| Literature DB >> 28490585 |
Xiaoying Shen1, Willy M Bogers2, Nicole L Yates3, Guido Ferrari3,4, Antu K Dey5, William T Williams3, Frederick H Jaeger3, Kevin Wiehe3, Sheetal Sawant3, S Munir Alam3, Celia C LaBranche4, David C Montefiori3,4, Loic Martin6, Indresh Srivastava7, Jonathan Heeney8, Susan W Barnett5, Georgia D Tomaras1,9,10,11,4.
Abstract
Evaluation of the epitope specificities, locations (systemic or mucosal), and effector functions of antibodies elicited by novel HIV-1 immunogens engineered to improve exposure of specific epitopes is critical for HIV-1 vaccine development. Utilizing an array of humoral assays, we evaluated the magnitudes, epitope specificities, avidities, and functions of systemic and mucosal immune responses elicited by a vaccine regimen containing Env cross-linked to a CD4-mimetic miniprotein (gp140-M64U1) in rhesus macaques. Cross-linking of gp140 Env to M64U1 resulted in earlier increases of both the magnitude and avidity of the IgG binding response than those with Env protein alone. Notably, IgG binding responses at an early time point correlated with antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) function at the peak immunity time point, which was higher for the cross-linked Env group than for the Env group. In addition, the cross-linked Env group developed higher IgG responses against a linear epitope in the gp120 C1 region of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein. These data demonstrate that structural modification of the HIV-1 envelope immunogen by cross-linking of gp140 with the CD4-mimetic M64U1 elicited an earlier increase of binding antibody responses and altered the specificity of the IgG responses, correlating with the rise of subsequent antibody-mediated antiviral functions.IMPORTANCE The development of an efficacious HIV-1 vaccine remains a global priority to prevent new cases of HIV-1 infection. Of the six HIV-1 efficacy trials to date, only one has demonstrated partial efficacy, and immune correlate analysis of that trial revealed a role for binding antibodies and antibody Fc-mediated effector functions. New HIV-1 envelope immunogens are being engineered to selectively expose the most vulnerable and conserved sites on the HIV-1 envelope, with the goal of eliciting antiviral antibodies. Evaluation of the humoral responses elicited by these novel immunogen designs in nonhuman primates is critical for understanding how to improve upon immunogen design to inform further testing in human clinical trials. Our results demonstrate that structural modifications of Env that aim to mimic the CD4-bound conformation can result in earlier antibody elicitation, altered epitope specificity, and increased antiviral function postimmunization.Entities:
Keywords: CD4 mimetic; antibody; epitope exposure; human immunodeficiency virus; nonhuman primate; structural modification; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28490585 PMCID: PMC5599731 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00401-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103
Immunization groups
| Group | Immunogen | Dose (mg) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | SF162 gp140ΔV2 | 100 |
| 2 | M64U1 | 50 |
| 3 | M64U1-SF162 gp140ΔV2 | 100 |
| 4 | None |
All groups (n = 6 animals/group) received MF59 as an adjuvant, and all vaccine doses were administered intramuscularly at 0, 4, 24, 36, and 107 weeks.
FIG 1Longitudinal antibody binding responses for SF162 gp140ΔV2 (vaccine strain) (A), ConS gp140 (B), MN gp120 (C), and MN gp41 (D). The data shown are MFI binding values within the linear range of the assay for each antigen (1:400 for SF162 gp140ΔV2 and MN gp41 and 1:80 for ConS gp140 and MN gp120). The gp140 group data are shown in blue, and the gp140-M64U1 group data are shown in red. For improved data visualization of data points with similar magnitudes, the x axis was plotted categorically with staggered symbols so that each data point is visible. One animal in the gp140-M64U1 group died before week 107, and serum samples were not available for another 3 animals in the gp140-M64U1 group at week 107, therefore leaving 2 data points for the gp140-M64U1 group for week 107 and 5 data points for this group for week 113. Green arrows below the x axis indicate times of vaccination. FDR_p, Wilcoxon rank sum exact test P value controlled for FDR by the Benjamini-Hochberg method. *, FDR_P < 0.05.
