Found 12 matching records:
Displaying record number 378
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Vaccine Details
Notes
Showing 12 of
12 notes.
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IIIB-V3-21: IIIB-V3-21 did not show any significant neutralization of infection of PBLs with various HIV-1 strains. IIIB-V3-21 did not inhibit transcytosis of cell-free or cell-associated virus across a monolayer of epithelial cells, in contrast, it somewhat increased the passage of cell-free HIV-1 through the epithelial cells. A mixture of 13 MAbs directed to well-defined epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope, including IIIB-V3-21, did not inhibit HIV-1 transcytosis, indicating that envelope epitopes involved in neutralization are not involved in mediating HIV-1 transcytosis. When the mixture of 13 MAbs and HIV-1 was incubated with polyclonal anti-human γ chain, the transcytosis was partially inhibited, indicating that agglutination of viral particles at the apical surface of cells may be critical for HIV transcytosis inhibition by HIV-specific Abs.
Chomont2008
(enhancing activity, neutralization)
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EVA3048: EVA3048: Binding of HLA peptide HA307-319 to gp120 was not influenced by pre-incubation of gp120 with MAb EVA3048, indicating that this Ab does not completely occlude sequences/structures of the C5 gp120 region relevant for the C5 mimicry of the HLA activation domain.
Cadogan2008
(mimics)
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V3-21: Transmission of HIV-1 by immature and mature DCs to CD4+ T lymphocytes was significantly higher for CXCR4- than for CCR5-tropic strains. In addition, V3-21 inhibited transmission of CCR5-tropic viruses while transmission of V3-21-neutralized X4 variants increased, indicating that X4 HIV-1 has an advantage over R5 in transmission when neutralized with V3-21.
vanMontfort2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, dendritic cells)
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The role of DC-specific ICAM-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN) as a potential receptor for HIV-1 in the capture and transfer of neutralized HIV-1 to CD4 T lymphocytes was studied. The nonneutralizing V3-21 enhanced HIV-1 infection upon capture and transfer via Raji-DC-SIGN cells, whereas no infection was observed with the neutralizing b12 MAb, indicating that different Abs have variant effects on inhibiting HIV-1 transfer to CD4 T lymphocytes.
vanMontfort2007
(enhancing activity, neutralization, dendritic cells)
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IIIB-V3-21: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of the V3 MAbs 694-98D and 447-52D, that both bind near the tip of the loop, was decreased by both thrombin and trypsin, but anti-V3 MAb IIIB-V3-21 was not decreased in either case.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
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IIIB-V3-21: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 1725.
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IIIB-V3-21: UK Medical Research Council AIDS reagent: ARP3048.
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IIIB-V3-21: This epitope is similar to a fragment of the FasI receptor precursor (Apptosis-mediating surface antigen fas) (APO- 1 antigen) (CD95 antigen), VEINCTRQN. Database note: Consistent with published papers, author Maksiutov is also shown as Maksyutov in this database.
Maksiutov2002
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IIIB-V3-21: A rare mutation in the neutralization sensitive R2-strain in the proximal limb of the V3 region caused Env to become sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed against the CD4 binding site (CD4BS), CD4-induced (CD4i) epitopes, soluble CD4 (sCD4), and HNS2, a broadly neutralizing sera -- 2/12 anti-V3 MAbs tested (19b and 694/98-D) neutralized R2, as did 2/3 anti-CD4BS MAbs (15e and IgG1b12), 2/2 CD4i MAbs (17b and 4.8D), and 2G12 and 2F5 -- thus multiple epitopes on R2 are functional targets for neutralization and the neutralization sensitivity profile of R2 is intermediate between the highly sensitive MN-TCLA strain and the typically resistant MN-primary strain.
Zhang2002
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IIIB-V3-21: Does not block HIV-1 LAI binding or entry into CEM cells.
Valenzuela1998
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IIIB-V3-21: Binds to NP40 treated gp120, and epitope is probably obscured by local glycosylation.
Laman1993
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IIIB-V3-21: Binds to the base of the V3 loop on denatured gp120.
Laman1992
References
Showing 10 of
10 references.
Cadogan2008
Martin Cadogan, Brian Austen, Jonathan L. Heeney, and Angus G. Dalgleish. HLA Homology within the C5 Domain Promotes Peptide Binding by HIV Type 1 gp120. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 24(6):845-855, Jun 2008. PubMed ID: 18544021.
Show all entries for this paper.
Chomont2008
Nicolas Chomont, Hakim Hocini, Jean-Chrysostome Gody, Hicham Bouhlal, Pierre Becquart, Corinne Krief-Bouillet, Michel Kazatchkine, and Laurent Bélec. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Do Not Inhibit Viral Transcytosis Through Mucosal Epithelial Cells. Virology, 370(2):246-254, 20 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17920650.
Show all entries for this paper.
Laman1992
J. D. Laman, M. M. Schellekens, Y. H. Abacioglu, G. K. Lewis, M. Tersmette, R. A. M. Fouchier, J. P. M. Langeduk, E. Claassen, and W. J. A. Boersma. Variant-specific monoclonal and group-specific polyclonal human immunodeficiency virus type 1 neutralizing antibodies raised with synthetic peptides from the gp120 third variable domain. J. Virol., 66:1823-1831, 1992. PubMed ID: 1629971.
Show all entries for this paper.
Laman1993
J. D. Laman, M. M. Schellekens, G. K. Lewis, J. P. Moore, T. J. Matthews, J. P. M. Langedijk, R. H. Meloen, W. J. A. Boersma, and E. Claassen. A Hidden Region in the Third Variable Domain of HIV-1 IIIB gp120 Identified by a Monoclonal Antibody. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 9:605-612, 1993. A peptide (FVTIGKIGNMRQAHC) induced MAb binds to the carboxy-terminal flank of the V3-loop, but the epitope is only exposed on gp120 when it is treated with SDS-DTT. PubMed ID: 8369165.
Show all entries for this paper.
Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
Show all entries for this paper.
Maksiutov2002
A. Z. Maksiutov, A. G. Bachinskii, and S. I. Bazhan. [Searching for Local Similarities Between HIV-1 and Human Proteins. Application to Vaccines]. Mol Biol (Mosk), 36(3):447-459, May-Jun 2002. Article in Russian. PubMed ID: 12068630.
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Valenzuela1998
A. Valenzuela, J. Blanco, B. Krust, R. Franco, and A. G. Hovanessian. Neutralizing Antibodies against the V3 Loop of Human Immunodeficiency Type 1 gp120 Block the CD4-Dependent and Independent Binding of the Virus to Cells. J. Virol., 71:8289-8298, 1998. PubMed ID: 9343181.
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vanMontfort2007
Thijs van Montfort, Alexey A. Nabatov, Teunis B. H. Geijtenbeek, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Efficient Capture of Antibody Neutralized HIV-1 by Cells Expressing DC-SIGN and Transfer to CD4+ T Lymphocytes. J. Immunol., 178(5):3177-85, 1 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17312166.
Show all entries for this paper.
vanMontfort2008
Thijs van Montfort, Adri A. M. Thomas, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Dendritic Cells Preferentially Transfer CXCR4-Using Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants to CD4+ T Lymphocytes in trans. J. Viro.l, 82(16):7886-7896, Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18524826.
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Zhang2002
Peng Fei Zhang, Peter Bouma, Eun Ju Park, Joseph B. Margolick, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Michael N. Flora, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. A Variable Region 3 (V3) Mutation Determines a Global Neutralization Phenotype and CD4-Independent Infectivity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Associated with a Broadly Cross-Reactive, Primary Virus-Neutralizing Antibody Response. J. Virol., 76(2):644-655, Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11752155.
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Displaying record number 500
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record as JSON.
MAb ID |
447-52D (447/52-DII, 447-52-D, 447d, 447-52-D, 447-D, 447, 447D, 447D-52) |
HXB2 Location |
Env(312-315) DNA(7158..7169) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp120( MN) |
Research Contact |
Dr. Susan Zolla-Pazner, NYU Med Center NY, NY; Veteran Affairs Med Center NY, NY; or Cellular Products Inc, Buffalo, NY, |
Epitope |
GPGR
|
Epitope Alignment
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp120 V3 // V3 glycan (V3g) |
Neutralizing |
L P View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG3λ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
acute/early infection, antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody sequence, assay or method development, autologous responses, binding affinity, broad neutralizer, co-receptor, complement, computational prediction, dendritic cells, dynamics, effector function, elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, enhancing activity, escape, genital and mucosal immunity, glycosylation, HIV-2, kinetics, mimics, mimotopes, neutralization, optimal epitope, polyclonal antibodies, review, SIV, structure, subtype comparisons, supervised treatment interruptions (STI), Th2, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion |
Notes
Showing 231 of
231 notes.
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447-52D: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
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447-52D: Following the VRC018 clinical trial of the BG505 DS-SOSIP immunogen, donor N751 showed the highest BG505-reactive ELISA responses. B cells from this donor were sorted for binding to a novel BG505 trimer construct (BG505 glycan base); 8 clones were identified that bound to glycan-base BG505, and 2 were selected for characterization (2C06 and 2C09). The epitopes of 2C06.01 and 2C09.01 were similar to each other, and have substantial overlap with the epitope of VRC34.01, and lower overlap with two other FP-targeting mAbs, PGT151 and ACS202. Binding of mAbs to BG505 DS-SOSIP was compared with binding to the glycan base construct; some mAbs bound to both BG505 DS-SOSIP and glycan base (PGT145, VRC26.25, VRC01, PGT151, VRC34.01, and 2G12), some bound to neither (PG05, 447-52D, and 2557), and 4 base-binding mAbs bound to BG505 DS-SOSIP, but not to BG505 glycan base (1E6, 5H3, 3H2, and 9B9).
Wang2023
(binding affinity)
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447-52D: A panel of 30 contemporary subtype B pseudoviruses (PSVs) was generated. Neutralization sensitivities of these PSVs were compared with subtype B strains from earlier in the pandemic using 31 nAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CH02, CH03, CH04, 830A, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 10-1074, 2192, 2219, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, b12, NIH45-46, VRC01, VRC03, 3BNC117, HJ16, sCD4, 10E8, 4E10, 2F5, 7H6, 2G12, 35O22). A significant reduction in Env neutralization sensitivity was observed for 27 out of 31 nAbs for the contemporary, as compared to earlier-decade subtype B PSVs. A decline in neutralization sensitivity was observed across all Env domains; the nAbs that were most potent early in the pandemic suffered the greatest decline in potency over time. A metaanalysis demonstrated this trend across multiple subtypes. As HIV-1 Env diversification continues, changes in Env antigenicity and neutralization sensitivity should continue to be evaluated to inform the development of improved vaccine and antibody products to prevent and treat HIV-1.
Wieczorek2023
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion)
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447-52D: A panel of 58 mAbs was cloned from a rhesus macaque immunized with envelope glycoprotein immunogens developed from HIV-1 clade B-infected human donor VC10014. Neutralizing mAbs predominantly targeted linear epitopes in the V3 region in the cradle orientation (V3C), with others targeting the V3 ladle orientation (V3L), the CD4 binding site, C1, C4, or gp41. Nonneutralizing mAbs bound C1, C5, or undetermined gp120 conformational epitopes. Neutralization potency strongly correlated with the magnitude of binding to infected primary macaque splenocytes and to the level of ADCC, but did not correlate with ADCP. MAbs were traced to 23 of 72 functional IgHV germline alleles. Neutralizing V3C mAbs displayed minimal nucleotide SHM in the H chain V region (3.77%), indicating that relatively little affinity maturation was needed to achieve in-clade neutralization breadth. This study underscores the polyfunctional nature of vaccine-elicited tier 2-neutralizing V3 Abs and demonstrates partial reproduction of a human donor’s Ab response through nonhuman primate vaccination. Several previously-isolated mAbs were used in binding assays: b12, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, 2558, 2219, 1006-15D, 447-52D, 10-1074, 830A, 2F5, F240, PGDM1400, 2219.
