4.8 Article

Mutational fitness landscapes reveal genetic and structural improvement pathways for a vaccine-elicited HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibody

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2011653118

Keywords

broadly neutralizing antibodies; HIV-1 vaccines; fusion peptide; somatic hypermutation; yeast display

Funding

  1. University of Kansas Departments of Pharmaceutical Chemistry and Chemical Engineering
  2. NIH [1DP5OD023118, R21AI143407, R01AI141452, P20GM103638, P20GM113117]
  3. Intramural Research Program of the Vaccine Research Center, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH
  4. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the National Cancer Institute [HHSN261200800001E]

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Vaccine-induced mutations in the anti-FP antibody vFP16.02 can improve affinity towards both soluble FP and HIV-1 Env, with rare somatic hypermutations explaining the observed improvements. Changes in heavy- and light-chain interface angles, conformational dynamics, and reduced Fab thermal stability are associated with enhanced neutralization breadth and potency. Structural mechanisms are identified for improved viral neutralization through parallel sets of mutations.
Vaccine-based elicitation of broadly neutralizing antibodies holds great promise for preventing HIV-1 transmission. However, the key biophysical markers of improved antibody recognition remain uncertain in the diverse landscape of potential antibody mutation pathways, and a more complete understanding of anti-HIV-1 fusion peptide (FP) antibody development will accelerate rational vaccine designs. Here we survey the mutational landscape of the vaccine-elicited anti-FP antibody, vFP16.02, to determine the genetic, structural, and functional features associated with antibody improvement or fitness. Using site-saturation mutagenesis and yeast display functional screening, we found that 1% of possible single mutations improved HIV-1 envelope trimer (Env) affinity, but generally comprised rare somatic hypermutations that may not arise frequently in vivo. We observed that many single mutations in the vFP16.02 Fab could enhance affinity >1,000-fold against soluble FP, although affinity improvements against the HIV-1 trimer were more measured and rare. The most potent variants enhanced affinity to both soluble FP and Env, had mutations concentrated in antibody framework regions, and achieved up to 37% neutralization breadth compared to 28% neutralization of the template antibody. Altered heavy- and light-chain interface angles and conformational dynamics, as well as reduced Fab thermal stability, were associated with improved HIV-1 neutralization breadth and potency. We also observed parallel sets of mutations that enhanced viral neutralization through similar structural mechanisms. These data provide a quantitative understanding of the mutational landscape for vaccine-elicited FP-directed broadly neutralizing antibody and demonstrate that numerous antigen-distal framework mutations can improve antibody function by enhancing affinity simultaneously toward HIV-1 Env and FP.

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