| Literature DB >> 23840243 |
Andrew Hiatt1, Larry Zeitlin, Kevin J Whaley.
Abstract
Vaccination strategies depend entirely on the appropriate responsiveness of our immune system against particular antigens. For this active immunization to be truly effective, neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) need to efficiently counter the infectivity or propagation of the pathogen. Some viruses, including HIV, are able to take advantage of this immune response in order to evade nAbs. This review focuses on viral immune evasion strategies that result directly from a robust immune response to infection or vaccination. A rationale for multi-Ab therapy to circumvent this phenomenon is discussed. Progress in the formulation, production, and regulatory approval of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is presented.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23840243 PMCID: PMC3690221 DOI: 10.1155/2013/632893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (bnMAbs) against HIV.
| Epitope | bnMAb | Discovery method | Median or range of IC50 values ( | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPER1 | 2F5 | EBV tfm2 | 3.8–7.8 [ | [ |
| 4E10 | EBV tfm2 | 3.4 [ | [ | |
| 10E8, 7H6 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.3–1.5 [ | [ | |
| Z13e1 | Phage display | — | [ | |
|
| ||||
| V1V23 | PG9 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.1–9.4 [ | [ |
| PG16 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.1–7.6 [ | [ | |
| CH01–04 | EBV tfm2 | 0.02–4.9 (CH04) [ | [ | |
| PGT141–145 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.2–2.1 [ | [ | |
|
| ||||
| V34 | 2G12 | EBV tfm2 | 2.4 [a] | [ |
| PGT121–123 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.03–0.05 [ | [ | |
| PGT125–131 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.02–0.5 [ | [ | |
| PGT135–137 | Neutralization assays6 | 0.2–7.8 [ | [ | |
| HGN194 | B cell immort10 | 0.1–3.7 [ | [ | |
|
| ||||
| CD4 bs5 | b12 | Phage display | 2.8 [ | [ |
| HJ16 | B cell immort10 | 0.01–9.8 [ | [ | |
| VRC01–03 | RSC37 | 0.3 (VRC01 [ | [ | |
| NIH45-46 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.06–1.9 [ | [ | |
| 3BNC55, 60, 62, 117 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.01–1.4 (BNC117 [ | [ | |
| 12A12, 21, 30 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.08–2.6 (12A12 [ | [ | |
| VRC-PGV04, 4b | RSC37, pyrosequencing9 | 0.2 (PGV04 [ | [ | |
| 8ANC37, 131, 134 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.06–6.3 (131 [ | [ | |
| 1B2530 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.06–9.8 [ | [ | |
| 1NC3, 7, 9 | gp120, 140 probes8 | 0.02–1.2 (INC9[ | [ | |
1Membrane-proximal external region of gp41.
2EBV transformation of B cells.
3V1V2 site on gp120.
4Glycan V3 site on gp120.
5CD4 binding site on GP120.
6Neutralization assays of B cells from infected donors.
7Resurfaced stabilized core 3 probe.
8Somatic mutation primers, gp120 and gp140 probes.
9454 pyrosequencing to characterize additional VRC01-like antibodies from HIV-1—infected individuals.
10Efficient B cell immortalization and high throughput screening.
Transient plant technology: the advantage of RAMP*.
| Expression system | Time to mg of mAb | Time to g of mAb |
|---|---|---|
| Mammalian cell culture | 2–6 months | 3–12 months |
| Transgenic animals | >12 months | >12 months |
| Transgenic plants | 12 months | >24 months |
| RAMP | 14 days | 14–20 days |
*adapted from Hiatt and Pauly, 2006 [124].