Spencer2021
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
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447-52D: This study analyzed Env sequences of early HIV-1 clonal variants from 31 individuals from the Amsterdam Cohort Studies with diverse levels of heterologous neutralization at 2-4 years post-seroconversion. A number of Env signatures coincided with neutralization development. These included a statistically shorter variable region 1 and a lower probability of glycosylation. Induction of neutralization was associated with a lower probability of glycosylation at position 332, which is involved in the epitopes of many bnAbs. 2G12 and PGT126 were tested for their ability to block infectivity by patient viruses with predicted glycosylation at N332; the NLS glycosylation motif was associated with resistance to these mAbs more often than the NIS glycosylation motif. Sequence Harmony software identified amino acid changes associated with the development of heterologous neutralization. These residues mapped to various Env subdomains, but in particular to the first and fourth variable region, as well as the underlying α2 helix of the third constant region. These findings imply that the development of heterologous neutralization might depend on specific characteristics of early Env. Env signatures that correlate with the induction of neutralization might be relevant for the design of effective HIV-1 vaccines. Primary virus isolates from 21 of the patients were assayed for neutralization by 11 well-known nAbs (b12, VRC01, 447-52D, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126, PG9, PG16, PGT145, 2F5, 4E10).
vandenKerkhof2013
(glycosylation, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, polyclonal antibodies)
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447D: Reduction in exposure of non-neutralizing Ab (nnAb) epitopes on native-like Env trimer immunogens results in bnAbs being elicited that have autologous tier 2 neutralization instead of tier 1. The design of trimer modifications to silence nnAb reactivity were directed towards (1) the V3 loop (2) epitopes exposed through CD4-induced conformational changes (CD4i epitopes) and (3) the exposed SOSIP trimer base that is usually buried within virus membrane. (1) In Steichen2016 2 Env variants of BG505 SOSIP.664 with reduced V3 nnAb-generating activity were created, one using mammalian display screens, BG505 MD39, and the other with an engineered disulfide bond, BG505 SOSIP.DS21. MD39's trimer design was improved by using the Rosetta Design platform and inserting 6 buried mutations to form BG505 Olio6, and both this trimer as well as the DS21 were shown to have reduced antigenicity for nnAb generation in a rabbit vaccine model. (2) To reduce CD4i epitope elicitation of nnAbs, saturation mutagenesis of Olio6 was performed, in search of the trimer that binds VRC01-class bnAbs but not CD4. BG505 Olio6.CD4KO containing the G473T mutation was identified. In addition, for the purposes of nucleic acid-based vaccine platform designs, the natural furin cleavage site between gp120 and gp41 was removed to abolish protease cleavage, by swapping the order of gp14 and gp120 in the gp160 gene, giving the trimer BG505 MD39.CP (circular permutation). (3) The exposed trimer base was masked with glycan in 3 under-glycosylated regions in order to direct bnAb responses to the distal regions (CD4bs, V2 apex, N332 superset) of the trimer instead, generating the GRSF (glycan resurfaced) MD39 and GRSF MD39.CP variants. Furthermore, variants with improved thermostability over MD39 were created, MD37 and MD64. All of these stabilizing mutations were transferred to diverse HIV isolates from different subtypes. Finally 3 subtype C (isolate 327c) trimers were assessed for binding to bnAbs, VRC01, PGT121, PGT151, PGT145, PG9 and to nnAbs, F105 and 17b. nnAb 447D interacts with non-native subtype C Env immunogens like c27c SOSIP and does not interact with native-like c27c MD37 and c27c MD39.
Kulp2017
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, assay or method development, autologous responses, vaccine antigen design, structure)
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447-52D: DS-SOSIP.4mut (4mut) was identified as the most immunogenic and stable of 4 engineered, soluble, closed prefusion HIV-1 Env trimers. 4mut contained 4 mutations (M154, M300, M302 and L320) designed to form hydrophobic interactions between V1V1 and V3 loops. Before V3-negative selection, mAb 447-52D recognized BG505 SOSIP.664 and DS-SOSIP but failed to recognize 4mut and the other 3 designed trimers (DS-SOSIP.6mut containing 4mut mutations, Y177W and I420M, DS-SOSIP.I423F and DS-SOSIP.A316W). After V3-negative selection, 447-52D only recognized BG505 SOSIP.664 and only with sCD4. Each DS-SOSIP variant was able to elicit trimer-specific responses, comparable to BG505 SOSIP.664, in guinea pigs after 4 immunizations, but none elicited heterologous neutralizing activity. Crystal structures were generated for 4mut and 6mut.
Chuang2017
(variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion)
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447-52D: Using subtype A BG505 Env structural information, improved variants of subtype B JRFL and subtype C 16055 Env native flexibly linked (NFL) trimers were generated. The trimer-derived (TD) residues that increased well-ordered, homogeneous, stable, and soluble trimers did not require positive or negative selection as previously needed [Guenaga2015, PLoS Pathos. 11(1):e1004570]. ELISA binding to the two V3-targeting nnAbs, 447-52D and 19b was inefficient as desired, for the NFL TD as well as NFL TD CC (disulfide link stabilized) trimers, indicating that these trimers were probably in the desired, closed conformation.
Guenaga2015a
(antibody interactions, assay or method development, vaccine antigen design, structure)
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447-52D: Most published structures of bnAbs, yet none of non- or poorly-neutralizing mAbs, were structurally compatible with a newly generated crystal structure of a mature ligand-free endoglycosidase H-treated BG505 SOSIP.664 Env trimer. Robust binding of the structurally incompatible V3- and CD4-bs targeting nAbs could be induced with CD4. A “DS” variant of BG505 SOSIP.664, containing a stabilizing disulfide bond between 201C and 433C mutations, was developed and appeared to represent an obligate intermediate in that it bound only a single CD4 and remained in a prefusion closed conformation. V3-targeting mAb 447-52D was author-defined as ineffective due to its neutralization breadth of 12% on a panel of 170 diverse HIV-1 pseudoviruses. This was consistent with structural modeling which suggested that 447-52D was incompatible with BG505 SOSIP.664. 447-52D neutralized >20% of clade B pseudoviruses demonstrating clade-specific breadth. Soluble CD4 induced 447-52D binding of wildtype BG505 SOSIP.664, JR-FL SOS E168K, or BG505 SOS T332N trimers, but not mutant trimers containing the DS mutations.
Kwon2015
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, structure)
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447-52D: HIV-1 and its SIV precursors share a bnAb epitope in Env V2 at the trimer apex. This study tested the immunogenicity of a chimpanzee SIV (SIVcpz) Env trimer. In mice expressing a human V2-apex bnAb heavy-chain precursor, trimer immunization induced V2-directed nAbs. Infection of macaques with chimeric simian-chimpanzee immunodeficiency viruses (SCIVs) elicited high-titer viremia, potent autologous neutralizing antibodies, rapid sequence escape in the canonical V2-apex epitope, and in some cases, low-titer heterologous plasma breadth mapping to the V2-apex. Antibody cloning from 2 macaques (T925 and T927) identified 7 lineages (53 mAbs) with long CDRH3 regions that cross-neutralize some primary HIV-1 strains with low potency. Electron microscopy of members of the two most cross-reactive lineages confirmed V2 targeting with an angle of approach distinct from prototypical V2-apex bNAbs; antibody binding either required or induced an occluded-open trimer. Probing with conformation-sensitive, nonneutralizing antibodies revealed that SCIV-expressed, but not wild-type SIVcpz Envs, as well as a subset of primary HIV-1 Envs, preferentially adopted a more open trimeric state. These results reveal the existence of a cryptic V2 epitope that is exposed in occluded-open SIVcpz and HIV-1 Env trimers and elicits cross-neutralizing responses of limited breadth and potency. This cryptic epitope, which in some Env backgrounds is immunodominant, needs to be considered in immunogen design. As part of the study, binding and neutralization assays used panels of nAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, VRC26.25, CH01, BG1, VRC38.01), non-nAbs (697-D, 1393A, CH58, CAP228-3D, 3074, 447-52D, 17b, A32), and unmutated ancestors (PG9-RUA, PG16-RUA, VRC26-UCA, CH01-RUA).
Bibollet-Ruche2023
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
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447-52d: To understand early bnAb responses, 51 HIV-1 clade C infected infants were assayed for neutralization of a 12-virus multi-clade panel. Plasma bnAbs targeting V2-apex on Env were predominant in infant elite and broad neutralizers. In infant elite neutralizers, multi-variant infection was associated with plasma bnAbs targeting diverse autologous viruses. A panel of mAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, VRC26.25, 10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, PGT135, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, PGT151, 35O22, 10E8, 4E10, F105, 17b, A32, 48d, b6, 447-52d) was assayed for their ability to neutralize Env clones from infant elite neutralizers; circulating viral variants in infant elite neutralizers were most susceptible to V2-apex bnAbs.
Mishra2020a
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
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447-52D: In vertically-infected infant AIIMS731, a rare HIV-1 mutation in hypervariable loop 2 (L184F) was studied. In patient sequences, this mutation was present in the majority of clones. A panel of 6 V2 bnAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CAP256.25, and CH01) was assayed for neutralization of 6 patient viral clones. The AIIMS731 viral variants segregated into 4 neutralization-sensitive and 2 resistant clones; sensitive clones carried 184F, while resistant clones carried the rare 184L mutation. A large panel of bnAbs targeting non-V2 epitopes was used to assess the neutralization of the 6 patient viral variants. The bnAb panel consisted of V3/N332 glycan supersite bnAbs (10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, and PGT135), CD4bs bnAbs (VRC01, VRC03, VRC07-523LS, N6, 3BNC117, and NIH45-46 G54W), a silent face-targeting bnAb (PG05), fusion peptide and gp120-gp41 interface bnAbs (PGT151, 35O22, and N123-VRC34.01), and MPER bnAbs (10E8, 4E10, and 2F5). All of these bnAbs had similar neutralization efficiencies for all 6 clones, suggesting that the L184F mutation was specific for viral escape from neutralization by V2 apex bnAbs. A panel of non-neutralizing mAbs (V3 loop-targeting non-nAbs 447-52D and 19b, and CD4-induced non-nAbs 17b, A32, 48d, and b6), were also assessed; 2 of the variants (the same 2 susceptible to the V2 bnAbs) showed moderate neutralization by 447-52D, 19b, 17b, and 48d. The structure of ligand-free BG505 SOSIP trimer revealed that the side chain of L184 was outward facing and did not make significant intraprotomeric interactions, but upon mutating L184 to F184, a disruption of the accessible surface between the bulky side chain of F184 on one protomer and R165 on the neighboring protomer was seen. Thus, the L184F mutation resulted in increased susceptibility to neutralization by antibodies known to target the relatively more open conformation of Env on tier 1 viruses, suggesting that the rare L184F mutation allowed Env to sample more open states resembling the CD4-bound conformation where the CCR5 binding site is exposed.
Mishra2020
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
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447-52d: An R5 virus isolated from chronic patient NAB01 (Patient Record# 4723) was adapted in culture to growth in the presence of target cells expressing reduced levels of CD4. Entry kinetics of the virus were altered, and these alterations resulted in extended exposure of CD4-induced neutralization-sensitive epitopes to CD4. Adapted and control viruses were assayed for their neutralization by a panel of neutralizing antibodies targeting several different regions of Env (PGT121, PGT128, 1-79, 447-52d, b6, b12, VRC01, 17b, 4E10, 2F5, Z13e1). Adapted viruses showed greater sensitivity to antibodies targeting the CD4 binding site and the V3 loop. This evolution of Env resulted in increased CD4 affinity but decreased viral fitness, a phenomenon seen also in the immune-privileged CNS, particularly in macrophages.
Beauparlant2017
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion, dynamics, kinetics)
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447-52D: Three vaccine regimens administered in guinea pigs over 200 weeks were compared for ability to elicit NAb polyclonal sera. While tier 1 NAb responses did increase with vaccination, tier 2 NAb heterologous responses did not. The 3 regimens were C97 (monovalent, Clade C gp140), 4C (tetravalent, 4 Clade C mosaic gp140s), ABCM (tetravalent, Clades A, B, C and mosaic gp140s). Polyclonal sera generated from the 4C regimen, compared to the C97 regimen, was markedly superior at outcompeting 447-52D binding to gp140 antigens, suggesting that the 4C regimen induced the most robust V3-specific antibodies.
Bricault2018
(antibody generation, vaccine-induced immune responses, polyclonal antibodies)
-
447-52D: Two conserved tyrosine (Y) residues within the V2 loop of gp120, Y173 and Y177, were mutated individually or in combination, to either phenylalanine (F) or alanine (A) in several strains of diverse subtypes. In general, these mutations increased neutralization sensitivity, with a greater impact of Y177 over Y173 single mutations, of double over single mutations, and of A over F substitutions. The Y173A Y177A double mutation in HIV-1 BaL increased sensitivity to most of the weakly neutralizing MAbs tested (2158, 447-D, 268-D, B4e8, D19, 17b, 48d, 412d) and even rendered the virus sensitive to non-neutralizing antibodies against the CD4 binding site (F105, 654-30D, and b13). In the case of V2 mAb 697-30D, residue Y173 is part of its epitope, and thus abrogates its binding and has no effect on neutralization; the Y177A mutant alone did increase neutralization sensitivity to this mAb. When the double mutant was tested against bnAbs, there was a large decrease in neutralization sensitivity compared to WT for many bnAbs that target V1, V2, or V3 (PG9, PG16, VRC26.08, VRC38, PGT121, PGT122, PGT123, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, PGT135, VRC24, CH103). The double mutation had lesser or no effect on neutralization by one V3 bnAb (2G12) and by most bnAbs targeting the CD4 binding site (VRC01, VRC07, VRC03, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH31, 12A12, 3BNC117, N6), the gp120-gp41 interface (35O22, PGT151), or the MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8).
Guzzo2018
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
447-52D: The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: A systems glycobiology approach was applied to reverse engineer the relationship between bNAb binding and glycan effects on Env proteins. Glycan occupancy was interrogated across every potential N-glycan site in 94 recombinant gp120 antigens. Using a Bayesian machine learning algorithm, bNAb-specific glycan footprints were identified and used to design antigens that selectively alter bNAb antigenicity. The novel synthesized antigens unsuccessfully bound to target bNAbs with enhanced and selective antigenicity.
Yu2018
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: The immunologic effects of mutations in the Env cytoplasmic tail (CT) that included increased surface expression were explored using a vaccinia prime/protein boost protocol in mice. After vaccinia primes, CT- modified Envs induced up to 7-fold higher gp120-specific IgG, and after gp120 protein boosts, they elicited up to 16-fold greater Tier-1 HIV-1 neutralizing antibody titers. Envs with or without the TM1 mutations were expressed in HEK 293T cells and analyzed for the relative expression of Ab epitopes including V3 loop crown for 447-52D.
