PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Impact of HIV-1 backbone on neutralization sensitivity: neutralization profiles of heterologous envelope glycoproteins expressed in native subtype C and CRF01_AE backbone.

  • Agnès-Laurence Chenine,
  • Lindsay Wieczorek,
  • Eric Sanders-Buell,
  • Maggie Wesberry,
  • Teresa Towle,
  • Devin M Pillis,
  • Sebastian Molnar,
  • Robert McLinden,
  • Tara Edmonds,
  • Ivan Hirsch,
  • Robert O'Connell,
  • Francine E McCutchan,
  • David C Montefiori,
  • Christina Ochsenbauer,
  • John C Kappes,
  • Jerome H Kim,
  • Victoria R Polonis,
  • Sodsai Tovanabutra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0076104
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e76104

Abstract

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Standardized assays to assess vaccine and antiviral drug efficacy are critical for the development of protective HIV-1 vaccines and drugs. These immune assays will be advanced by the development of standardized viral stocks, such as HIV-1 infectious molecular clones (IMC), that i) express a reporter gene, ii) are representative of globally diverse subtypes and iii) are engineered to easily exchange envelope (env) genes for expression of sequences of interest. Thus far, a subtype B IMC backbone expressing Renilla luciferase (LucR), and into which the ectodomain of heterologous env coding sequences can be expressed has been successfully developed but as execution of HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trials shifts increasingly to non-subtype B epidemics (Southern African and Southeast Asia), non-subtype B HIV-1 reagents are needed to support vaccine development. Here we describe two IMCs derived from subtypes C and CRF01_AE HIV-1 primary isolates expressing LucR (IMC.LucR) that were engineered to express heterologous gp160 Envs. 18 constructs expressing various subtypes C and CRF01_AE Envs, mostly acute, in subtype-matched and -unmatched HIV backbones were tested for functionality and neutralization sensitivity. Our results suggest a possible effect of non-env HIV-1 genes on the interaction of Env and neutralizing antibodies and highlight the need to generate a library of IMCs representative of the HIV-1 subtype spectrum to be used as standardized neutralization assay reagents for assessing HIV-1 vaccine efficacy.