Frontiers in Immunology (Sep 2023)

Comprehensive profiling of pre-infection antibodies identifies HIV targets associated with viremic control and viral load

  • Wendy Grant-McAuley,
  • William Morgenlander,
  • William Morgenlander,
  • Sarah E. Hudelson,
  • Manjusha Thakar,
  • Estelle Piwowar-Manning,
  • William Clarke,
  • Autumn Breaud,
  • Joel Blankson,
  • Ethan Wilson,
  • Helen Ayles,
  • Helen Ayles,
  • Peter Bock,
  • Ayana Moore,
  • Barry Kosloff,
  • Barry Kosloff,
  • Kwame Shanaube,
  • Sue-Ann Meehan,
  • Anneen van Deventer,
  • Sarah Fidler,
  • Richard Hayes,
  • Ingo Ruczinski,
  • Kai Kammers,
  • Oliver Laeyendecker,
  • Oliver Laeyendecker,
  • H. Benjamin Larman,
  • H. Benjamin Larman,
  • Susan H. Eshleman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1178520
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundHigh HIV viral load (VL) is associated with increased transmission risk and faster disease progression. HIV controllers achieve viral suppression without antiretroviral (ARV) treatment. We evaluated viremic control in a community-randomized trial with >48,000 participants.MethodsA massively multiplexed antibody profiling system, VirScan, was used to quantify pre- and post-infection antibody reactivity to HIV peptides in 664 samples from 429 participants (13 controllers, 135 viremic non-controllers, 64 other non-controllers, 217 uninfected persons). Controllers had VLs <2,000 copies/mL with no ARV drugs detected at the first HIV-positive visit and one year later. Viremic non-controllers had VLs 2,000 copies/mL with no ARV drugs detected at the first HIV-positive visit. Other non-controllers had either ARV drugs detected at the first HIV-positive visit (n=47) or VLs <2,000 copies/mL with no ARV drugs detected at only one HIV-positive visit (n=17).ResultsWe identified pre-infection HIV antibody reactivities that correlated with post-infection VL. Pre-infection reactivity to an epitope in the HR2 domain of gp41 was associated with controller status and lower VL. Pre-infection reactivity to an epitope in the C2 domain of gp120 was associated with non-controller status and higher VL. Different patterns of antibody reactivity were observed over time for these two epitopes.ConclusionThese studies suggest that pre-infection HIV antibodies are associated with controller status and modulation of HIV VL. These findings may inform research on antibody-based interventions for HIV treatment.

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