Hogan2018
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: SOSIP.664 trimer was modified at V3 positions 306 and 308 by Leucine substitution to create hydrophobic interactions with the tryptophan residue at position 316 and the V1V2 domain. These modifications stabilized the resulting SOSIP.v5.2 S306L R308L trimers. In vivo, the induction of V3 non-NAbs was significantly reduced compared with the SOSIP.v5.2 trimers. With S306L plus R308L substitutions 447-52D did not bind to SOSIP.v5.2 and SOSIP.v5.2 constructs.
deTaeye2018
(broad neutralizer)
-
447-52D: Three strategies were applied to perturb the structure of Env in order to make the protein more susceptible to neutralization: exposure to cold, Env-activating ligands, and a chaotropic agent. A panel of mAbs (E51, 48d, 17b, 3BNC176, 19b, 447-52D, 39F, b12, b6, PG16, PGT145, PGT126, 35O22, F240, 10E8, 7b2, 2G12) was used to test the neutralization resistance of a panel of subtype B and C pseudoviruses with and without these agents. Both cold and CD4 mimicking agents (CD4Ms) increased the sensitivity of some viruses. The chaotropic agent urea had little effect by itself, but could enhance the effects of cold or CD4Ms. Thus Env destabilizing agents can make Env more susceptible to neutralization and may hold promise as priming vaccine antigens.
Johnson2017
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Env from of a highly neutralization-resistant isolate, CH120.6, was shown to be very stable and conformationally-homogeneous. Its gp140 trimer retains many antigenic properties of the intact Env, while its monomeric gp120 exposes more epitopes. Thus trimer organization and stability are important determinants for occluding epitopes and conferring resistance to antibodies. Among a panel of 21 mAbs, CH120.6 was resistant to neutralization by all non-neutralizing and strain-specific mAbs (including 447-52D), regardless of the location of their epitopes. It was weakly neutralized by several broadly-neutralizing mAbs (VRC01, NIH45-46, 12A12, PG9, PG16, PGT128, 4E10, and 10E8), and well neutralized by only 2 (PGT145 and 10-1074).
Cai2017
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: PGT145 was used to positively isolate a subtype B Env trimer immunogen, B41 SOSIP.664, that exists in two conformations, closed and partially open. bNAbs tested against the trimer were able to neutralize the B41 pseudovirus with a wide range of potencies. Among non-NAbs to CD4bs (b6, F91, F105); to CD4i (17b); to gp41ECTO (F240); and to V3 (447-52D, 39F, CO11, 19b and 14e), none neutralized B41 (IC50 >50µg/ml).
Pugach2015
-
447-52D: A new trimeric immunogen, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, was developed that bound and activated most known neutralizing antibodies but generally did not bind antibodies lacking neuralizing activity. This highly stable immunogen mimics the Env spike of subtype A transmitted/founder (T/F) HIV-1 strain, BG505. Anti-V3 non-NAb 447-52D did not neutralize BG505.T332N, the pseudoviral equivalent of the immunogen BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, and did not recognize or bind the immunogen either.
Sanders2013
(assay or method development, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The study's goal was to produce modified SOSIP trimers that would reduce the exposure - and, by inference, the immunogenicity - of non-NAb epitopes such as V3. The binding of several modified SOSIP trimers was compared among 12 neutralizing (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGT121, PGT126, 2G12, PGT135, VRC01, CH103, CD4, IgG2, PGT151, 35O22) and 3 non-neutralizing antibodies (14e, 19b, b6). The V3 non-NAbs 447-52D, 39F, 14e, and 19b bound less well to all A316W variant trimers compared to wild-type trimers. Mice and rabbits immunized with modified, stabilized SOSIP trimers developed fewer V3 Ab responses than those immunized with native trimers.
deTaeye2015
(antibody binding site)
-
447D: The study compared various factors affecting the accessibility of epitopes for antibodies targeting the V2 integrin (V2i) region, versus the V3 region. CD4 treament of BaL and JRFL pseudoviruses increased their neutralization sensitivity to V3 MAbs, but not to V2i MAbs. Viruses grown in a glycosidase inhibitor were more sensitive to neutralization by V3, but not V2i, MAbs. Increasing the time of virus-MAb interaction increased virus neutralization by some V2i MAbs and all V3 MAbs. The structural dynamics of V2i and V3 epitopes has important effects in neutralization. The V3 MAbs tested were: 447, 2219, and 2557.
Upadhyay2014
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
447-52D: A computational method, MDE, predicts the presence of neutralization epitopes in the V3 loop solely from the viral sequence and the crystal structure of the antibody. For V3-specific mAbs 2219 and 447-52D, the method accurately predicted the presence of neutralization epitopes in diverse strains of HIV-1. Identification of Ab-targeted neutralization epitopes in silico enables easy prediction of the reactivity of specific mAbs across diverse variants, and facilitates rational design of immunogens.
Shmelkov2014
(computational prediction)
-
447-52D: This study proposes a mimotope model of the V3 crown epitope in which the PR-L and GPG sequences represent the two known epitope binding sites. Rabbit serum to these mimotopes recognized the V3 peptides and moderately decreased the fusion between HIV-1 Env- and CD4-expressing Jurkat cells. MAb 447-52D has been used as V3 epitope core recognizing Ab. The most intriguing characteristic of this mimotope model of the V3 epitope is the absence of the arginine at the position next to the GPG, which offers the flexibility of this phage-displayed linear peptide affecting the correct interaction between the epitope and the antibody tolerating substitutions of the GPG amino acids.
Gazarian2013
(mimotopes)
-
447-52D: Study evaluated 4 gp140 Env protein vaccine immunogens derived from an elite neutralizer donor VC10042, an HIV+ African American male from Vanderbilt cohort. Env immunogens, VC10042.05, VC10042.05RM, VC10042.08 and VC10042.ela, elicited high titers of cross-reactive Abs recognizing V1/V2 regions. 447-52D bound to all 4 trimeric Env.
Carbonetti2014
(elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
447-52D: This study showed that the inability of Env to elicit the production of broadly neutralizing Abs is due to the inability of diverse Env to engage the germ line B cell receptor forms of known bNAbs. 447-52D bound to all the Envs tested except the clade B REJO, the consensus A1 sequence, the clade 405c, and the clade A/E A244. The predicted germ line version of 447-52D did not exhibit any detectable binding against these Envs. Ca2+ influx through the 447-52D BCR was also tested as a function of binding affinity. Removal of selected N-linked glycosylaion sites on Env did not confer binding to the predicted germline 447-52D.
McGuire2014
(antibody interactions, antibody lineage)
-
447-52D: Describes the mutagenesis of plasmid P5Q (a scFv antibody derived from mAb 447). Cites the original mAb 447 as first described by Buchbinder et al. 1992.
Lewis1995
(binding affinity, antibody sequence)
-
447-52D: The sera of 20 HIV-1 patients were screened for ADCC in a novel assay measuring granzyme B (GrB) and T cell elimination and reported that complex sera mediated greater levels of ADCC than anti-HIV mAbs. The data suggested that total amount of IgG bound is an important determinant of robust ADCC which improves the vaccine potency. 447-52D was used as an anti-V3 Ab to study effects of Ab specificity and affinity on ADCC against HIV-1 infected targets.
Smalls-Mantey2012
(assay or method development, effector function)
-
447-52D: Somatic hypermutations are preferably found in CDR loops, which alter the Ab combining sites, but not the overall structure of the variable domain. FWR of CDR are usually resistant to and less tolerant of mutations. This study reports that most bnAbs require somatic mutations in the FWRs which provide flexibility, increasing Ab breadth and potency. To determine the consequence of FWR mutations the framework residues were reverted to the Ab's germline counterpart (FWR-GL) and binding and neutralizing properties were then evaluated. 447-52D had limited neutralizing activity recognizing the V3 loop and carried fewer somatic mutations than bnAbs. Fig S4C described the comparison of Ab framework amino acid replacement vs. interactive surface area on 447-52D.
Klein2013
(neutralization, structure, antibody lineage)
-
447-52D: Polyclonal B cell responses to conserved neutralization epitopes are reported. Cross-reactive plasma samples were identified and evaluated from 308 subjects tested. 447-52D was used as a control mAb in the comprehensive set of assays performed.
Tomaras2011
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
447-52D: The role of V1V2 in the resistance of HIV-1 to neutralizing Abs was studied using a panel of neutralization-sensitive and -resistant HIV-1 variants and through exchanging regions of Env between neutralization-sensitive and -resistant viruses. An increase in the length of the V1V2 loop and/or the number of potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNGS) in that same region of Env was directly involved in the neutralization resistance. The introduction of a shorter V1V2 loop from historical seroconverters into the background of Env of HIV-1 from contemporary seroconverters resulted in significant increase in neutralization sensitivity to MAb 447-52D.
vanGils2011
(glycosylation, neutralization, escape)
-
447-52D: The inhibitory activity of HIV-1-specific Abs against HIV-1 replication in langerhans cells (LCs) and interstitial dendritic cells (IDCs) was analyzed. Five well-known NAbs 447-52D, 4E10, b12, 2G12, 2F5 strongly inhibited HIV-1BaL and HIV-1TV1 replication in LCs and IDCs, and their inhibitory activities were stronger than those measured on PBMCs. Inhibition was more efficient by IgGs than corresponding IgAs, due to an Fc receptor-dependent mechanism, where HIV-1 inhibition occurs by binding of the Fc portion of IgGs to Fc receptors. Blocking the binding of the NAb to the FcRs present on the cell surface of the DCs reduced the inhibitory activity of the IgG 447-52D. Finally, nonneutralizing inhibitory action of 447-52D Fab fragments 240D and 246D 246D, which do not exhibit neutralizing activity on PBMCs, reduced the number of HIV-1BaL-infected LCs and IDCs by 90%.
Peressin2011
(genital and mucosal immunity, dendritic cells)
-
447-52D: Small sized CD4 mimetics (miniCD4s) were engineered. These miniCD4s by themselves are poorly immunogenic and do not induce anti-CD4 antibodies. Stable covalent complexes between miniCD4s and gp120 and gp140 were generated through a site-directed coupling reaction. These complexes were recognized by CD4i antibodies as well as by the HIV co-receptor CCR5 and elicited CD4i antibody responses in rabbits. A panel of MAbs of defined epitope specificities was used to analyze the antigenic integrity of the covalent complexes using capture ELISA. Binding of the cross-linked complex on 447-52D or MN 215 was increased compared with that of gp140 alone.
Martin2011
(mimics, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Signature motifs specific for neutralization epitopes present in the V3 loop crown were used to determine the presence or absence of MAb-specific epitopes in vaccine immunogens and in break-through viruses infecting vaccine and placebo recipients in the VAX003 and VAX004 Phase III clinical trials. Of the six epitopes present in the immunogens and targeted by known NAbs, only the one targeted by anti-V3 NAb 2219 exhibited a significant reduction in occurrence in vaccinated subjects from VAX003 Thailand cohort compared to the placebo group. The signature motif used for MAb 447-52D is P16, R18 in V3-loop position numbers.
Shmelkov2011
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
447-52D: The long-term effect of broadly bNAbs on cell-free HIV particles and their capacity to irreversibly inactivate virus was studied. MPER-specific MAbs potently induced gp120 shedding upon prolonged contact with the virus, rendering neutralization irreversible. The kinetic and thermodynamic requirements of the shedding process were virtually identical to those of neutralization, identifying gp120 shedding as a key process associated with HIV neutralization by MPER bNAbs. Neutralizing and shedding capacity of 7 MPER-, CD4bs- and V3 loop-directed MAbs were assessed against 14 divergent strains. 447-52D induced potent shedding that correlated with its neutralization activity.
Ruprecht2011
(neutralization, kinetics)
-
447-52D: Closely related HIV-1 B clade Envs from a pediatric subject in a late disease differed in their capacity to infect primary macrophages. E153G conferred high levels of macrophage infectivity for several heterologous R5 envelopes, while the reciprocal G153E substitution abrogated infection. Shifts in macrophage tropism were associated with dramatic shifts in sensitivity to the V3 loop MAb 447-52D and soluble CD4, as well as more modest changes in sensitivity to the CD4bs MAb, b12.
Musich2011
(escape)
-
447-52D: This study analyzed the neutralization sensitivity of sequential HIV-1 primary isolates during their natural evolution in 5 subtype B and CRF02_AG HIV-1 infected drug naive individuals to 13 anti-HIV-1 MAbs (including this MAb) directed at epitopes in the V2, V3, CD4bd and carbohydrates. Patient viruses evolved to become more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed at epitopes at V2, V3 and CDbd, indicating that cross sectional studies are inadequate to define the neutralization spectrum of MAb neutralization with primary HIV-1 isolates.
Haldar2011
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: A way to produce conformationally intact, deglycosylated soluble, cleaved recombinant Env trimers by inhibition of the synthesis of complex N-glycans during Env production, followed by treatment with glycosidases under conditions that preserve Env trimer integrity is described to facilitate crystallography and immunogenicity studies. MAb 447–52D bound more strongly to deglycosylated trimers than untreated ones.
Depetris2012
(glycosylation, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Masking signatures were developed and analyzed for 4 anti-HIV V3 loop MAbs, 2219, 3074, 2557, 447-52D. The epitopes were classified as "masked" if their signature motifs were present in a virus, but there was no detectible neutralization by the MAb of the same virus in vitro. The signature motif for MAb 2219 used in the study was R9+K10+[l,V]12+[Y,F]21. Of the 4 MAbs, 2219 neutralized the largest number of pseudoviruses containing its epitope. The 2219 neutralization epitope is unmasked in 25/68 (36.8%) of the viruses containing the 2219 epitope.
Agarwal2011
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: One Env clone (4–2.J45) obtained from a recently infected Indian patient (NARI-IVC4) had exceptional neutralization sensitivity compared to other Envs obtained at the same time point from the same patient. The effect of I424M substitution in three clade B Envs (RHPA4259.7, JRFL and YU2) was tested and 2-45-fold increase was found in their sensitivities to anti-V3 MAbs including 447-52D.
Ringe2011
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: Several soluble gp140 Env proteins recognized by PG9 and PG16 were identified, and the effect of Env trimerization, the requirement for specific amino acids at position 160 within the V2 loop, and the importance of proper gp120-gp41 cleavage for MAb binding to soluble gp140s were investigated along with whether and how the kinetics of PG9 and PG16 binding to soluble gp140 correlates with the neutralizing potencies of these MAbs. In some cases the affinities of PG9/PG16 binding were comparable to those of 447-52D. Lower binding affinity of gp140 ligands to PG9/PG16 than 447D was observed. 447-52D binds to an epitope within the V3 loop of gp120 and interacts very efficiently with monomeric gp120. 447-52D also bound to all clade A Env gp140s tested. The anti-SF162 neutralizing activity of 447-52D decreased when the lysine at position 160 was replaced by an asparagine.
Davenport2011
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The location and extent of conservation of eight protease cleavage sites on HIV-1 gp120 recognized by 3 major human proteases (cathepsins L, S and D) are described along with the effect of cathepsin cleavage on gp120 binding to CD4-IgG and NAbs. 447-52D binding was destroyed with cathepsin L-treated gp120 but preserved with cathepsin D-treated gp120.
Yu2010
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: This review discusses current understanding of Env neutralization by antibodies in relation to epitope exposure and how this insight might benefit vaccine design strategies. This MAb is in the list of current MAbs with notable cross-neutralizing activity.
Pantophlet2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
447-52D: This review outlines the general structure of the gp160 viral envelope, the dynamics of viral entry, the evolution of humoral response, the mechanisms of viral escape and the characterization of broadly neutralizing Abs. It is noted that this MAb predominantly neutralizes clade B viruses and occasionally neutralizes some viruses from non-B clades.
Gonzalez2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, escape, review)
-
447-52D: The expression and characterization of different glycoforms of V3-Fc fusion protein along with its binding to HIV-neutralizing Abs 2G12 and 447-52D was examined. The binding affinity of 447-52D was high for complex type glycoform V3-Fc-CT and high-mannose type glycoforms of V3-Fc (V3-Fc-HM, V3-Fc-M9 and the two mutants:N301A and Fc-N297A) following a quick association/dissociation kinetic process but it was higher for gp120 with extremely slow dissociation process. The affinity to 447-52D was not significantly affected by removal of the N-glycans at the N297, N301 and N332 sites.
Yang2010a
(glycosylation, binding affinity)
-
447-D52: This paper shows that a highly neutralization-resistant virus is converted to a neutralization sensitive virus with a rare single mutation D179N in the C-terminal portion of the V2 domain for several antibodies. 447D-52, however, did not neutralize any of the mutants tested.
ORourke2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: A side-by-side comparison was performed on the quality of Ab responses in humans elicited by three vaccine studies focusing on Env-specific Abs. V3 Abs with specificities similar to that of 447-52D were elicited nearly ubiquitously in all of the vaccine sera tested, where the sera were able to outcompete binding to 447-52D.
Vaine2010
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: Structure of 447-52D bound to a peptide containing the sequence of the V3 loop was used to derive sensitive and specific signature motifs for its neutralization epitope. 447-52D epitope (16PxR18) was found conserved in 11% of circulating HIV-1 strains, and was highly restricted to subtype B strains. 447-52D neutralized 9% of subtype A pseudovirions, 47% of subtype B, 4% of subtype C, 10% of subtype D and 0% of CRF02_AG.
Swetnam2010
(antibody binding site, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons, structure)
-
447-52D: Peptide ligands for CD4i epitopes on native dualtropic Envs were selected by phage display. The correct exposure of CD4i epitopes was detected by binding with MAb 447-52D, which bound both in the presence or absence of sCD4.
Dervillez2010
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Impact of in vivo Env-CD4 interactions was studied during vaccinations of Rhesus macaques with two Env trimer variants rendered CD4 binding defective (368D/R and 423/425/431 trimers) and wild-type (WT) trimers. Ab binding profiles of the three trimer variants were assessed by binding analyses to different MAbs. V3-directed MAb 447-52D bound similarly to all three trimer variants: WT and 368D/R, and 423/425/431.
Douagi2010
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The effect of presence and absence of V1 loop was assessed using two approaches: remove V1 loop from the soluble trimeric gp140 construct (ΔV1SF162gp140) and second, substitute the V1 loop on SF162gp140 construct with four different V1 loops from 89.6, YU2, JRFL, and HxB2 (heterologous HIV-1 viruses). Deletion or substitution of V1 loop increased resistance to neutralization by 447-52D in 3 out of 5 V1-modified gp140 constructs, although it did not affect the binding to 447-52D. D368R modification to SF162gp120 did not affect the binding to 447-52D but there was a decrease in neutralization activity by 447-52D.
Ching2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52d: Clustering analysis was performed to find patterns of neutralization reactivity for the dataset of 103 patients sera against 20 viruses. The clustering by five MAbs (including 447-52d) against the 20 isolates was less statistically robust than that with serum titers, resulting in three clusters for both cases. The membership in an isolate cluster defined by serum titers was compared with its sensitivity to every MAb to understand the relationship of serum and MAb reactivity. Membership in two out of three clusters did not correlate with sensitivity to 447-52d.
Doria-Rose2010
(neutralization)
-
447: 447 neutralizing activity was assessed against pseudoviruses expressing Envs of diverse HIV-1 subtypes from subjects with acute and chronic infection. IC50 neutralization activity was also statistically assessed based on the area under the neutralization curves (AUC). 447 was able to neutralize 6/57 viruses in U87-based assay and 12/41 viruses in TZM-based assay, including Tier 1 and Tier 2 viruses, viruses of subtypes A, B, C, AG, and viruses from both chronic and acute infections. AUC analysis revealed that 15/57 viruses in the U87-based assay, and 12/41 viruses in the TZM-based assay, were significantly neutralized by this Ab. Thus, the AUC method has the ability to detect low levels of neutralizing activity that otherwise may be missed.
Hioe2010
(assay or method development, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: A set of Env variants with deletions in V1/V2 was constructed. Replication competent Env variants with V1/V2 deletions were obtained using virus evolution of V1/V2 deleted variants. Sensitivity of the evolved ΔV1V2 viruses was evaluated to study accessibility of their neutralization epitopes. 447-52D neutralized all ΔV1V2 variants more potently than wild type virus, indicating better exposure of the 447-52D epitope when V1V2 domain is removed.
Bontjer2010
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: This review discusses recent research done to improve the production, quality, and cross-reactivity of binding Abs, neutralizing Abs, monoclonal Abs with broad neutralizing activity, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC), antibody-dependent cell-mediated viral inhibition (ADCVI), and catalytic Abs. Studies focusing on several aspects of BNAb roles in vaccine development, and studies done to better understand the broad binding capacity of BNAbs are reviewed.
Baum2010
(effector function, neutralization, review)
-
447-52D: GnTI virus (complex glycans of the neutralizing face are replaced by fully trimmed oligomannose stumps), and the N301Q mutant virus (glycan at position 301 is removed), were both significantly more sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D compared to the parental virus. This suggests that the antennae of the complex glycans play a significant role in protecting the V3 loop from Ab binding.
Binley2010
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
447: This human Ab was compared to MAbs 2.2G, 2.3E, 2.5B derived from B-cell cultures from SHIV-infected rhesus macaques and human MAbs 2909, 830A and sCD4. 447 blocked the capture of virions by MAbs 2.2G, 2.3E, 2.5B and human MAb 2909. 447 capture of virions was partially blocked by 2909 and 830A and not blocked by sCD4.
Robinson2010
(binding affinity)
-
447: Two V3-scaffold immunogen constructs were designed and expressed using 3D structures of cholera toxin B (CTB), V3 in the gp120 context, and V3 bound to 447-52D MAb. The construct (V3-CTB) presenting the complete V3 was recognized by 447-52D and by the large majority of other MAbs (18/24), indicating correctly folded and exposed MAb epitopes. V3-CTB induced V3-binding Abs and Abs displaying cross-clade neutralizing activity in immunized rabbits. Short V3-CTB construct, presenting a V3 fragment in conformation observed in complex with 447-52D, showed high affinity binding to 447-52D. Few other MAbs retained the same binding affinities for this construct as for the V3-CTB, indicating that they utilize a binding mode similar to that of 447-52D.
Totrov2010
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, structure)
-
447-52D: A panel of 109 HIV-1 pseudoviruses was assessed for neutralization sensitivities to 447-52D MAb and patient plasma pools from genetically diverse HIV-1 positive samples. Clustering analyses revealed that the 109 viruses could be divided to 4 sub-groups, based on their neutralization sensitivity to the plasma pools: very high (Tier 1A), above-average (Tier 1B), moderate (Tier 2), and low (Tier 3) sensitivity. 3 Tier 1A, 7 Tier 1B, 3 Tier 2 and 1 Tier 3 viruses were found to be sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D.
Seaman2010
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: Neutralizing sensitivity of L669S gp41 mutant virus to 447-52D increased ∼169-fold compared to the wild type virus, indicating that conformational changes in the MPER could alter the exposure of neutralization epitopes in other regions of HIV-1 Env.
Shen2010
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: Neutralization potency of 447-52D was compared to that of HK20 scFv in TZM-based assay using 45 Tier 1 and Tier 2 HIV isolates. 447-52D neutralized 6/45 isolates.
Sabin2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Crystal structures of 2219, 2557, 1006-15D and 3074 MAbs in complex with V3 peptides revealed that these MAbs bind to conserved elements in four regions of the V3: the arch, the circlet, the band, and the V3 peptide main chain backbone. A mimotope that preserved the key structural elements in the circlet and band regions, but with GPG of the arch replaced by a disulfide bond, interacted with broadly reactive MAbs 2557, 1006 and 2219. It did not react with 447-52D nor 268-D, which are dependent on the Arg in the arch. Thus, mimotopes can be constructed that may focus the immune response on structurally conserved elements.
Jiang2010
(antibody binding site, mimotopes, structure)
-
447-52D: B cell depletion in an HIV-1 infected patient using rituximab led to a decline in NAb titers and rising viral load. Recovery of NAb titers resulted in control of viral load, and the newly emerged virus population was examined. Strong binding competition between patient sera and 447-52D was observed.
Huang2010
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: Binding affinity of 447-52D to a minimal peptide was 2-fold weaker than binding of this Ab to gp140 monomers and trimers. The opposite was observed for MAb 4E10.
Xu2010
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: 447-52D ability to bind different Env trimers and its neutralization breadth are reviewed. This review also summarizes data on the evolution of HIV neutralizing Abs, principles of Env immunogen design to elicit broadly neutralizing Abs, and future critical areas of research for development of an Ab-based HIV vaccine.
Hoxie2010
(vaccine antigen design, review)
-
447-52D: 58 mAbs, including 3 broadly neutralizing mAbs, were isolated from memory B cells of HIV-1 infected donors using an improved EBV immortalization method combined with a broad screening strategy. 447-52D neutralization activity was compared to the three new broadly neutralizing mAbs. 447-52D neutralized 88% of Tier 1 and 4% of Tier 2 viruses, the neutralization of Tier 2 viruses being inferior to that of the new mAbs HGN194 and HJ16.
Corti2010
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: 433 Abs were cloned from HIV envelope-binding memory B cells from 6 patients with broadly neutralizing sera. The Abs had neutralizing activity directed against several epitopes on gp120 and the majority neutralized Tier 1 viruses. Tier-2 neutralization was observed only with mixtures of MAbs, but only at high concentrations. 447-52D was used as a control and it neutralized 5/5 Tier 1 and 2/5 Tier 2 viruses.
Scheid2009
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: NAb specificities of a panel of HIV sera were systematically analyzed by selective adsorption with native gp120 and specific mutant variants. The integrity and specificity of gp120 beads in adsorption assay were validated by their ability to adsorb binding activity of 447-52D. gp120 point mutation D368R was used to screen the sera for CD4bs- Abs, and it was shown that this mutant could adsorb binding activity of 447-52D. To test for presence of coreceptor binding region MAbs in sera, gp120 I420 mutant was used. This mutant was recognized by 447-52D at equal levels as the wild type. To test sera for presence of V3 neutralizing activity, V3 peptides were used. These peptides inhibited neutralization mediated by 447-52D. In some of the broadly neutralizing sera, the gp120-directed neutralization was mapped to CD4bs. Some sera were positive for NAbs against coreceptor binding region. A subset of sera also contained NAbs directed against MPER.
Li2009c
(assay or method development)
-
447-52D: 447-52D sequence-independent mode of epitope recognition is reviewed in detail. The review also summarizes on how different modes of Ab binding and recognition are used to overcome viral evasion tactics and how this knowledge may be used to re-elicit responses in vivo.
Kwong2009a
(antibody binding site, review)
-
447-52D: The review discusses the implications of HIV-1 diversity on vaccine design and induction of neutralizing Abs, and possible novel approaches for rational vaccine design that can enhance coverage of HIV diversity. Patterns of within-clade and between-clade diversity in core epitopes of known potent neutralizing Abs is displayed.
