Payal P Pratap, Christopher A Cottrell, James Quinn, Diane G Carnathan, Daniel L V Bader, Andy S Tran, Chiamaka A Enemuo, Julia T Ngo, Sara T Richey, Hongmei Gao, Xiaoying Shen, Kelli M Greene, Jonathan Hurtado, Katarzyna Kaczmarek Michaels, Elana Ben-Akiva, Ashley Lemnios, Mariane B Melo, Joel D Allen, Gabriel Ozorowski, Max Crispin, Bryan Briney, David Montefiori, Guido Silvestri, Darrell J Irvine, Shane Crotty, Andrew B Ward
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
During infection, the fusion peptide (FP) of HIV envelope glycoprotein (Env) serves a central role in viral fusion with the host cell. As such, the FP is highly conserved and therefore an attractive epitope for vaccine design. Here, we describe a vaccination study in non-human primates (NHPs) where glycan deletions were made on soluble HIV Env to increase FP epitope exposure. When delivered via implantable osmotic pumps, this immunogen primed immune responses against the FP, which were then boosted with heterologous trimers resulting in a focused immune response targeting the conserved FP epitope. Although autologous immunizations did not elicit high affinity FP-targeting antibodies, the conserved FP epitope on a heterologous trimer further matured the lower affinity, FP-targeting B cells. This study suggests using epitope conservation strategies on distinct Env trimer immunogens can focus humoral responses on desired neutralizing epitopes and suppress immune-distracting antibody responses against non-neutralizing epitopes.
NPJ VaccinesImmunology and Microbiology-Immunology
CiteScore
11.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
146
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍:
Online-only and open access, npj Vaccines is dedicated to highlighting the most important scientific advances in vaccine research and development.