PLoS ONE (Mar 2011)

An anti-HIV-1 V3 loop antibody fully protects cross-clade and elicits T-cell immunity in macaques mucosally challenged with an R5 clade C SHIV.

  • Jennifer D Watkins,
  • Nagadenahalli B Siddappa,
  • Samir K Lakhashe,
  • Michael Humbert,
  • Anton Sholukh,
  • Girish Hemashettar,
  • Yin Ling Wong,
  • John K Yoon,
  • Wendy Wang,
  • Francis J Novembre,
  • Francois Villinger,
  • Chris Ibegbu,
  • Kalpana Patel,
  • Davide Corti,
  • Gloria Agatic,
  • Fabrizia Vanzetta,
  • Siro Bianchi,
  • Jonathan L Heeney,
  • Federica Sallusto,
  • Antonio Lanzavecchia,
  • Ruth M Ruprecht

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0018207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
p. e18207

Abstract

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Neutralizing antibodies have been shown to protect macaques against SHIV challenge. However, genetically diverse HIV-1 clades have evolved, and a key question left unanswered is whether neutralizing antibodies can confer cross-clade protection in vivo. The novel human monoclonal antibody HGN194 was isolated from an individual infected with an HIV-1 clade AG recombinant circulating recombinant form (CRF). HGN194 targets an epitope in the third hypervariable loop (V3) of HIV-1 gp120 and neutralizes a range of relatively neutralization-sensitive and resistant viruses. We evaluated the potential of HGN194 to protect infant rhesus monkeys against a SHIV encoding a primary CCR5-tropic HIV-1 clade C envelope. After high-dose mucosal challenge, all untreated controls became highly viremic while all HGN194-treated animals (50 mg/kg) were completely protected. When HGN194 was given at 1 mg/kg, one out of two monkeys remained aviremic, whereas the other had delayed, lower peak viremia. Interestingly, all protected monkeys given high-dose HGN194 developed Gag-specific proliferative responses of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. To test whether generation of the latter involved cryptic infection, we ablated CD8+ cells after HGN194 clearance. No viremia was detected in any protected monkeys, thus ruling out virus reservoirs. Thus, induction of CD8 T-cell immunity may have resulted from transient "Hit and Run" infection or cross priming via Ag-Ab-mediated cross-presentation. Together, our data identified the HGN194 epitope as protective and provide proof-of-concept that this anti-V3 loop mAb can prevent infection with sterilizing immunity after challenge with virus of a different clade, implying that V3 is a potential vaccine target.