Korber2009
(review)
-
447-52D: 447-52D bound to both SF162 wild type and SF162 mutant, carrying only the monomeric form of the Env protein, virions and transfected cells. 447-52D exhibited higher binding activity to SF162 wild type compared to 2909, suggesting that 2909 epitope may not be formed on each trimer.
Kimura2009
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
447-D: FcγR-mediated inhibition and neutralization of HIV by 447-D and other MAbs is reviewed. The review also summarizes the role of ADCC and ADCVI Abs on HIV infection inhibition and neutralization.
Forthal2009
(review)
-
447-52D: The crystal structure for VRC01 in complex with an HIV-1 gp120 core from a clade A/E recombinant strain was analyzed to understand the structural basis for its neutralization breadth and potency. The number of mutations from the germline and the number of mutated contact residues for 447-52D were smaller than those for VRC01.
Zhou2010
(neutralization, structure)
-
447-52D: Resurfaced stabilized core 3 (RSC3) protein was designed to preserve the antigenic structure of the gp120 CD4bs neutralizing surface but eliminate other antigenic regions of HIV-1. RSC3 did not show binding to 447-52D. Memory B cells were selected that bound to RSC3 and full IgG mAbs were expressed. Three newly detected MAb VRC1 did not enhance neutralization by 447-52D. Addition of RSC3 had no effect on 447-52D neutralization of HXB2.
Wu2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52d: Insertion of one or two disulfide bonds at specific residues in a V3 MN peptide sequence was used to constrain the conformations of the peptides to β-hairpin structures recognized by the 447-52d (postulated R5 V3 conformation). Insertion of two disulfide bonds increased the tendency of the peptides to form β-hairpin structures but it required replacement of residues reacting strongly with 447-52d Ab. Thus, peptides constrained by one disulfide bond are suggested to be more attractive candidates for immunogens that could elicit neutralizing Abs.
Mor2009
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52d: The epitope sequence motif of 447-52d was precisely defined based on the 3D structure of the MAb complexed with V3MN peptide. Depending on how snugly V3 loop side chains are bound by the Ab, the complex can be divided into 3 subdomains. The specific epitope motif suggested by the complex structure was shown to be R315. 93% of HIV sequences with R315 in the Los Alamos HIV database fit the ag-binding site of MAb 447-52d. A set of V3 chimeric pseudoviruses, carrying either R315 or Q315, were tested for their sensitivity to neutralization by 447-52d. R315 viruses were neutralized very well while Q315 viruses were neutralized much more weakly. Thus, the sequence motif for the neutralization epitope recognized by 447-52d is R315. The neutralization-relevant epitope sequence motif of 447-52d was calculated to be present in approximately 13% of worldwide HIV isolates, predominating in subtype B isolates.
Cardozo2009
(neutralization, optimal epitope)
-
447-52D: NL4.3 virus was cultured with cyclotriazadisulfonamide (CADA) and CADA-resistant virus was selected. 447-52D MAb showed enhanced binding to the CADA-resistant virus compared to wildtype. In addition, CADA-resistant virus was more susceptible to neutralization by this MAb. The mutations in CADA-resistant virus are suggested to stabilize the conformation of gp120 and reduce glycosylation.
Vermeire2009
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: C2EB5 MAb was isolated from mice immunized with a peptide from C2 region. C2EB5 neutralization and binding affinity to virions of clades A, B, C, D and CRF01_AE was compared to that of 447-52D.
Sreepian2009
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Binding of 447-52D to gp120 was not inhibited by YZ23, an Ab derived from mice immunized with eletcrophilic analogs of gp120 (E-gp120), indicating no overlap of these MAb epitopes.
Nishiyama2009
-
447-52D: V3 peptides were constrained in various ways to stabilize the β-hairpin conformation. This study showed that it is possible to constrain V3 peptides to this conformation that is recognized by 447-52D while maintaining high-affinity binding to this Ab. Peptides designed to mimic either the R5A or R5B conformation had higher affinity to 447-52D than peptides designed to mimic X4 conformation.
Mester2009
(antibody binding site, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: This Ab neutralized JRFL strain but many folds higher concentrations of the Ab were needed compared to neutralization of SF162 and SS1196 by 447-52D. 447-52D did not neutralize strain 3988.25.
Hioe2009
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:3-15*07, IGHD:3-10, D-RF:3, IGHJ:6. There was a preferential usage of the VH5-51 gene segment for V3 Abs. The usage of the VH4 family for the V3 Abs was restricted to only one gene segment, VH4-59, and the VH3 gene family was used at a significantly lower level by these Abs. The V3 Abs preferentially used the JH3 and D2-15 gene segments.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
447-52D: An international collaboration (NeutNet) was organized to compare the performance of a wide variety of HIV-1 neutralization assays performed in different laboratories. Four neutralizing agents were evaluated: 4E10, 447-52D, sCD4 and TriMab (equal mixture of 2F5, 2G12 and b12). In general, there were clear differences in assay sensitivities that were dependent on both the neutralizing agent and the virus. No single assay was capable of detecting the entire spectrum of neutralizing activities.
Fenyo2009
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
447-52D: Two chimeras were constructed from a new HIV-2KR.X7 proviral scaffold where the V3 region was substituted with the V3 from HIV-1 YU2 and Ccon, generating subtype B and C HIV-2 V3 chimera. Both chimera were sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D, while the wildtype derived viruses HIV-2KR.X4 and HIV-2KR.X7 were completely resistant. A V3 linear peptide from HIV-1 JR-FL was able to absorb all 447-52D neutralizing activity and a peptide from HIV-1 YU2 removed most of the 447-52D neutralizing activity. Fc-V3 fusion proteins from subtypes B and C completely eliminated 447-52D-mediated neutralization. However, 447-52D was unable to neutralize the primary HIV-1 BORI virus while it neutralized the HIV-2-BORI V3 chimera. Competition assays showed that most of the plasmas derived from subtype B and C chronically infected individuals had neutralizing activity that was V3 specific and dependent upon residued in the V3 crown that overlap 447-52D and F425 B4e8 epitopes. Also, 55 early founder viral Env proteins from 47 subjects acutely infected with subtype B virus were tested for susceptibility to 447-52D. 51 viruses were resistant to neutralization by 447-52D, but many showed sensitivity to this Ab once conformational changes were induced with sCD4. This indicates that the V3 region in primary HIV-1 Envs is highly conserved but is shielded from Ab recognition.
Davis2009
(HIV-2, neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
447-52D: Two different but genetically related viruses, CC101.19 and D1/85.16, which are resistant to small molecule CCR5 inhibitors, and two clones from their inhibitor sensitive parental strain CC1/85, were used to analyze interactions of HIV-1 with CCR5. CC101.19 had 4 substitutions in the V3 region and D1/85.16 had 3 changes in gp41. 447-52D bound detectably to gp120 of CC101.19 but this was greatly reduced compared to the binding of 447-52D to gp120 of the other three viruses. The opposite was true for 447-52D binding to the V3 peptide alone of the four viruses. 447-52D neutralized CC101.19 but did not neutralize the other three viruses. This indicates that the V3 region of CC101.19 has become unusually accessible to V3 Abs.
Berro2009
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: This report investigated whether mannose removal alters gp120 immunogenicity in mice. Approximately 55 mannose residues were removed from gp120 by mannosidase digestion creating D-gp120 for immunization. 447-52D was able to bind to D-gp120 comparably as to the untreated gp120, indicating that the mannosidase digestion did not affect the antigenicity of gp120.
Banerjee2009
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Reactivity and structure of 447-52D and 537-10D MAbs was compared. 447-52D was able to bind 22/24 V3 peptides from a panel of clades A, B and C, including peptides with both GPGR and GPGQ motifs, while 537-10D only reacted with peptides containing the GPGR motif. Crystal structures of the Fab fragments of 447-52D and 537-10D in complex with 23-mer peptides derived from clades A and B viruses, respectively, was determined. Although both MAbs had highly similar antigen binding sites, differences in their binding and neutralization activities were found to be due to subtile differences in their structures. The structure analyses explained the ability of 447-52D to bind to both GPGR and GPGQ motifs.
Burke2009
(antibody binding site, neutralization, structure)
-
447-52D: Data is summarized on the X-ray crystal structures resolution and NMR studies of 447-52D.
Sirois2007
(review, structure)
-
447-52D: This review summarizes data on possible vaccine targets for elicitation of neutralizing Abs and discusses whether it is more practical to design a clade-specific than a clade-generic HIV-1 vaccine. Development of a neutralizing Ab response in HIV-1 infected individuals is reviewed, including data that show no apparent division of different HIV-1 subtypes into clade-related neutralization groups. Also, a summary of the neutralizing activity of MAb 447-52D in different HIV-1 clades is provided.
McKnight2007
(variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
447-52D: This review provides information on the HIV-1 glycoprotein properties that make it challenging to target with neutralizing Abs. 447-52D neutralization properties and binding to HIV-1 envelope, and current strategies to develop versions of the Env spike with functional trimer properties for elicitation of broadly neutralizing Abs, such as 447-52D, are discussed. In addition, approaches to target cellular molecules, such as CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, and MHC molecules, with therapeutic Abs are reviewed.
Phogat2007
(review)
-
447-52D: This review summarizes current knowledge on the various functional properties of antibodies in HIV-1 infection, including 447-52D MAb, in vivo and in vitro activity of neutralizing Abs, the importance and downfalls of non-neutralizing Abs and antibodies that mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and the complement system, and summarizes data on areas that need future investigation on Ab-mediated immune control.
Huber2007
(review)
-
447-52D: 447-52D structure, binding, neutralization, and strategies that can be used for vaccine antigen design to elicit anti-V3 Abs, are reviewed in detail.
Lin2007
(review, structure)
-
447/52D: This review summarizes 447-52D Ab epitope, properties and neutralization activity.
Kramer2007
(review)
-
447-52D: Current insights into CTLs and NAbs, and their possible protective mechanisms against establishment of persistent HIV/SIV infection are discussed. Pre- and post-infection sterile and non-sterile protection of NAbs against viral challenge, and potential role of NAbs in antibody-mediated antigen presentation in modification of cellular immunity, are reviewed. 447-52D anti-viral activity in suppression of viral rebound in HIV-1 infected humans undergoing structured treatment interruptions is described.
Yamamoto2008
(supervised treatment interruptions (STI), review)
-
447-52D: A mathematical model was developed and used to derive transmitted or founder Env sequences from individuals with acute HIV-1 subtype B infection. All but three of the transmitted or early founder Envs were resistant to neutralization by 447-52D, indicating that the coreceptor binding surfaces on transmitted/founder Envs are conformationally masked. sCD4 could trigger a conformational change in gp120 of these Envs and render the virus susceptible to neutralization by 447-52D.
Keele2008
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
447-52D: A significantly higher level of 447-52D bound to gp120 complexed with anti-CD4bs mAbs than to gp120 alone or in complex with other non-CD4bs Abs, indicating that binding of anti-CD4bs Abs to gp120 increases exposure of specific V3 MAb epitopes.
Visciano2008
(antibody binding site)
-
447D: Trimeric envelope glycoproteins with a partial deletion of the V2 loop derived from subtype B SF162 and subtype C TV1 were compared. 447D recognized both B and C trimers with similar efficiency, indicating that the epitope recognized by this Ab is exposed and preserved in the subtype C trimers. Subtype C trimer had many biophysical, biochemical, and immunological characteristics similar to subtype B trimer, except for a difference in the three binding sites for CD4, which showed cooperativity of CD4 binding in subtype C but not in subtype B.
Srivastava2008
(binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: In order to assess whether small molecule CCR5 inhibitor resistant viruses were more sensitive to neutralization by NAbs, two escape mutant viruses, CC101.19 and D1/85.16, were tested for their sensitivity to neutralization by 447-52D, compared to the sensitivity of CC1/85 parental isolate and the CCcon.19 control isolate. The CC101.19 escape mutant has 4 sequence changes in V3 while the D1/85.16 has no sequence changes in V3 and relies on other sequence changes for its resistance. None of the control or resistant viruses were sensitive for neutralization by 447-52D, although 447-52D bound strongly to gp120 from CC1/85 and CC101.19. These results indicate that V3-dependent and -independent changes responsible for CCR5 inhibitor resistance do not necessarily alter the exposure of V3 to some of the V3 Abs.
Pugach2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: To examine sequence and conformational differences between subtypes B and C, several experiments were performed with 11 MAbs regarding binding and neutralization. Both binding and neutralization studies revealed that the 11 MAbs could be divided in three different groups, and that the most differences between the subtypes were located in the stem and turn regions of V3. 447-52D belonged to the group 2 MAbs, which are able to bind subtype B but not subtype C gp120, and are able to bind both V3 peptides. 447-52D was able to bind subtype B V3 in the subtype C Env backbone chimera, but not the reverse, indicating that 447-52D binds to a structure created by the subtype B V3 sequence that is not impacted by the gp120 backbone. For subtype B, 447-52D required an R18 residue in order to bind, but the binding was not significantly affected by the H13R change. For subtype C, Q18R mutation did not restore binding to gp120, but the R13H-Q18R double mutation did. Peptide binding was affected only by the R13H mutation, indicating that the poor binding of Q18R gp120 mutant has a structural basis. 447-52D was not able to neutralize JR-FL isolate, and somewhat neutralized SF162. A chimeric SF162 variant with a JR-FL-like V3 sequence was hypersensitive to neutralization by this Ab.
Patel2008
(neutralization, binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Requirements for elicitation of CD4i Abs were examined by immunizing non-primate monkeys, rabbits, and human-CD4 transgenic (huCD4) rabbits with trimeric gp140. The trimers used for the immunizations were inoculated with PBMCs, and CD4-specific binding to live CD3+/CD4+/CD8- cells was verified by recognition of the trimers by 447-52D.
Forsell2008
-
447-52D: To test whether the conformation change of Env induced by CD4 affects the breadth and potency of 447-52D neutralization, 447-52D was tested in the presence or absence of sCD4 in neutralization of a panel of 12 subtype B and 12 subtype C Env-pseudoviruses. Without sCD4, 447-52D neutralized 2 subtype B and 0 subtype C viruses. With sCD4 present, 447-52D neutralized 7 subtype B and 1 subtype C virus, indicating that neutralization resistance of some viruses to 447-52D is due to a lack of exposure of the V3 loop. Neutralization of JRFL, ADA, and YU2 isolates by 447-52D increased with increased dose of sCD4. A virus with GPGG sequence at the tip of the V3 loop did not react with 447-52D, indicating that amino acid sequence variation may account for the neutralization resistance of other viruses. The presence of b12 and F105 did not induce 447-52D mediated neutralization of JRFL virus, indicating that b12 and F105 do not induce a conformation alternation in Env that exposes V3 loop to 447-52D.
Wu2008
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: The neutralization profile of early R5, intermediate R5X4, and late X4 viruses from a rhesus macaque infected with SHIV-SF162P3N was assessed. The parental R5 virus was resistant to neutralization by 447-52D, while both the R5X4 intermediate and the late X4 viruses were sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D. The enhanced neutralization susceptibility of the dual-tropic and the X4 viruses to 447-52D suggests adoption of an increasingly open conformation of the Env gp120 over time.
Tasca2008
(co-receptor, neutralization)
-
447D: 447D neutralized 6 of the 15 subtype B isolates tested, of which 5 were resistant to neutralization by MAbs 19b, 39F, CO11, F2A3, F530, LA21 and LE311. Angle of interaction between 447D and V3 was shown by superimposing the Fab fragment of the Ab with V3. 447D was shown to interact with V3 from a nearly identical angle as MAb 58.2.
Pantophlet2008
(antibody binding site, neutralization, structure)
-
447-52D: A new purification method was developed using a high affinity peptide mimicking CD4 as a ligand in affinity chromatography. This allowed the separation in one step of HIV envelope monomer from cell supernatant and capture of pre-purified trimer. Binding of 447-52D to gp120SF162 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the miniCD4 allows the separation of HIV-1 envelope with intact 447-52D epitope. gp140DF162ΔV2 was purified by the miniCD4 method to assess its ability to capture gp140 trimers. Purified gp140DF162ΔV2 was recognized by 447-52D, and the k-off value for 447-52D was reduced compared to gp120SF162 monomer, consistent with the gp140DF162ΔV2 trimeric conformation. Binding of 447-52D to gp140DF162ΔV2 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the SF162 trimer antigenicity was preserved.
Martin2008
(assay or method development, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Variable domains of three heavy chain Abs, the VHH, were characterized. The Abs were isolated from llamas, who produce immunoglobulins devoid of light chains, immunized with HIV-1 CRF07_BC, to gp120. It was hypothesized that the small size of the VHH, in combination with their protruding CDR3 loops, and their preference for cleft recognition and binding into active sites, may allow for recognition of conserved motifs on gp120 that are occluded from conventional Abs. 447-52D provided some inhibition of binding of the three neutralizing VHH Abs to gp120, suggesting that 447-52D imposes steric hinderance to binding of the VHH Abs to gp120.
Forsman2008
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: 24 broadly neutralizing plasmas from HIV-1 subtype B and C infected individuals were investigated using a series of mapping methods to identify viral epitopes targeted by NAbs. V3 Ab activity was measured by three assays where 447-52D was used as a control. A V3 peptide derived from the N-terminal part of the V3 loop, including the crown, potently inhibited neutralization of several HIV-1 isolates by 447-52D, indicating that V3 Abs are commonly directed to the N-terminal part of the V3 loop.
Binley2008
(neutralization)
-
447: 32 human HIV-1 positive sera neutralized most viruses from clades A, B, and C. Two of the sera stood out as particularly potent and broadly reactive. Two CD4-binding site defective mutant Env proteins were generated to evaluate whether Abs to the CD4-binding site are involved in the neutralizing activity of the two sera. The integrity of the wildtype and mutant proteins was tested to their reactivity to the 447 Ab.
Li2007a
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: HIV-1 env clones resistant to cyanovirin (CV-N), a carbohydrate binding agent, showed amino acid changes that resulted in deglycosylation of high-mannose type residues in the C2-C4 region of gp120. Compared to their parental virus HIV-1 IIIB, these resistant viruses were over 200 times more sensitive to 447-52D, indicating that deglycosylation in CV-N resistant viruses is likely to make the V3 loop more accessible to Abs.
Hu2007
(antibody binding site, neutralization, escape)
-
447-52D: Five amino acids in the gp41 N-terminal region that promote gp140 trimerization (I535, Q543, S553, K567 and R588) were considered. Their influence on the function and antigenic properties of JR-FL Env expressed on the surfaces of pseudoviruses and Env-transfected cells was studied. Various non-neutralizing antibodies bind less strongly to the Env mutant, but neutralizing antibody binding is unaffected. 447-52D captured modestly (but not significantly) fewer mutant pseudovirions than wild type, neutralization was not tested.
Dey2008
(binding affinity)
-
447D: The study explores how the V1 loop of Env influences the neutralization susceptibilities of heterologous viruses to antibodies elicited by the SF162gp140 immunogen. When the V1 loop of the heterologous isolates was replaced by the V1 loop present on the DF162go140 immunogen, these isolates became susceptible to neutralization by anti-V3 MAb 447D, indicating that the V1 loop plays an important role in the resistance of heterologous viruses to neutralization.
Ching2008
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: The study determined a crystal structure of Fab 447-52D in complex with a V3 peptide NNTRKSIHLGPGRAFYATGDIIG at 2.1 A resolution. The structure revealed an extended CDR H3 loop that forms a β-sheet with the peptide, with predominantly main-chain hydrogen bonds contacts. There was high structural homology with reported structures of other Fab 447-52D complexes, indicating that the V3 loop may adopt a small set of conserved structures around the crown of the β-hairpin.
Dhillon2008
(structure)
-
447-52D: 447-52D bound only to V3 peptides from the three isolates (MN, SHIVsf162p3 and clade B consensus) which contain GPGR motif. 447-52D did not recognize one B consensus peptide that did contain GPGR motif. Glycosylation of the position 154 in V1 was more important for the protection of the virus from this Ab than glycosylation of the position 195 in V2. 447-52D neutralized chimeric viruses 89.6/SF162V1, JRFL/SF162V1, YU2/SF162V1 and HxB2/SF162V1 more efficiently than their wildtype counterparts, indicating that the accessibility of the V3 loop is affected by the nature of the V1 loop.
Derby2007
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The epitope recognition sequence for this Ab was introduced into the corresponding region of SIVmac239 either alone or together with epitopes for Abs 2F5 and 4E10. The infectivity and replicative capacity of SIV239/447-52D and SIV239/447-52D/2F5/4E10 were, however, not detectable and too low, respectively, to be used for further analyses.
Yuste2006
(SIV)
-
447-52D: The neutralizing capacity and binding of this Ab to the V3 region of gp120, as well as resistance to neutralization in different HIV-1 clades are reviewed.
Pantophlet2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization, review, subtype comparisons, structure)
-
447-52D: This Ab was shown to neutralize SF162 and the neutralization sensitivity increased in the SF162 variant with a JR-FL V3 loop, SF162(JR-FL V3). In contrast, a great reduction in sensitivity to neutralization was observed in the SF162(JR-FL V1/V2) variant and was somewhat restored in the SF162(JR-FL V1/V2/V3) variant, indicating that the masking of the V1/V2 loop plays a much greater role in restricting neutralization sensitivity than the variations in V3. This Ab was shown to neutralize viruses with V3 sequences from several different subtypes (B, F, A1, CRF02_AG, H and CRF01_AE) except subtype C. This Ab failed to neutralize SF162(JR-FL V1/V2) with V3 derived from different HIV-1 clades indicating effective V1/V2-mediated masking of several HIV-1 clades. The effect on the neutralization sensitivity of the residue at the crown of the V3 loop (position 18) was shown to be great for this Ab.
Krachmarov2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: The G314E escape variant highly resistant to KD-247 was shown to be more sensitive to 447-52D than the wildtype virus. 447-52D was shown to be able to bind well to both mutant and wildtype surface-expressed Envs.
Yoshimura2006
(escape, binding affinity)
-
47-52D: Binding of this Ab to three V3 peptides was compared to binding of Ab 2219 to the same peptides. 447-52D was shown to bind to V3 MN and V3 UG1033 but not to V3 UR29.
Stanfield2006
(variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: This MAb was derived from plasma from a patient with env clade B virus with the GPGR V3 motif. When cross-reactivity was tested, this Ab bound to the V3subtypeB-fusion protein containing GPGR motif but not to the V3subtypeA-fusion protein containing GPGQ motif. This Ab was also shown to be able to neutralize both clade B psSF162 (GPGR) and clade C psMW965 (GPGQ) virus, and four of subtype B and two of non-B primary isolates.
Gorny2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Escape variants with the V3 P313L mutation, or V2 R166K, D167N and P175L mutations, were resistant or partially resistant, respectively, to 447-52D. Binding of 447-52D to surface-expressed Env proteins with the V2 mutations was lowered compared to the binding to viruses with no mutations. Binding to surface-expressed Env proteins with the V3 mutation was comparable to the negative control values. Binding affinity of this Ab for different combinations of V2 and V3 mutants was also tested.
Shibata2007
(escape, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: This Ab was used in the analysis of clade C gp140 (97CN54) antigenicity and was shown to bind with relatively high avidity to the molecule and to dissociate substantially within 420 s. It was also used as a positive control in the neutralization assay.
Sheppard2007a
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Compared to the full-length Con-S gp160, chimeric VLPs containing Con-S ΔCFI gp145 with transmembrane (TM) and cytoplasmic tail (CT) sequences derived from the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), showed higher binding capacity to 447-52D. Chimeric VLPs with only CT derived from MMTV also showed higher binding capacity to 447-52D than the full-length Con-S gp160, however, not as high as the chimeric CT-TM VLPs.
Wang2007a
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The major infectivity and neutralization differences between a PBMC-derived HIV-1 W61D strain and its T-cell line adapted counterpart were conferred by the interactions of three Env amino acid substitutions, E440G, D457G and H564N. Chimeric Env-pseudotyped virus Ch5, containing all three of the mutations, was more neutralization sensitive to 447-52D than Ch2, which did not contain any of these mutations. Env-pseudotyped viruses containing D457G mutation alone, or in combination with E440G or H564N, were also more sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D than Ch2.
Beddows2005a
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: The structure of the 447-52D MAb and its mechanisms of the V3 loop GPGR motif recognition and binding are reviewed. Engineering of Abs based on revealed structures of broadly neutralizing MAbs is discussed.
Burton2005
(antibody binding site, review, structure)
-
447-52D: Monomeric gp120 and trimeric gp140CF proteins synthesized from an artificial group M consensus Env gene (CON6) bound well to 447-52D, indicating correct exposure of the 447-52D epitope.
Gao2005a
(antibody binding site)
-
447-D: This Ab was used as a control in a peptide adsorption assay. 447-D neutralized the SF162 primary isolate to 95%. When 447-D was pre-incubated with BaL or YU2 V3 loop peptides, nearly all neutralizing activity was inhibited.
Grundner2005
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: The crystal and nuclear magnetic resonance structures of V3-reactive antibody-peptide complexes were examined. 447-52D completely surrounded V3, suggesting a high degree of accessibility for generating an immune response. Accessibility of V3 to this MAb is shown in a 3D figure.
Huang2005
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
447-52D: A series of genetically modified Env proteins were generated and expressed in both insect and animal cells to be monitored for their antigenic characteristics. For 447-52D, five of the modified proteins expressed in insect cells, including 3G mutant (mutations in 3 glycosylation sites), dV1V2 mutant (V1V2 deletions), 3G-2G, 3G-dV2, and 3G-dV2-1G (1G being a mutation near the TM domain), showed higher binding than the wildtype. Of these, the 3G-dV2-1G mutant showed highest binding to 447-52D, indicating that glycosylation of the gp41 domain may affect exposure of the V3 loop. Expressed in animal cells, mutants dV2 and 3G-dV1V2 showed increased binding to 447-52D at relatively high Ab concentrations compared to the wildtype Env.
Kang2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
447D: Full-length gp160 clones were derived from acute and early human HIV-1 infections and used as env-pseudotyped viruses in neutralization assays for their characterization as neutralization reference agents. 2 out of 19 pseudoviruses were sensitive to neutralization by 447D, as was the SF162.LS strain.
Li2005a
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
447: Pseudoviruses expressing HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins from BL01, BR07 and 89.6 strains were compared in neutralization assays to replication competent clone derived from transfection of 293T cells (IMC-293T) and to the IMC-293T derived from a single passage through PBMC (IMC-PBMC). The neutralization responses of pseudoviruses and corresponding IMC-293T to 447 were similar, while a significant decrease in viral neutralization sensitivity to 447 was observed for the BR07 and 89.6 IMC-PBMC viruses. The decrease was associated with an increase in average virion envelope glycoprotein content on the PBMC-derived virus.
Louder2005
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
447-52D: The structure of V3 HIV-1 peptides derived from IIIB and MN isolates when bound to 447-52D was determined by NMR. It was observed that the two different V3 peptides assumed same N-terminal strand conformation when bound to this Ab. V3 peptide IIIB bound to Ab 0.5β differed from the same peptide bound to 447-52D by 180 degrees N-terminal chain orientation. It is suggested that the conformation of an Ab-bound V3 peptide is dictated not only by the peptide sequence but also by an induced fit to the specific Ab. Dominant interactions of 447-52D with three conserved N-terminal residues may be responsible for the broadly neutralizing capability of this Ab.
Rosen2005
(antibody binding site, co-receptor, variant cross-reactivity, structure)
-
447-52D: This review summarizes data on the role of NAb in HIV-1 infection and the mechanisms of Ab protection, data on challenges and strategies to design better immunogens that may induce protective Ab responses, and data on structure and importance of MAb epitopes targeted for immune intervention. The importance of standardized assays and standardized virus panels in neutralization and vaccine studies is also discussed.
Srivastava2005
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, review, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: gp120 alone and gp120 bound to CD4D12 (the first two domains of human CD4) or to M9 (a 27-residue CD4 analog) were used to immunize guinea pigs. Only sera from the gp120-CD4D12 immunized animals showed broadly neutralizing activity. Sera from gp120-CD4D12 and gp120 immunized animals competed equally well with 447-52D, indicating that the V3-loop was accessible in both immunogens.
Varadarajan2005
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: This review focuses on the importance of neutralizing Abs in protecting against HIV-1 infection, including mechanisms of Ab interference with the viral lifecycle, Ab responses elicited during natural HIV infection, and use of monoclonal and polyclonal Abs in passive immunization. In addition, vaccine design strategies for eliciting of protective broadly neutralizing Abs are discussed. MAbs included in this review are: 2F5, Clone 3 (CL3), 4E10, Z13, IgG1b12, 2G12, m14, 447-52D, 17b, X5, m16, 47e, 412d, E51, CM51, F105, F425, 19b, 2182, DO142-10, 697-D, 448D, 15e and Cβ1.
McCann2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, review, structure)
-
447-52D: MAbs were investigated in different neutralization formats, including the standard format that measures activity over the entire infection period and several formats that emphasize various stages of infection. Visualization of Env-Ab binding was conducted by BN-PAGE band shifts. 447-52D binding to trimer was completely dependent on sCD4, consistent with neutralization.
Crooks2005
(antibody binding site, assay or method development, neutralization)
-
447-52D: This review summarizes data on 447-52D-V3 and 447-52D-V3 peptide X-ray crystallographic structures and NMRs and its neutralization capabilities. The binding mechanism of this Ab to V3 explains its ability to neutralize a wide array of viral isolates. Conformation of the V3 peptide bound to 447-52D is very similar to its conformation when bound to mouse Abs 50.1, 59.1 and 83.1.
Stanfield2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, review, structure)
-
447-52D: A T-cell line adapted strain (TCLA) of CRF01_AE primary isolate DA5 (PI) was more neutralization sensitive to 447-52D than the primary isolate. Mutant virus derived from the CRF01_AE PI strain, that lacked N-linked glycosylation at position 197 in the C2 region of gp120, was significantly more sensitive to neutralization by 447-52D then the PI strain. Mutants at positions 138 in V1 and 461/464 in V5 showed lower sensitivity to neutralization by 447-52D. Deglycosylated subtype B mutants at positions 197 and 234 were slightly more neutralizable by 447-52D.
Teeraputon2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: In addition to gp120-gp41 trimers, HIV-1 particles were shown to bear nonfunctional gp120-gp41 monomers and gp120-depleted gp41 stumps on their surface. 447-52D moderately neutralized wildtype virus particles. It effectively bound to nonfunctional monomers but not to gp120-gp41 trimers. Monomer binding did not correlate with neutralization, but it did correlate with virus capture. It is hypothesized that the nonfunctional monomers on the HIV-1 surface serve to divert the Ab response, helping the virus to avoid neutralization.
Moore2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
447D: Macaques were immunized with SF162gp140, ΔV2gp140, ΔV2ΔV3gp140 and ΔV3gp140 constructs and their antibody responses were compared to the broadly reactive NAb responses in a macaque infected with SHIV SF162P4, and with pooled sera from humans infected with heterologous HIV-1 isolates (HIVIG). 447D recognized SF162gp140 and ΔV2gp140 equally and failed to recognize ΔV2ΔV3gp140 and ΔV3gp140.
Derby2006
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: 447-52D was not found to inhibit binding of gp120 to DC-SIGN. This Ab bound to Fc-gp120 construct but not to the chimeras missing the V3 loop.
Binley2006
(binding affinity)
-
447-52D: 29 subtype B V3 peptides were designed and used for immunization of guinea pigs. Peptides that induced Abs that neutralized more than 3 HIV isolates were shown to bind to this Ab better than peptides unable to induce neutralization of any of the HIV-1 primary isolates.
Haynes2006
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Cloned Envs (clades A, B, C, D, F1, CRF01_AE, CRF02_AG, CRF06_cpx and CRF11_cpx) derived from donors either with or without broadly cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies were shown to be of comparable susceptibility to neutralization by 447-52D.
Cham2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Guinea-pigs were immunized with 447-52D epitope inserted at three different surface V3 loop locations in the small Escherichia coli Trx protein in order to generate a competent immunogen. Only one complex was shown to successfully generate anti-V3 Abs capable of out-competing 447-52D binding to gp120 and recognizing the same epitope as this Ab. However, these 447-52D-like Abs were not able to affect neutralization of JRFL and BAL.
Chakraborty2006
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: The ability of this Ab to inhibit viral growth was increased when macrophages and immature dendritic cells (iDCs) were used as target cells instead of PHA-stimulated PBMCs. It is suggested that inhibition of HIV replication by this Ab for macrophages and iDCs can occur by two distinct mechanisms, neutralization of infectivity involving only the Fab part of the IgG, and, an IgG-FcγR-dependent interaction leading to endocytosis and degradation of HIV particles.
Holl2006
(dendritic cells)
-
447-52D: Inhibition of R5 HIV replication by monoclonal and polyclonal IgGs and IgAs in iMDDCs was evaluated. The neutralizing activity of 447-52D was observed to be higher in iMDDCs than in PBLs and PHA-stimulated PBMCs. A 90% reduction of HIV infection was observed without induction of MDDC maturation by this MAb. It was also demonstrated that binding of this MAb to HIV-1 was necessary for inhibition of iMDDC infection. Increased expression of FcγRI on iMDDCs increased inhibition of HIV by 447-52D, suggesting the involvement of this receptor in the HIV-inhibitory activity of this MAb.
Holl2006a
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
447-52D: The neutralization potency of this Ab against 7 HIV-1 primary isolates was compared to the neutralization potency of the anti-V3 MAb KD-247. Same Ab concentrations were needed for neutralization of the MN, N-NIID, and 92TH022 isolates, while higher concentrations of 447-52D were needed for the neutralization of the rest of the HIV-1 isolates suggesting KD-247 is more potent.
Eda2006a
-
447-52D: In this study the neutralization breadth of F425 B4e8 was assessed using a panel of 40 primary HIV-1 isolates, and 447-52D was found to have a similar profile, and was used as a control to gauge the effects of the amino acid substitutions in the V3 region. As expected, replacing Arg 315 with Ala or Gln and Pro 313 with Ala reduced binding affinity of this 447-52D substantially. Ala substitutions of residues in positions 304-309 and 319-320 also unexpectedly resulted in diminished binding affinity of the Ab.
Pantophlet2007
(antibody binding site, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Z13e1, a high affinity variant of Fab Z13, was identified through targeted mutagenesis and affinity selection against gp41 and an MPER peptide. Z13e1 showed 100-fold improvement in binding affinity for MPER antigens over Z13. 447-52D was used as a control in this study. 447-52D was shown to clearly bind to monomers of gp120-gp41 while trimer binding was negligible, in accordance with its modest neutralization potency against HIV-1 JR-FL.
Nelson2007
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: G1 and G2 recombinant gp120 proteins, consisting of 2F5 and 4E10, and 4E10 epitopes, respectively, engrafted into the V1/V2 region of gp120, were tested as an immunogen to see if they could elicit MPER antibody responses. Deletion of V1/V2 from gp120, or its replacement with G1 and G2 grafts, did not greatly affect binding of 447-52D to gp120. Shortening of the N and C termini of the V3 loop enhanced the binding of 447-52D.
Law2007
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: This review describes the effectiveness of the current HIV-1 immunogens in eliciting neutralizing antibody responses to different clades of HIV-1. It also summarizes different evasion and antibody escape mechanisms, as well as the most potent neutralizing MAbs and their properties. MAbs reviewed in this article are: 2G12, IgG1b12, 2F5, 4E10, A32, 447-52D and, briefly, D50. Novel immunogen design strategies are also discussed.
Haynes2006a
(neutralization)
-
447-52D: Viruses from early and late infection of a macaque with SHIV SF162P4 were resistant to contemporaneous serum that had broadly reactive NAbs. SF162 was highly susceptible to neutralization by anti-V3 MAbs 447D and P3E1, as well as anti-V1 MAb P3C8, while envelopes cloned from this animal at 304 days and at 643 days (time of death) post infection had developed resistance to all three of these antibodies.
Kraft2007
(neutralization, escape)
-
447-52D: This Ab was used to help define the antigenic profile of envelopes used in serum depletion experiments to attempt to define the neutralizing specificities of the broadly cross-reactive neutralizing serum. Peptides containing epitopes for 447-52D did not inhibit neutralization by broadly neutralizing sera from two clade B and one clade A infected asymptomatic individuals, indicating that the V3 epitope for this MAb did not account for the broad neutralizing activity observed. 447-52D bound to JR-FL and JR-CSF gp120 monomers but not to core JR-CSF gp120 monomer.
Dhillon2007
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
447-52D: Antigens were designed to attempt to target immune responses toward the IgG1b12 epitope, while minimizing antibody responses to less desirable epitopes. One construct had a series of substitutions near the CD4 binding site (GDMR), the other had 7 additional glycans (mCHO). The 2 constructs did not elicit b12-like neutralizing antibodies, but both antigens successfully dampened other responses that were intended to be dampened while not obscuring b12 binding. V3 MAbs (447-52D, 19b, F245-B4e8 and 39F) bound to the GDMR antigen, but either did not bind or had diminished binding to mCHO.
Selvarajah2005
(vaccine-induced immune responses, Th2)
-
447-52D: This study is about the V2 MAb C108g, which is type-specific and neutralizes BaL and HXB2. JR-FL is a neutralization resistant strain; modification of JRFL at V2 positions 167 and 168 (GK->DE) created a C108g epitope, and C108g could potently neutralize the modified JR-FL. The modification in V2 also increased neutralization sensitivity to V3 MAbs 4117c, 2219, 2191, and 447-52D (447-52D was the only one of the 4 V3 MAbs that could neutralize the unmodified JRFL); but only had minor effects on neutralization by CD4BS MAb 5145A, and broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, and 2F5.
Pinter2005
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: The HIV-1 Bori-15 variant was adapted from the Bori isolate for replication in microglial cells. Bori-15 had increased replication in microglial cells and a robust syncytium-forming phenotype, ability to use low levels of CD4 for infection, and increased sensitivity to neutralization by sCD4 and 17b. Four amino acid changes in gp120 V1-V2 were responsible for this change. Protein functionality and integrity of soluble, monomeric gp120-molecules derived from parental HIV-1 Bori and microglial-adapted HIV-1 Bori-15 was assessed in ELISA binding assays using CD4BS MAbs F105 and IgG1b12, glycan-specific 2G12, and V3-specific 447-52D, and were unchanged. Association rates of sCD4 and 17b were not changed, but dissociation rates were 3-fold slower for sCD4 and 14-fold slower for 17b.
Martin-Garcia2005
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: The epitope for the MAb D19 is conserved and embedded in V3. D19 is unique in that for R5 viruses, it was cryptic and did not bind without exposure to sCD4, and for X4 and R5X4 isolates it was constitutively exposed. It had an overlapping binding region with MAbs 447-52D, B4e8, and 268-D, but different reactivity patterns and fine specificity. While B4e8 and 447-52D could bind to the R5 virus BaL in the absence of sCD4, treatment with sCD4 did increase the binding of both B4e8 and 447-52D, but did not impact their ability to neutralize BaL.
Lusso2005
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Sera from subtype A infected individuals from Cameroon have antibodies that react strongly with subtype A and subtype B V3 loops in fusion proteins, and neutralize SF162 pseudotypes, while sera from 47 subtype B infected individuals reacted only with subtype B. Sera from Cameroon did not neutralize primary A or B isolates, due to indirect masking by the V1/V2 domain rather than due to loss of the target epitope. Neutralization by anti-V3 B clade specific MAbs 447-52D and 4117C was fully blocked by a clade V3 loop fusion protein, but not an A clade fusion protein, while Cameroonian sera neutralization was fully blocked by both A and B clade fusion proteins.
