| Literature DB >> 24295501 |
Miguel Lacerda, Penny L Moore, Nobubelo K Ngandu, Michael Seaman, Elin S Gray, Ben Murrell, Mohan Krishnamoorthy, Molati Nonyane, Maphuti Madiga, Constantinos Kurt Wibmer, Daniel Sheward, Robert T Bailer, Hongmei Gao, Kelli M Greene, Salim S Abdool Karim, John R Mascola, Bette T M Korber, David C Montefiori, Lynn Morris, Carolyn Williamson, Cathal Seoighe1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Identification of the epitopes targeted by antibodies that can neutralize diverse HIV-1 strains can provide important clues for the design of a preventative vaccine.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24295501 PMCID: PMC4220805 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-10-347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1IDtiters for each serum sample. (A) Heat map of ID50 titers clustered by the viral phylogeny. The percentages below the heat map indicate the percentage of panel viruses that were neutralized (ID50 > 20) by the antibodies in each serum. (B) Histograms of the natural logarithm of ID50 titer. The distribution for CAP256 was notably different from that of the other sera.
Figure 2Scaled Bayes factors for CAP256. Neutralization titers were strongly associated with sites 166 and 169 when the ConC reference sequence was used. These sites have previously been shown to contribute significantly to the epitope targeted by CAP256 antibodies [12]. Shaded regions indicate the degree of evidence for an association with ID50: white indicates no or negligible evidence, light grey indicates moderate evidence and dark grey indicates strong evidence [55]. Sites that were strongly associated with ID50 are annotated with their HXB2 position and the amino acid found to be enriched among sensitive (high titer) viruses at that site.
All sites with scaled Bayes factors ≥ 6
| CAP256 | 166† | Arg | 25.4 (0.0001) | CAP45 | 261.3* |
| | | | | ConC | 22.2* |
| | 169† | Lys | 10.7 (0.083) | CAP45 | 365.8* |
| | | | | ConC | 15.3* |
| CAP8 | 24 | Met | 6.4 (1.000) | | NT |
| | 295 | Asn | 11.9 (1.000) | TRO | 0.4 |
| | 316† | Thr | 9.1 (1.000) | ConC | 1.8 |
| | 535 | Ile | 6.0 (1.000) | | NT |
| CAP257 | 166 | Arg | 6.3 (0.738) | ConC | 1.8 |
| | 295 | Asn | 7.0 (0.665) | Q842 | 0.1 |
| | 648 | Glu | 6.1 (0.757) | Du156 | 1.2 |
| | | | | RHPA | 2.9* |
| | 702 | Leu | 6.2 (0.747) | | NT |
| CAP255 | 332 | Asn | 8.0 (0.622) | Q23 | 4.0* |
| | | | | TRO | 2.9* |
| | | | | ConC | 0.2 |
| | 334 | Ser | 6.8 (0.750) | TRO | >12.4* |
| | | | | ConC | 0.3 |
| | 351 | Glu | 6.8 (0.750) | | NT |
| | 837 | Phe | 10.1 (0.366) | | NT |
| CAP177 | 209 | Thr | 8.8 (0.388) | TRO | 0.4 |
| | 332† | Asn | 7.3 (0.573) | ConC | 1.7 |
| | | | | Q23 | 11.0* |
| | | | | TRO | >2.8* |
| | 334† | Ser | 7.8 (0.511) | ConC | 2.1* |
| | | | | TRO | 0.2 |
| | 683 | Lys | 6.3 (0.689) | | NT |
| CAP206 | 150 | Met | 6.7 (0.457) | | NT |
| | 655 | Lys | 7.3 (0.384) | | NT |
| CAP248 | 85 | Val | 6.5 (1.000) | | NT |
| | 340 | Glu | 6.0 (1.000) | ConC | 2.2* |
| | | | | CAP45 | 0.6 |
| | 651 | Asn | 7.4 (1.000) | ConC | 2.0* |
| | | | | CAP45 | 1.3 |
| | | | | Du156 | 2.4* |
| | 659 | Asp | 8.9 (1.000) | ConC | 2.9* |
| CAP45 | 0.5 |
†Sites with q ≤ 1/3 based on the method of Gnanakaran et al. [15]. ‡Amino acid found to be significantly enriched among sensitive (high titer) viruses based on our evolutionary model. *Fold effect ≥ 2. NT = Not tested.
Figure 3Scaled Bayes factors for CAP255. There was strong evidence of an association with ID50 titer at sites 332, 334 and 351 when the ConC reference sequence was used. The predictions at sites 332 and 334 were tested and validated experimentally (see Table 1). There were several sites surrounding these three positions in the C3 region that were moderately associated with neutralization sensitivity. The background shading is described in the legend of Figure 2.
Figure 4Three-dimensional predictions for CAP255. (A) Amino acid residues that were weakly (2 ≤ B < 4), moderately (4 ≤ B < 6) and strongly (B ≥ 6) associated with ID50 titer using the ConC reference sequence are shown with light, intermediate and dark green, respectively. There is evidence for a cluster of sites with moderately large Bayes factors on the three-dimensional surface, as might be expected of a B cell epitope. (B) Posterior probabilities of a conformational epitope using the three-dimensional Metropolis algorithm. The surface of the protein (PDB ID: 2B4C) was shaded from dark blue (posterior probability = 0) to red (posterior probability = 1) according to the posterior probability assigned to each amino acid residue. There was evidence for a conformational epitope involving the C3 region (residues in the light blue region have posterior probabilities of approximately 0.2).
Figure 5Bayesian evolutionary-network model for CAP255 [[38]]. The red node corresponds to ID50 titer and all other nodes represent sites in the HIV-1 envelope. Nodes with scaled Bayes factors > 6 are shaded in dark green, while nodes with scaled Bayes factors between 2 and 6 are shaded in light green. An edge connecting two nodes indicates that there is a direct association between the two nodes. Edges are labeled with the estimated posterior probability of an interaction between the nodes they connect. Only sites with scaled Bayes factors > 4 or posterior probabilities of an association with such a site > 0.75 are shown. Since all of the sites with Bayes factors > 4 are directly connected to the ID50 node, none of the predicted associations could be attributed to compensatory mutations.