Between-group comparisons with FDR-controlled P values
| Group comparison and protein/time point | Raw | FDR_ |
|---|---|---|
| Serum IgG binding BAMA (MFI), gp140 group vs gp140-M64U1 group | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 6 | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 26 | 0.485 | 0.614 |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | 0.071 | |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 113 | 0.052 | |
| ConS gp140/wk 6 | ||
| ConS gp140/wk 26 | 0.818 | 0.897 |
| ConS gp140/wk 38 | 0.052 | |
| ConS gp140/wk 113 | 0.052 | |
| MN gp120/wk 6 | ||
| MN gp120/wk 26 | 0.818 | 0.897 |
| MN gp120/wk 38 | 0.093 | 0.189 |
| MN gp120/wk 113 | 0.075 | |
| MN gp41/wk 6 | ||
| MN gp41/wk 26 | 0.180 | 0.277 |
| MN gp41/wk 38 | 0.180 | 0.277 |
| MN gp41/wk 113 | 0.126 | 0.231 |
| C1_104.AE/wk 6 | 0.180 | 0.277 |
| C1_104.AE/wk 26 | ||
| C1_104.AE/wk 38 | 0.052 | |
| C1_104.AE/wk 113 | 0.082 | 0.180 |
| Serum IgG avidity SPR (off-rate [ | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 6 | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 26 | 0.699 | 0.813 |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | 0.098 | |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 113 | 0.052 | |
| Serum IgG ADCC | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 26 | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 113 | 0.126 | 0.231 |
| Serum neutralization | ||
| SHIV-SF162P4/wk 38 | 0.071 | |
| SHIV-SF162P4/wk 42 | 0.506 | 0.628 |
| SHIV-SF162P4/wk 113 | 0.126 | 0.231 |
| Serum linear epitope mapping (signal intensity), gp140 group vs gp140-M64U1 group | ||
| C1.1/wk 26 | 0.073 | |
| C1.2/wk 26 | ||
| C2/wk 26 | 0.318 | 0.422 |
| V3/wk 26 | 0.937 | 0.948 |
| C4/wk 26 | 0.387 | 0.502 |
| V5-C5/wk 26 | 0.242 | 0.343 |
| C5.1/wk 26 | 0.180 | 0.277 |
| C5.2/wk 26 | 0.937 | 0.948 |
| gp41-ID/wk 26 | 0.240 | 0.343 |
| gp160 total/wk 26 | 0.093 | 0.189 |
| CD4bs panel BAMA (WT/mutant ratio), gp140 group vs gp140-M64U1 group | ||
| RSC3 WT:Δ371/wk 26 | 0.536 | 0.650 |
| YU gp120 core WT:D368R/wk 26 | 0.099 | |
| Serum IgA binding BAMA (MFI), gp140 group vs gp140-M64U1 group | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 6 | 0.180 | 0.277 |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 26 | 0.937 | 0.948 |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | 0.310 | 0.420 |
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 113 | 0.247 | 0.343 |
| Nasal IgG binding BAMA (sp act), gp140 group vs gp140-M64U1 group | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | 0.132 | 0.235 |
| Nasal IgG binding BAMA (sp act), gp140 group vs mock control group | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | ||
| Nasal IgG binding BAMA (sp act), gp140-M64U1 group vs M64U1 control group | ||
| SF162 gp140ΔV2/wk 38 | 0.052 |
Raw P value, Wilcoxon rank sum exact test P value, not corrected for multiple comparisons; FDR_P value, Wilcoxon rank sum exact test P value controlled for FDR, calculated according to the Benjamini-Hochberg method (68). FDR was performed across Wilcoxon rank sum tests for Table 2 and across Spearman correlation tests for Table 3 (57 tests in total). Values in bold are P values of <0.05. *, significant difference between groups (FDR_P < 0.05).
Quantification of neutralization and ADCC responses is reported by Bogers et al. (69).
Spearman correlation test with FDR control for correlations between antibody functions (ADCC or neutralization) and binding antibody responses (avidity or IgG binding) and between nasal and serum IgG responses
| Parameter 1 | Parameter 2 | Raw | FDR_ | Spearman |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| wk 26 ADCC (linear titer) | wk 6 off-rate ( | −0.73 | ||
| wk 26 off-rate ( | 0.95 | 0.948 | −0.021 | |
| wk 6 IgG binding (BAMA MFI) | 0.9 | |||
| wk 26 IgG binding (BAMA MFI) | 0.91 | 0.948 | 0.035 | |
| wk 38 neutralization (ID50 titer) | wk 6 off-rate ( | 0.87 | ||
| wk 38 off-rate ( | 0.75 | 0.850 | −0.1 | |
| wk 6 IgG binding (BAMA MFI) | 0.2 | 0.298 | −0.4 | |
| wk 38 IgG binding (BAMA MFI) | 0.97 | |||
| Nasal IgG (SA) | Serum IgG binding (MFI) | 0.56 | 0.661 | 0.19 |
Raw P value, Spearman rank correlation test P value, not corrected for multiple comparisons; FDR_P value, Spearman rank correlation test P value controlled for the FDR, calculated according to the Benjamini-Hochberg method (68). FDR was performed across Wilcoxon rank sum tests for Table 2 and across Spearman correlation tests for Table 3 (57 tests in total). Values in bold are P values of <0.05. *, significant correlation after controlling for FDR (FDR_P < 0.05).
