprotein gp120. This was carried out by amplifying and cloning the V3 region. In all six cases studied, 20 randomly selected V3 clones derived from the proviral DNA of the iCFV, 20 clones from patient cell-free virus, and 20 clones from cell-integrated virus were sequenced to study the distribution and frequency of the intrapatient virus population. The number of major virus variants in the six patients ranged from three to nine. The various V3 sequences found in the AIDS patients showed the typical amino acid pattern of the syncytium-inducing and non-syncytium-inducing viral phenotypes characteristic for the late stage of infection. However, only one patient-specific iCFV variant was detected within the 20 V3 clones analyzed per virus isolation. For the six patients a total of 34 V3-loop variants, either iCFV or non-iCFV, was observed. All 34 V3-loop sequences were expressed as glutathione-S-transferase fusion proteins (V3-GST). The autologous antibody response to the V3-GST fusion proteins was studied by Western immunoblot analysis. A strong antibody response to almost all non-iCFV V3-GST proteins was found in the sera of the six patients. In contrast, the autologous antibody response to the six iCFV V3 loops was undetectable (in four patients) or very faint (in two patients) compared with that to the non-iCFV V3 loops. Five of the six iCFV loops showed positively charged amino acids at positions strongly associated with the syncytium-inducing phenotype. These findings suggest that our in vitro isolation system selects for virions which are not recognized by V3-specific antibodies and are infectious both in vitro and in vivo.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- V3-specific neutralizing antibodies in sera from HIV-1 gp160-immunized volunteers block virus fusion and act synergistically with human monoclonal antibody to the conformation-dependent CD4 binding site of gp120. NIH-NIAID AIDS Vaccine Clinical Trials Network.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993
- Synergistic Neutralization of HIV-1 by Human Monoclonal Antibodies Against the V3 Loop and the CD4-Binding Site of gp120AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 1992
- Conserved Sequence and Structural Elements in the HIV-1 Principal Neutralizing DeterminantScience, 1990
- Plasma Viremia in Human Immunodeficiency Virus InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Quantitation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in the Blood of Infected PersonsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Characterization of HIV-1 neutralization escape mutantsAIDS, 1989
- Detection of HIV-1 DNA in different subsets of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells using the polymerase chain reactionArchiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, 1989
- The Reservoir for HIV-1 in Human Peripheral Blood Is a T Cell That Maintains Expression of CD4Science, 1989
- Specificity and Function of the Individual Amino Acids of an Important Determinant of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 that Induces Neutralizing ActivityJournal of General Virology, 1989
- HTLV-III, LAV, ARV are variants of same AIDS virusNature, 1985