Virus-like Particles Identify an HIV V1V2 Apex-Binding Neutralizing Antibody that Lacks a Protruding Loop

病毒样颗粒识别缺乏突出环的 HIV V1V2 顶端结合中和抗体

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作者:Evan M Cale, Jason Gorman, Nathan A Radakovich, Ema T Crooks, Keiko Osawa, Tommy Tong, Jiaqi Li, Raju Nagarajan, Gabriel Ozorowski, David R Ambrozak, Mangai Asokan, Robert T Bailer, Anthony K Bennici, Xuejun Chen, Nicole A Doria-Rose, Aliaksandr Druz, Yu Feng, M Gordon Joyce, Mark K Louder, Sijy O'D

Abstract

Most HIV-1-specific neutralizing antibodies isolated to date exhibit unusual characteristics that complicate their elicitation. Neutralizing antibodies that target the V1V2 apex of the HIV-1 envelope (Env) trimer feature unusually long protruding loops, which enable them to penetrate the HIV-1 glycan shield. As antibodies with loops of requisite length are created through uncommon recombination events, an alternative mode of apex binding has been sought. Here, we isolated a lineage of Env apex-directed neutralizing antibodies, N90-VRC38.01-11, by using virus-like particles and conformationally stabilized Env trimers as B cell probes. A crystal structure of N90-VRC38.01 with a scaffolded V1V2 revealed a binding mode involving side-chain-to-side-chain interactions that reduced the distance the antibody loop must traverse the glycan shield, thereby facilitating V1V2 binding via a non-protruding loop. The N90-VRC38 lineage thus identifies a solution for V1V2-apex binding that provides a more conventional B cell pathway for vaccine design.

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