FIG 2Linear epitope specificity of serum IgG by epitope mapping (A to E) and BAMA (F). Week 26 mean binding intensity values for serum IgG for the gp140-only (B and D) and gp140-M64U1 (C and E) groups are shown for overlapping peptides of 7 consensus gp120 (B and C) and gp41 (D and E) sequences. Different colors represent different clades/circular recombinant forms (CRFs). Epitope regions identified in the study are indicated by text over a horizontal bar in plots. (A) Magnitude of binding to each epitope, calculated as the highest level of binding to a single peptide within each epitope region. The percentages listed for each epitope are the response rates to the epitope by the animals of the 2 groups (gp140 versus gp140-M64U1). The peptide ranges for the epitopes are as follows: C1.1, residues 16 to 21; C1.2, residues 32 to 39; C2, residues 65 to 68; V3, residues 97 to 104; C4, residues 133 to 139; V5-C5, residues 147 to 151; C5.1, residues 152 to 159; C5.2, residues 161 to 163; and gp41-ID, residues 187 to 194. The sequences of all peptides have been published previously (65). (F) Longitudinal binding to the C1_104.AE peptide (corresponds to the C1.2 epitope in epitope mapping) was measured by BAMA. Green arrows indicate times of immunization. (G) Structural modeling of the conformational change of the C1 epitope upon CD4 binding. The C1_104 epitope bends ∼90° from the unliganded gp120 conformation (gp120 monomer from SOSIP Env trimer; PDB entry 4TVP) (beige) to the CD4-liganded gp120 conformation (PDB entry 4RQS) (light blue). Binding of CD4 (PDB entry 4QRS; green) results in a >30-Å displacement of the C-terminal residue (stick representation) between the C1_104 epitope in the unliganded gp120 protein (red) and the CD4-bound C1_104 epitope (magenta).
FIG 3CD4bs and CD4i specificities (A) and off-rate measurements for SF162 gp140ΔV2 (B), MN gp120, (C), MN gp41 (D), and ConS gp140 (E) for the 2 vaccine groups, with group mean off-rates and avidity score values as measured by SPR (F). The cutoff for the CD4bs and CD4i differential binding assay was 2.5-fold. For the CD4bs/CD4i differential binding assay, b12 (CD4bs monoclonal antibody [MAb]) was used as a positive control for YU gp120 core WT/D368R differential binding and RSC3 WT/Δ371 differential binding (48), and 17b (CD4i MAb) was used as a positive control for HXB2 8b core WT/I420R differential binding (28, 48). Serum samples were tested at 1:400. Control MAbs b12 and 17b were tested at 25 and 50 μg/ml, respectively. All baseline serum samples were negative for binding to both the WT and mutant proteins in this test panel. Green arrows indicate times of immunization. FDR_p, Wilcoxon rank sum exact test P value controlled for FDR by the Benjamini-Hochberg method. *, FDR_P < 0.05. Between-group comparison test results are shown in Table 2.
FIG 4Correlation of neutralization (A and B) and ADCC (C and D) activities with serum IgG binding magnitude (A and C) and serum IgG avidity (B and D). Spearman correlation analysis was performed using SAS, and P values were corrected for FDR across all between-group comparison tests (Table 2) and this correlation test (Table 3). **, FDR_P < 0.01; *, FDR_P < 0.05. ID50 titer, 50% inhibitory dose titer.
FIG 5Longitudinal binding of serum IgA to SF162 gp140ΔV2 (A), week 38 nasal IgG binding to SF162 gp140ΔV2 (B), and correlation between levels of serum and nasal IgG binding to SF162 gp140ΔV2 at week 38 (C). MFI binding values shown for IgA binding are for a 1:80 serum dilution. Binding specificities for nasal samples were normalized to the total IgG concentration in each sample. Green arrows indicate times of immunization. *, FDR_P < 0.05.