The Structural Basis for Serotype-Specific Neutralization of Dengue Virus by a Human Antibody

Ee Ping Teoh(National University of Singapore), Petra Kukkaro(National University of Singapore), En Wei Teo(National University of Singapore), Angeline Lim(Duke-NUS Medical School), Tze Tong Terence Tan(National University of Singapore), Andy M. Yip(Novartis (Singapore)), Wouter Schul(Novartis (Singapore)), Myint Thazin Aung(National University of Singapore), V.A. Kostyuchenko(National University of Singapore), Yee Sin Leo(Tan Tock Seng Hospital), Soh Ha Chan(National University of Singapore), Kenneth G. C. Smith(Cambridge School), Annie Hoi Yi Chan(Ministry of Defence), Gang Zou(Novartis (Singapore)), Eng Eong Ooi(Duke-NUS Medical School), D.M. Kemeny(National University of Singapore), G.K. Tan(National University of Singapore), Jowin K. W. Ng(National University of Singapore), Mah Lee Ng(National University of Singapore), Sylvie Alonso(National University of Singapore), Dale Fisher(National University Hospital), Pei‐Yong Shi(Novartis (Singapore)), Brendon J. Hanson(Ministry of Defence), Shee‐Mei Lok(National University of Singapore), Paul A. MacAry(National University of Singapore)
Science Translational Medicine
June 20, 2012
Cited by 213

Abstract

Dengue virus (DENV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that affects 2.5 billion people worldwide. There are four dengue serotypes (DENV1 to DENV4), and infection with one elicits lifelong immunity to that serotype but offers only transient protection against the other serotypes. Identification of the protective determinants of the human antibody response to DENV is a vital requirement for the design and evaluation of future preventative therapies and treatments. Here, we describe the isolation of a neutralizing antibody from a DENV1-infected patient. The human antibody 14c10 (HM14c10) binds specifically to DENV1. HM14c10 neutralizes the virus principally by blocking virus attachment; at higher concentrations, a post-attachment step can also be inhibited. In vivo studies show that the HM14c10 antibody has antiviral activity at picomolar concentrations. A 7 Å resolution cryoelectron microscopy map of Fab fragments of HM14c10 in a complex with DENV1 shows targeting of a discontinuous epitope that spans the adjacent surface of envelope protein dimers. As found previously, a human antibody specific for the related West Nile virus binds to a similar quaternary structure, suggesting that this could be an immunodominant epitope. These findings provide a structural and molecular context for durable, serotype-specific immunity to DENV infection.


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