Frequency and Phenotype of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope-Specific B Cells from Patients with Broadly Cross-Neutralizing Antibodies
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 83 (1) , 188-199
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01583-08
Abstract
Induction of broadly cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies (NAb) is an important goal for a prophylactic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine. Some HIV-infected patients make a NAb response that reacts with diverse strains of HIV-1, but most candidate vaccines have induced NAb only against a subset of highly sensitive isolates. To better understand the nature of broad NAb responses that arise during natural infection, we screened patients for sera able to neutralize diverse HIV strains and explored the frequency and phenotype of their peripheral Envelope-specific B cells. We screened 113 HIV-infected patients of various clinical statuses for the prevalence of broad NAb. Sera able to neutralize at least four of five viral isolates were found in over one-third of progressors and slow progressors, but much less frequently in aviremic long-term nonprogressors. Most Env-specific antibody-secreting B cells were CD27(hi) CD38(hi) plasmablasts, and the total plasmablast frequency was higher in HIV-infected patients than in uninfected donors. We found that 0.0031% of B cells and 0.047% of plasmablasts secreted Env-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) in an enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay. We developed a novel staining protocol to label HIV-specific B cells with Env gp140 protein. A total of 0.09% of B cells were found to be Env-specific by this method, a frequency far higher than that indicated by ELISPOT assay. gp140-labeled B cells were predominantly CD27(+) and surface IgG(+). These data describe the breadth and titer of serum NAb and the frequency and phenotype of HIV-specific B cells in a cohort of patients with broad cross-neutralizing antibody responses that are potential goals for vaccines for HIV.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vaccines: Correlates of Vaccine‐Induced ImmunityClinical Infectious Diseases, 2008
- Evidence for HIV-associated B cell exhaustion in a dysfunctional memory B cell compartment in HIV-infected viremic individualsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2008
- Pathogenic mechanisms of B-lymphocyte dysfunction in HIV diseaseJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2008
- Rapid cloning of high-affinity human monoclonal antibodies against influenza virusNature, 2008
- Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity of human memory B cellsSeminars in Immunology, 2008
- Cross-subtype antibody and cellular immune responses induced by a polyvalent DNA prime–protein boost HIV-1 vaccine in healthy human volunteersVaccine, 2008
- Broad HIV-1 neutralization mediated by CD4-binding site antibodiesNature Medicine, 2007
- Cross-reactive HIV-1 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies selected by screening of an immune human phage library against an envelope glycoprotein (gp140) isolated from a patient (R2) with broadly HIV-1 neutralizing antibodiesVirology, 2007
- Efficient protein boosting after plasmid DNA or recombinant adenovirus immunization with HIV-1 vaccine constructsVaccine, 2006
- Maintenance of viral suppression in HIV-1–infected HLA-B*57+ elite suppressors despite CTL escape mutationsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006