| Literature DB >> 28445724 |
Tongqing Zhou1, Nicole A Doria-Rose1, Cheng Cheng1, Guillaume B E Stewart-Jones1, Gwo-Yu Chuang1, Michael Chambers1, Aliaksandr Druz1, Hui Geng1, Krisha McKee1, Young Do Kwon1, Sijy O'Dell1, Mallika Sastry1, Stephen D Schmidt1, Kai Xu1, Lei Chen1, Rita E Chen1, Mark K Louder1, Marie Pancera1, Timothy G Wanninger1, Baoshan Zhang1, Anqi Zheng1, S Katie Farney1, Kathryn E Foulds1, Ivelin S Georgiev1, M Gordon Joyce1, Thomas Lemmin1, Sandeep Narpala1, Reda Rawi1, Cinque Soto1, John-Paul Todd1, Chen-Hsiang Shen1, Yaroslav Tsybovsky2, Yongping Yang1, Peng Zhao3, Barton F Haynes4, Leonidas Stamatatos5, Michael Tiemeyer3, Lance Wells6, Diana G Scorpio1, Lawrence Shapiro7, Adrian B McDermott1, John R Mascola8, Peter D Kwong9.
Abstract
While the HIV-1-glycan shield is known to shelter Env from the humoral immune response, its quantitative impact on antibody elicitation has been unclear. Here, we use targeted deglycosylation to measure the impact of the glycan shield on elicitation of antibodies against the CD4 supersite. We engineered diverse Env trimers with select glycans removed proximal to the CD4 supersite, characterized their structures and glycosylation, and immunized guinea pigs and rhesus macaques. Immunizations yielded little neutralization against wild-type viruses but potent CD4-supersite neutralization (titers 1: >1,000,000 against four-glycan-deleted autologous viruses with over 90% breadth against four-glycan-deleted heterologous strains exhibiting tier 2 neutralization character). To a first approximation, the immunogenicity of the glycan-shielded protein surface was negligible, with Env-elicited neutralization (ID50) proportional to the exponential of the protein-surface area accessible to antibody. Based on these high titers and exponential relationship, we propose site-selective deglycosylated trimers as priming immunogens to increase the frequency of site-targeting antibodies. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: CD4-binding site; HIV-1; crystal structure; envelope glycoprotein; glycan shield; glycomics; immunogen design; immunogenicity; targeted deglycosylation; vaccine design
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28445724 PMCID: PMC5538809 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.04.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423