Nature Communications (Nov 2024)

Enhanced and sustained biodistribution of HIV-1 neutralizing antibody VRC01LS in human genital and rectal mucosa

  • Maria P. Lemos,
  • Rena D. Astronomo,
  • Yunda Huang,
  • Sandeep Narpala,
  • Madhu Prabhakaran,
  • Philipp Mann,
  • Carmen A. Paez,
  • Yiwen Lu,
  • Gregory J. Mize,
  • Hayley Glantz,
  • Katharine Westerberg,
  • Hunter Colegrove,
  • Kimberly S. Smythe,
  • Minggang Lin,
  • Robert H. Pierce,
  • Julia Hutter,
  • Ian Frank,
  • John R. Mascola,
  • Adrian B. McDermott,
  • Linda-Gail Bekker,
  • M. Juliana McElrath

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54580-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract To prevent sexually-acquired HIV-1 infection by immunoprophylaxis, effective concentrations of broadly neutralizing antibodies are likely needed at mucosal sites of exposure. Here, we examine the biodistribution of monoclonal antibody VRC01 and its extended half-life variant, VRC01LS, in colorectal and genitourinary tracts of healthy adults 1-52 weeks after intravenous infusion. At 1-2 weeks, VRC01LS levels are ~3-4 times higher than VRC01 in serum (p = 0.048), rectal (p = 0.067), vaginal (p = 0.003) and cervical tissues (p = 0.003); these differences increase over time. Both antibodies primarily localize within rectal lamina propria and cervicovaginal stroma, with limited and variable epithelial distribution. Although 8-28% of serum mAb levels reach mucosal tissues, <3% are in seminal and rectal secretions. Elimination half-lives in mucosal tissues are 20-28 days for VRC01 and 51-68 days for VRC01LS. Thus, VRC01LS infusion achieves higher, sustained concentrations in human mucosal tissues than VRC01, supporting the future investigation of potent, long-acting LS-modified antibodies to prevent HIV-1.