| Literature DB >> 31080066 |
Kimberly M Cirelli1, Diane G Carnathan2, Bartek Nogal3, Jacob T Martin4, Oscar L Rodriguez5, Amit A Upadhyay6, Chiamaka A Enemuo7, Etse H Gebru7, Yury Choe7, Federico Viviano7, Catherine Nakao8, Matthias G Pauthner9, Samantha Reiss1, Christopher A Cottrell3, Melissa L Smith5, Raiza Bastidas9, William Gibson10, Amber N Wolabaugh6, Mariane B Melo4, Benjamin Cossette11, Venkatesh Kumar12, Nirav B Patel13, Talar Tokatlian4, Sergey Menis9, Daniel W Kulp14, Dennis R Burton15, Ben Murrell16, William R Schief15, Steven E Bosinger17, Andrew B Ward3, Corey T Watson10, Guido Silvestri2, Darrell J Irvine18, Shane Crotty19.
Abstract
Conventional immunization strategies will likely be insufficient for the development of a broadly neutralizing antibody (bnAb) vaccine for HIV or other difficult pathogens because of the immunological hurdles posed, including B cell immunodominance and germinal center (GC) quantity and quality. We found that two independent methods of slow delivery immunization of rhesus monkeys (RMs) resulted in more robust T follicular helper (TFH) cell responses and GC B cells with improved Env-binding, tracked by longitudinal fine needle aspirates. Improved GCs correlated with the development of >20-fold higher titers of autologous nAbs. Using a new RM genomic immunoglobulin locus reference, we identified differential IgV gene use between immunization modalities. Ab mapping demonstrated targeting of immunodominant non-neutralizing epitopes by conventional bolus-immunized animals, whereas slow delivery-immunized animals targeted a more diverse set of epitopes. Thus, alternative immunization strategies can enhance nAb development by altering GCs and modulating the immunodominance of non-neutralizing epitopes.Entities:
Keywords: FNA; GC- T(FH); HIV vaccine; affinity maturation; immune complexes; memory B cells; non-human primates; rhesus macaque genome; somatic hypermutation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31080066 PMCID: PMC6619430 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.04.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582