4.6 Article

Complementary Roles of Antibody Heavy and Light Chain Somatic Hypermutation in Conferring Breadth and Potency to the HIV-1-Specific CAP256-VRC26 bNAb Lineage

期刊

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
卷 96, 期 10, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.00270-22

关键词

neutralizing antibodies

类别

资金

  1. South African Medical Research Council (MRC) SHIP program
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [AI116086]
  3. Centre for the AIDS Program of Research (CAPRISA)
  4. South African HIV/AIDS Research and Innovation Platform of the South African Department of Science and Technology
  5. U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
  6. U.S. National Institutes of Health
  7. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services grant [U19 AI51794]
  8. South African Research Chairs Initiative of the Department of Science and Technology
  9. NRF [98341]
  10. Poliomyelitis Foundation
  11. NRF SARChI chair-linked PhD bursary

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A major focus in the search for an HIV vaccine is understanding the ontogeny of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) that can prevent HIV infection. This study investigated the mutations in the CAP256-VRC26 bNAb lineage that confer neutralization capacity to the unmutated common ancestor (CAP256.UCA). The heavy and light chains of the antibody were found to have complementary roles in neutralization breadth and potency, with the heavy chain responsible for conferring breadth. Mutations in previously uninvestigated regions also contributed to breadth. Vaccine approaches that promote affinity maturation at key sites could more rapidly produce antibodies with neutralization breadth.
A major focus in the search for an HIV vaccine is elucidating the ontogeny of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs), which prevent HIV infection in vitro and in vivo. The unmutated common ancestors (UCAs) of bNAbs are generally strain specific and acquire breadth through extensive, and sometimes redundant, somatic hypermutation during affinity maturation. Some HIV-infected people develop broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) that block many diverse, unrelated strains of HIV from infecting target cells and, through passive immunization, protect animals and humans from infection. Therefore, understanding the development of bNAbs and their neutralization can inform the design of an HIV vaccine. Here, we extend our previous studies of the ontogeny of the CAP256-VRC26 V2-targeting bNAb lineage by defining the mutations that confer neutralization to the unmutated common ancestor (CAP256.UCA). Analysis of the sequence of the CAP256.UCA showed that many improbable mutations were located in the third complementarity-determining region of the heavy chain (CDRH3) and the heavy chain framework 3 (FR3). Transferring the CDRH3 from bNAb CAP256.25 (63% breadth and 0.003 mu g/mL potency) into the CAP256.UCA introduced breadth and the ability to neutralize emerging viral variants. In addition, we showed that the framework and light chain contributed to potency and that the second CDR of the light chain forms part of the paratope of CAP256.25. Notably, a minimally mutated CAP256 antibody, with 41% of the mutations compared to bNAb CAP256.25, was broader (64% breadth) and more potent (0.39 mu g/mL geometric potency) than many unrelated bNAbs. Together, we have identified key regions and mutations that confer breadth and potency in a V2-specific bNAb lineage. These data indicate that immunogens that target affinity maturation to key sites in CAP256-VRC26-like precursors, including the CDRHs and light chain, could rapidly elicit breadth through vaccination. IMPORTANCE A major focus in the search for an HIV vaccine is elucidating the ontogeny of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs), which prevent HIV infection in vitro and in vivo. The unmutated common ancestors (UCAs) of bNAbs are generally strain specific and acquire breadth through extensive, and sometimes redundant, somatic hypermutation during affinity maturation. We investigated which mutations in the CAP256-VRC26 bNAb lineage conferred neutralization capacity to the UCA. We found that mutations in the antibody heavy and light chains had complementary roles in neutralization breadth and potency, respectively. The heavy chain, particularly the third complementarity-determining region, was responsible for conferring breadth. In addition, previously uninvestigated mutations in the framework also contributed to breadth. Together, approximately half of the mutations in CAP256.25 were necessary for broader and more potent neutralization than many unrelated neutralizing antibodies. Vaccine approaches that promote affinity maturation at key sites could therefore more rapidly produce antibodies with neutralization breadth.

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