PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Induction of antibodies in rhesus macaques that recognize a fusion-intermediate conformation of HIV-1 gp41.

  • S Moses Dennison,
  • Laura L Sutherland,
  • Frederick H Jaeger,
  • Kara M Anasti,
  • Robert Parks,
  • Shelley Stewart,
  • Cindy Bowman,
  • Shi-Mao Xia,
  • Ruijun Zhang,
  • Xiaoying Shen,
  • Richard M Scearce,
  • Gilad Ofek,
  • Yongping Yang,
  • Peter D Kwong,
  • Sampa Santra,
  • Hua-Xin Liao,
  • Georgia Tomaras,
  • Norman L Letvin,
  • Bing Chen,
  • S Munir Alam,
  • Barton F Haynes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027824
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 11
p. e27824

Abstract

Read online

A component to the problem of inducing broad neutralizing HIV-1 gp41 membrane proximal external region (MPER) antibodies is the need to focus the antibody response to the transiently exposed MPER pre-hairpin intermediate neutralization epitope. Here we describe a HIV-1 envelope (Env) gp140 oligomer prime followed by MPER peptide-liposomes boost strategy for eliciting serum antibody responses in rhesus macaques that bind to a gp41 fusion intermediate protein. This Env-liposome immunization strategy induced antibodies to the 2F5 neutralizing epitope ⁶⁶⁴DKW residues, and these antibodies preferentially bound to a gp41 fusion intermediate construct as well as to MPER scaffolds stabilized in the 2F5-bound conformation. However, no serum lipid binding activity was observed nor was serum neutralizing activity for HIV-1 pseudoviruses present. Nonetheless, the Env-liposome prime-boost immunization strategy induced antibodies that recognized a gp41 fusion intermediate protein and was successful in focusing the antibody response to the desired epitope.