The Neutralization Breadth of HIV-1 Develops Incrementally over Four Years and Is Associated with CD4+ T Cell Decline and High Viral Load during Acute Infection.
Date
2011
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology.
Abstract
An understanding of how broadly neutralizing activity develops in HIV-1-infected individuals is needed to
guide vaccine design and immunization strategies. Here we used a large panel of 44 HIV-1 envelope variants
(subtypes A, B, and C) to evaluate the presence of broadly neutralizing antibodies in serum samples obtained
3 years after seroconversion from 40 women enrolled in the CAPRISA 002 acute infection cohort. Seven of 40
participants had serum antibodies that neutralized more than 40% of viruses tested and were considered to
have neutralization breadth. Among the samples with breadth, CAP257 serum neutralized 82% (36/44 variants)
of the panel, while CAP256 serum neutralized 77% (33/43 variants) of the panel. Analysis of longitudinal
samples showed that breadth developed gradually starting from year 2, with the number of viruses neutralized
as well as the antibody titer increasing over time. Interestingly, neutralization breadth peaked at 4 years
postinfection, with no increase thereafter. The extent of cross-neutralizing activity correlated with CD4+T cell
decline, viral load, and CD4+T cell count at 6 months postinfection but not at later time points, suggesting
that early events set the stage for the development of breadth. However, in a multivariate analysis, CD4 decline
was the major driver of this association, as viral load was not an independent predictor of breadth. Mapping
of the epitopes targeted by cross-neutralizing antibodies revealed that in one individual these antibodies
recognized the membrane-proximal external region (MPER), while in two other individuals, cross-neutralizing
activity was adsorbed by monomeric gp120 and targeted epitopes that involved the N-linked glycan at position
332 in the C3 region. Serum antibodies from the other four participants targeted quaternary epitopes, at least
2 of which were PG9/16-like and depended on the N160 and/or L165 residue in the V2 region. These data
indicate that fewer than 20% of HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals develop antibodies with cross-neutralizing
activity after 3 years of infection and that these antibodies target different regions of the HIV-1 envelope,
including as yet uncharacterized epitopes.
Description
Keywords
Vaccines., Drug development., HIV infections--Immunology.
Citation
Gray, E.S., et al. 2011. The neutralization breadth of HIV-1 develops incrementally over four years and is associated with CD4+ T cell decline and high viral load during acute infection. J. Virol. 85 (10), 4828-4840.