Cell Reports (Mar 2020)

Mapping Polyclonal Antibody Responses in Non-human Primates Vaccinated with HIV Env Trimer Subunit Vaccines

  • Bartek Nogal,
  • Matteo Bianchi,
  • Christopher A. Cottrell,
  • Robert N. Kirchdoerfer,
  • Leigh M. Sewall,
  • Hannah L. Turner,
  • Fangzhu Zhao,
  • Devin Sok,
  • Dennis R. Burton,
  • Lars Hangartner,
  • Andrew B. Ward

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 11
pp. 3755 – 3765.e7

Abstract

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Summary: Rational immunogen design aims to focus antibody responses to vulnerable sites on primary antigens. Given the size of these antigens, there is, however, potential for eliciting unwanted, off-target responses. Here, we use our electron microscopy polyclonal epitope mapping approach to describe the antibody specificities elicited by immunization of non-human primates with soluble HIV envelope trimers and subsequent repeated viral challenge. An increased diversity of epitopes recognized and the approach angle by which these antibodies bind constitute a hallmark of the humoral response in most protected animals. We also show that fusion peptide-specific antibodies are likely responsible for some neutralization breadth. Moreover, cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) analysis of a fully protected animal reveals a high degree of clonality within a subset of putatively neutralizing antibodies, enabling a detailed molecular description of the antibody paratope. Our results provide important insights into the immune response against a vaccine candidate that entered into clinical trials in 2019. : Nogal et al. use electron microscopy polyclonal epitope mapping of BG505 Env-immunized and matched SHIVBG505-challenged non-human primates to identify hallmarks of protection. Additionally, cryo-EM polyclonal analysis of a fully protected animal reveals a high degree of clonality, allowing detailed characterization of a putative neutralizing paratope.