Vaccine-induced plasma IgA specific for the C1 region of the HIV-1 envelope blocks binding and effector function of IgG

Georgia D. Tomaras(International Vaccine Institute), Guido Ferrari(International Vaccine Institute), Xiaoying Shen(International Vaccine Institute), S. Munir Alam(International Vaccine Institute), Hua-Xin Liao(International Vaccine Institute), Justin Pollara(International Vaccine Institute), Mattia Bonsignori(International Vaccine Institute), M. Anthony Moody(International Vaccine Institute), Youyi Fong(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Xi Chen(International Vaccine Institute), Brigid Poling Poling, Cindo O. Nicholson, Ruijun Zhang(International Vaccine Institute), Xiaozhi Lu(International Vaccine Institute), Robert Parks(International Vaccine Institute), Jaranit Kaewkungwal(Mahidol University), Sorachai Nitayaphan(Armed Forces Research Institute of Medical Science), Punnee Pitisuttithum(Mahidol University), Supachai Rerks‐Ngarm(Ministry of Public Health), Peter B. Gilbert(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Jérôme H. Kim, Nelson L. Michael, David C. Montefiori(International Vaccine Institute), Barton F. Haynes(International Vaccine Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 9, 2013
Cited by 390Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Analysis of correlates of risk of infection in the RV144 HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trial demonstrated that plasma IgG against the HIV-1 envelope (Env) variable region 1 and 2 inversely correlated with risk, whereas HIV-1 Env-specific plasma IgA responses directly correlated with risk. In the secondary analysis, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) was another inverse correlate of risk, but only in the presence of low plasma IgA Env-specific antibodies. Thus, we investigated the hypothesis that IgA could attenuate the protective effect of IgG responses through competition for the same Env binding sites. We report that Env-specific plasma IgA/IgG ratios are higher in infected than in uninfected vaccine recipients in RV144. Moreover, Env-specific IgA antibodies from RV144 vaccinees blocked the binding of ADCC-mediating mAb to HIV-1 Env glycoprotein 120 (gp120). An Env-specific monomeric IgA mAb isolated from an RV144 vaccinee also inhibited the ability of natural killer cells to kill HIV-1-infected CD4(+) T cells coated with RV144-induced IgG antibodies. We show that monomeric Env-specific IgA, as part of postvaccination polyclonal antibody response, may modulate vaccine-induced immunity by diminishing ADCC effector function.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis