Antigenic conservation and immunogenicity of the HIV coreceptor binding site

Julie M. Decker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Frédéric Bibollet‐Ruche(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiping Wei(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Shuyi Wang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), David N. Levy(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Wenquan Wang(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Éric Delaporte(Université de Montpellier), Martine Peeters(Université de Montpellier), Cynthia A. Derdeyn(Emory University), Susan Allen(Emory University), Eric Hunter(Emory University), Michael S. Saag(University of Alabama at Birmingham), James A. Hoxie(University of Pennsylvania), Beatrice H. Hahn(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Peter D. Kwong(National Institutes of Health), James E. Robinson(Tulane University), George M. Shaw(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
May 2, 2005
Cited by 307Open Access
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Abstract

Immunogenic, broadly reactive epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein could serve as important targets of the adaptive humoral immune response in natural infection and, potentially, as components of an acquired immune deficiency syndrome vaccine. However, variability in exposed epitopes and a combination of highly effective envelope-cloaking strategies have made the identification of such epitopes problematic. Here, we show that the chemokine coreceptor binding site of HIV-1 from clade A, B, C, D, F, G, and H and circulating recombinant form (CRF)01, CRF02, and CRF11, elicits high titers of CD4-induced (CD4i) antibody during natural human infection and that these antibodies bind and neutralize viruses as divergent as HIV-2 in the presence of soluble CD4 (sCD4). 178 out of 189 (94%) HIV-1-infected patients had CD4i antibodies that neutralized sCD4-pretreated HIV-2 in titers (50% inhibitory concentration) as high as 1:143,000. CD4i monoclonal antibodies elicited by HIV-1 infection also neutralized HIV-2 pretreated with sCD4, and polyclonal antibodies from HIV-1-infected humans competed specifically with such monoclonal antibodies for binding. In vivo, variants of HIV-1 with spontaneously exposed coreceptor binding surfaces were detected in human plasma; these viruses were neutralized directly by CD4i antibodies. Despite remarkable evolutionary diversity among primate lentiviruses, functional constraints on receptor binding create opportunities for broad humoral immune recognition, which in turn serves to constrain the viral quasispecies.


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