Cross-Reactive Human IgM-Derived Monoclonal Antibodies that Bind to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins
Open Access
- 4 February 2010
- Vol. 2 (2) , 547-565
- https://doi.org/10.3390/v2020547
Abstract
Elicitation of antibodies with potent and broad neutralizing activity against HIV by immunization remains a challenge. Several monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) isolated from humans with HIV-1 infection exhibit such activity but vaccine immunogens based on structures containing their epitopes have not been successful for their elicitation. All known broadly neutralizing mAbs (bnmAbs) are immunoglobulin (Ig) Gs (IgGs) and highly somatically hypermutated which could impede their elicitation. Ig Ms (IgMs) are on average significantly less divergent from germline antibodies and are relevant for the development of vaccine immunogens but are underexplored compared to IgGs. Here we describe the identification and characterization of several human IgM-derived mAbs against HIV-1 which were selected from a large phage-displayed naive human antibody library constructed from blood, lymph nodes and spleens of 59 healthy donors. These antibodies bound with high affinity to recombinant envelope glycoproteins (gp140s, Envs) of HIV-1 isolates from different clades. They enhanced or did not neutralize infection by some of the HIV-1 primary isolates using CCR5 as a coreceptor but neutralized all CXCR4 isolates tested although weakly. One of these antibodies with relatively low degree of somatic hypermutation was more extensively characterized. It bound to a highly conserved region partially overlapping with the coreceptor binding site and close to but not overlapping with the CD4 binding site. These results suggest the existence of conserved structures that could direct the immune response to non-neutralizing or even enhancing antibodies which may represent a strategy used by the virus to escape neutralizing immune responses. Further studies will show whether such a strategy plays a role in HIV infection of humans, how important that role could be, and what the mechanisms of infection enhancement are. The newly identified mAbs could be used as reagents to further characterize conserved non-neutralizing, weakly neutralizing or enhancing epitopes and modify or remove them from candidate vaccine immunogens.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vaccination with ALVAC and AIDSVAX to Prevent HIV-1 Infection in ThailandNew England Journal of Medicine, 2009
- Maturation Pathways of Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing AntibodiesViruses, 2009
- Germline-like predecessors of broadly neutralizing antibodies lack measurable binding to HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins: Implications for evasion of immune responses and design of vaccine immunogensBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2009
- Human monoclonal antibodies and engineered antibody domains as HIV-1 entry inhibitorsCurrent Opinion in HIV and AIDS, 2009
- Construction of a Large Naïve Human Phage-Displayed Fab Library Through One-Step CloningPublished by Springer Nature ,2008
- Human domain antibodies to conserved sterically restricted regions on gp120 as exceptionally potent cross-reactive HIV-1 neutralizersProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Construction of a Large Phage-Displayed Human Antibody Domain Library with a Scaffold Based On a Newly Identified Highly Soluble, Stable Heavy Chain Variable DomainJournal of Molecular Biology, 2008
- Extensively cross-reactive anti-HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies induced by gp140 immunizationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Production and Characterization of High-Affinity Human Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins in a Mouse Model Expressing Human ImmunoglobulinsClinical and Vaccine Immunology, 2007
- Analysis of Heavy and Light Chain Pairings Indicates that Receptor Editing Shapes the Human Antibody RepertoireJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999