4.7 Article

HIV Superinfection Drives De Novo Antibody Responses and Not Neutralization Breadth

Journal

CELL HOST & MICROBE
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 593-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2018.09.001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for the AIDS Program of Research (CAPRISA)
  2. South African Medical Research Council (MRC) SHIP program
  3. South African HIV/AIDS Research and Innovation Platform of the South African Department of Science and Technology
  4. US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, US Department of Health and Human Services grant [U19 AI51794]
  5. DST-NRF Center of Excellence in HIV Prevention
  6. DST
  7. NRF [COE141028106922, 98341]
  8. Bill AMP
  9. Melinda Gates Foundation's Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery (CAVD)/Comprehensive Antibody Vaccine Immune Monitoring Consortium [1032144, 1146996]
  10. CFAR pilot grant
  11. CAVD Science Exchange Program
  12. Poliomyelitis Research Foundation
  13. National Research Foundation
  14. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the NIH [R00A1120851]
  15. South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Technology

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Eliciting antibodies that neutralize a broad range of circulating HIV strains (broadly neutralizing antibodies [bnAbs]) represents a key priority for vaccine development. HIV superinfection (re-infection with a second strain following an established infection) has been associated with neutralization breadth, and can provide insights into how the immune system responds to sequential exposure to distinct HIV envelope glycoproteins (Env). Characterizing the neutralizing antibody (nAb) responses in four superinfected women revealed that superinfection does not boost memory nAb responses primed by the first infection or promote nAb responses to epitopes conserved in both infecting viruses. While one superinfected individual developed potent bnAbs, superinfection was likely not the driver as the nAb response did not target an epitope conserved in both viruses. Rather, sequential exposure led to nAbs specific to each Env but did not promote bnAb development. Thus, sequential immunization with heterologous Envs may not be sufficient to focus the immune response onto conserved epitopes.

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