| Literature DB >> 33238130 |
Reda Rawi1, Lucy Rutten2, Yen-Ting Lai1, Adam S Olia1, Sven Blokland2, Jarek Juraszek2, Chen-Hsiang Shen1, Yaroslav Tsybovsky3, Raffaello Verardi1, Yongping Yang1, Baoshan Zhang1, Tongqing Zhou1, Gwo-Yu Chuang4, Peter D Kwong5, Johannes P M Langedijk6.
Abstract
Soluble envelope (Env) trimers, stabilized in a prefusion-closed conformation, can elicit neutralizing responses against HIV-1 strains closely related to the immunizing trimer. However, to date such stabilization has succeeded with only a limited number of HIV-1 strains. To address this issue, here we develop ADROITrimer, an automated procedure involving structure-based stabilization and consensus repair, and generate "RnS-DS-SOSIP"-stabilized Envs from 180 diverse Env sequences. The vast majority of these RnS-DS-SOSIP Envs fold into prefusion-closed conformations as judged by antigenic analysis and size exclusion chromatography. Additionally, representative strains from clades AE, B, and C are stabilized in prefusion-closed conformations as shown by negative-stain electron microscopy, and the crystal structure of a clade A strain MI369.A5 Env trimer provides 3.5 Å resolution detail into stabilization and repair mutations. The automated procedure reported herein that yields well-behaved, soluble, prefusion-closed Env trimers from a majority of HIV-1 strains could have substantial impact on the development of an HIV-1 vaccine. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: ADROITrimer; HIV-1 vaccine; RnS; RnS-DS-SOSIP; conformational stabilization; protein design; repair and stabilize
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33238130 PMCID: PMC7714614 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.108432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423