| Literature DB >> 23077306 |
Joshua M Costin1, Elena Zaitseva, Kristen M Kahle, Cindo O Nicholson, Dawne K Rowe, Amanda S Graham, Lindsey E Bazzone, Greg Hogancamp, Marielys Figueroa Sierra, Rachel H Fong, Sung-Tae Yang, Li Lin, James E Robinson, Benjamin J Doranz, Leonid V Chernomordik, Scott F Michael, John S Schieffelin, Sharon Isern.
Abstract
There are no available vaccines for dengue, the most important mosquito-transmitted viral disease. Mechanistic studies with anti-dengue virus (DENV) human monoclonal antibodies (hMAbs) provide a rational approach to identify and characterize neutralizing epitopes on DENV structural proteins that can serve to inform vaccine strategies. Here, we report a class of hMAbs that is likely to be an important determinant in the human humoral response to DENV infection. In this study, we identified and characterized three broadly neutralizing anti-DENV hMAbs: 4.8A, D11C, and 1.6D. These antibodies were isolated from three different convalescent patients with distinct histories of DENV infection yet demonstrated remarkable similarities. All three hMAbs recognized the E glycoprotein with high affinity, neutralized all four serotypes of DENV, and mediated antibody-dependent enhancement of infection in Fc receptor-bearing cells at subneutralizing concentrations. The neutralization activities of these hMAbs correlated with a strong inhibition of virus-liposome and intracellular fusion, not virus-cell binding. We mapped epitopes of these antibodies to the highly conserved fusion loop region of E domain II. Mutations at fusion loop residues W101, L107, and/or G109 significantly reduced the binding of the hMAbs to E protein. The results show that hMAbs directed against the highly conserved E protein fusion loop block viral entry downstream of virus-cell binding by inhibiting E protein-mediated fusion. Characterization of hMAbs targeting this region may provide new insights into DENV vaccine and therapeutic strategies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23077306 PMCID: PMC3536401 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02273-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103