Krachmarov2005
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Of 35 Env-specific MAbs tested, only 2F5, 4E10, IgG1b12, and two CD4BS adjacent MAbs (A32 and 1.4G) and gp41 MAbs (2.2B and KU32) had binding patterns suggesting polyspecific autoreactivity, and similar reactivities may be difficult to induce with vaccines because of elimination of such autoreactivity. 447-52D has no indication of polyspecific autoreactivity.
Haynes2005
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52d: 2909 is a human anti-Env NAb that was selected by a neutralization assay and binds to the quaternary structure on the intact virion. ELISA-based competition assays and subsequent mutational analysis determined that the CD4BS and V2 and V3 loops contribute to the 2909 epitope: 2909 binding was inhibited by MAbs 447-52d (anti-V3), 830A (anti-V2), and IgG1b12 (anti-CD4BS) and sCD4. 2909 was not inhibited by MAbs 670, 1418, nor 2G12.
Gorny2005
-
447-52D: By adding N-linked glycosylation sites to gp120, epitope masking of non-neutralizing epitopes can be achieved leaving the IgG1b12 binding site intact. This concept was originally tested with the addition of four glycosylation sites, but binding to b12 was reduced. It was modified here to exclude the C1 N-terminal region, and to include only three additional glycosylation sites. This modified protein retains full b12 binding affinity and it masks other potentially competing epitopes, and does not bind to 21 other MAbs to 7 epitopes on gp120, including 447-52D.
Pantophlet2004
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: 93 viruses from different clades were tested for their neutralization cross-reactivity using a panel of HIV antibodies. Neutralization outside of the B clade was very rare, and seemed to depend on the presence of a GPGR V3 tip, which is rare outside of the B clade.
Binley2004
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Analysis of the conformation of 447-52D in complex with the V3MN18 peptide (gp12 aa 310-329, KRKRIHIGPGRAFYTTKN) was undertaken using solid state NMR. The bound peptide had a well-defined constrained structure that was in good agreement with solution NMR and crystallographic studies.
Sharpe2004
(structure)
-
447-52D: A primary isolate, CC1/85, was passaged 19 times in PBMC and gradually acquired increased sensitivity to FAb b12 and sCD4 that was attributed to changes in the V1V2 loop region, in particular the loss of a potential glycosylation site. The affinity for sCD4 was unchanged in the monomer, suggesting that the structural impact of the change was manifested at the level of the trimer. The passaged virus, CCcon19, retained an R5 phenotype and its neutralization susceptibility to other Abs was essentially the same as CC1/85. 447-52D did not neutralize the primary or passaged variant.
Pugach2004
(variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
447-52D: V1V2 was determined to be the region that conferred the neutralization phenotype differences between two R5-tropic primary HIV-1 isolates, JRFL and SF162. JRFL is resistant to neutralization by many sera and MAbs, while SF162 is sensitive. All MAbs tested, anti-V3, -V2, -CD4BS, and -CD4i, (except the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12, which neutralized both strains), neutralized the SF162 pseudotype but not JRFL, and chimeras that exchanged the V1V2 loops transferred the neutralization phenotype. 5/6 anti-V3 MAbs, including 447-52D, had similar binding affinity to soluble SF162 and JR-FL rgp120s, although the V3 loop differs at three positions (HigpgrafyTtgE for JR-FL and TigpgrafyAtgD for SF162).
Pinter2004
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Sera from two HIV+ people and a panel of MAbs were used to explore susceptibility to neutralization in the presence or absence of glycans within or adjacent to the V3 loop and within the C2, C4 and V5 regions of HIV-1 SF162 env gp120. The loss of the any of three glycans within or adjacent to the V3 loop (GM299 V3), C2 (GM292 C2), C3 (GM329 C3) increased neutralization susceptibility to 447-52D, but C4 (GM438 C4) or V5 (GM454 V5) removal did not make SF162 more sensitive. V3 glycans tended to shield V3 loop, CD4 and co-receptor MAb binding sites, while C4 and V5 glycans shielded V3 loop, CD4, gp41 but not co-receptor MAb binding sites. Selective removal of glycans from a vaccine candidate may enable greater access to neutralization susceptible epitopes.
McCaffrey2004
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of the V3 MAbs 694-98D and 447-52D, that both bind near the tip of the loop, was decreased by both thrombin and trypsin.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: V3 MAb neutralization is influenced by retaining the epitope, exposure on the intact virion, mobility during CD4-induced conformational change, and affinity. Anti-V3 MAbs selected using V3 peptides neutralize less effectively than V3 MAbs selected using fusion proteins or gp120, suggesting antigenic conformation is important. This MAb was selected using V3 peptides, but was an exception in that it is cross-neutralizing. 447-52D neutralized 12/13 clade B viruses.
Gorny2004
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: This review provides summaries of Abs that bind to HIV-1 Env. There are many V3 MAbs, many neutralize some TCLA strains, and a subset can also neutralize some primary isolates. The set that can cross-neutralize primary isolates (2182, 2191, 2219, 2412, 2442, 2456) bind V3 but are conformationally sensitive, suggesting some structural conservation despite sequence variation. These MAbs have distinct epitopes relative to 447-52D, a MAb directed at the tip of the V3 loop that also can neutralize many primary isolates. Although 447-52D was selected using a peptide, it has conformational characteristics. Inter-clade cross-neutralization by anti-V3 conformation-dependent MAbs is reduced.
Gorny2003
(antibody binding site, review)
-
447-52D: This paper attempts to engineer a gp120 molecule that would focus the immune response onto the IgG1b12 epitope. Adding a glycosylation sequon (P313N) to the V3 loop knocked out binding to anti-V3 MAbs loop 2, 19b and 447-52-D.
Pantophlet2003b
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: scFv 4KG5 reacts with a conformational epitope that is formed by the V1V2 and V3 loops and the bridging sheet (C4) region of gp120 and is influenced by carbohydrates. Of a panel of MAbs tested, only NAb b12 enhanced 4KG5 binding to gp120 JRFL. MAbs to the following regions diminished 4KG5 binding: V2 loop, V3 loop, V3-C4 region, CD4BS. MAbs directed against C1, CD4i, C5 regions didn't impact 4KG5 binding. These results suggest that the orientation or dynamics of the V1/V2 and V3 loops restricts CD4BS access on the envelope spike, and IgG1b12 can uniquely remain unaffected by these loops. This was one of the V3 MAbs used.
Zwick2003a
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: The Fv fragment (composed of just the light and heavy variable regions, and the smallest intact binding unit of an Ab) of 447-52 D was expressed and purified. Preliminary NMR with the peptide epitope indicates that an NMR structure determination is feasible.
Kessler2003
(antibody sequence, structure)
-
447-52D: The SOS mutant envelope protein introduces a covalent disulfide bond between gp120 surface and gp41 transmembrane proteins into the R5 isolate JR-FL by adding cysteines at residues 501 and 605. Pseudovirions bearing this protein bind to CD4 and co-receptor bearing cells, but do not fuse until treatment with a reducing agent, and are arrested prior to fusion after CD4 and co-receptor engagement. 447-52D was able to neutralize the SOS protein better than the wildtype, but did not neutralize SOS well when added post-attachment, as the V3 loop is involved in co-receptor engagement.
Binley2003
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Virion capture assays are not a good predictor of neutralization, and the presentation of epitopes using this assay seems to be different from that of functional Envelope spikes on primary isolates -- F105 and b6 could efficiently block the b12-mediated capture of infectious virions in a virus capture, but did not inhibit b12 neutralization -- Ab 447-52D was able to potently neutralize 89.6 and to neutralize JR-CSF at a high concentration but poorly neutralized ADA -- b12 was potent at neutralizing the three primary virions JR-CSF, ADA, and 89.6, but anti-V3 Abs 447-52D and 19b, which did not neutralize JR-CSF and ADA, captured amounts of p24 equal to or higher than the amounts captured by the neutralizing Ab b12.
Poignard2003
(antibody binding site, assay or method development, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Review of NAbs.
Ferrantelli2002
-
447-52D: Transgenic mice carrying human genes allowing production of fully human MAbs were used to rapidly create a panel of anti-HIV gp120 MAb producing hybridomas by immunization with HIV SF162 gp120 -- the previously described human MAbs 5145A(CD4BS) , 4117C (plus others, V3) and 697D (and SC258, V2) were used as controls.
He2002
-
447-52D: Conformation-dependent anti-V3 loop Abs may be more cross-reactive, so six new V3 MAbs were generated -- the six new MAbs all bind to the tip of the V3 loop and cross-compete with the MAb 447-52D and are conformationally sensitive -- MAbs showed cross-clade binding to native, intact virions of clades A(N=2), B(N=4), and F(N=2), limited binding to C(N=3) and D(N=3), and did not bind to CRF01(subtype E, N=2) -- the strength binding was highly correlated with percent neutralization using the ghost cell or PHA blast assay -- five well-characterized MAbs were used as controls: anti-V3 447-52D (anti-V3 MAb for competition and neutralization studies), 654 (anti-CD4BS used as a conformation-sensitive MAb control), 1331A (anti-C5 used as a linear binding site MAb control), MAb 246 (anti-gp41 MAb that bound to primary isolates of all clades) -- 447-52D bound to primary isolates from all clades except CRF01 (E), was conformationally sensitive and showed the some of the most potent neutralizing activity.
Gorny2002
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: The feasibility of determining the NMR structure of the V3(MN) peptide bound to the 447-52D Fab fragment was tested and a general strategy for obtaining NMR structures of V3 peptide-Fab fragments developed -- preliminary NMR spectra for 447-52D complexed to a 23 amino acid V3 peptide was obtained.
Sharon2002
(structure)
-
447-52D: Oligomeric gp140 (o-gp140) derived from R5 primary isolate US4 was characterized for use as a vaccine reagent---antigen capture ELISA was used to compare the antigenicity of gp120 and o-gp140 using a panel of well characterized MAbs---447-D recognized the gp120 monomer much more readily than o-gp140, suggesting the V3 loop is less exposed on o-gp140 and on intact virions.
Srivastava2002
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: A panel of 12 MAbs was used to identify those that could neutralize the dual-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 89.6 -- six gave significant neutralization at 2 to 10 ug/ml: 2F5, 50-69, IgG1b12, 447-52D, 2G12, and 670-D six did not have neutralizing activity: 654-D, 4.8D, 450-D, 246-D, 98-6, and 1281 -- no synergy, only additive effects were seen for pairwise combinations of MAbs, and antagonism was noted between gp41 MAbs 50-69 and 98-6, as well as 98-6 and 2F5.
Verrier2001
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Abs against the V3 loop (50.1, 58.2, 59.1, 257-D, 268-D, 447-52D), CD4BS (IgG1b12, 559-64D, F105), CD4i (17b), and to gp41 (2F5, F240) each showed similar binding efficiency to Env derived from related pairs of primary and TCLA lines (primary: 168P and 320SI, and TCLA: 168C and 320SI-C3.3), but the TCLA lines were much more susceptible to neutralization suggesting that the change in TCLA lines that make them more susceptible to NAbs alters some step after binding -- the dissociation constant, Kd of 447-52D for the cell associated primary and TCLA Envs was equal, 3nM.
York2001
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
447-52D: Six mutations in MN change the virus from a high-infectivity neutralization resistant phenotype to low-infectivity neutralization sensitive -- V3, CD4BS, and CD4i MAbs are 20-100 fold more efficient at neutralizing the sensitive form -- the mutation L544P reduced binding of all MAbs against gp120 by causing conformational changes.
Park2000
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: A panel of 47 human MAbs was tested against 26 HIV-1 group M primary isolates from clades A through H -- 19 V3 MAbs were tested, and of 494 combinations, 44% displayed some viral binding -- V3 MAbs tended to have the most cross-reactive binding to clade A, B, C, and D isolates, less to E, F, G, and H -- 447-52D showed the highest cross-reactivity, bound to 24/26 viruses tested, but achieved 90% neutralization only against MN, 50% against CA5, and no neutralization was observed for 3 other isolates tested.
Nyambi2000
(subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Called 447D -- SF162 is a neutralization-resistant HIV-1 isolate -- N-linked glycosylation modifications in the V2 loop of the SF162 gp120 revealed that these sites prevent neutralization by CD4BS MAbs (IgG1b12 and IgGCD4), and protect against neutralization by V3 MAbs (447D and 391-95D) -- V2-region glycosylation site mutations did not alter neutralization resistance to V2 MAbs (G3.4 and G3.136) or CD4i MAbs (17b and 48d) -- V2 glycosylation site modification allows infection of macrophages, probably due to glycosylated forms requiring fewer CCR5 molecules for viral entry.
Ly2000
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Ab responses, because of their capacity to alter antigen uptake and processing, can influence helper T cell responses -- CD4BS MAbs or serum Ig from HIV+ individuals inhibited proliferative responses of gp120 specific T cells -- V3 MAbs 447-52-D and 268-10-D did not affect proliferation.
Hioe2000
-
447-52D: To determine the antigenicity of virus killed by thermal and chemical inactivation, retention of conformation-dependent neutralization epitopes was examined, and exposure of CD4BS epitopes was found to be enhanced (MAbs IgG1b12, 205-46-9, and 205-43-1) -- binding to 2G12 and 447-52D epitopes was essentially unaltered -- the 17b CD4i epitope was also exposed.
Grovit-Ferbas2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Binding of panel of 21 MAbs to soluble oligomeric gp140 versus gp41 or gp120 monomers was compared -- no MAb was oligomer specific, though anti-V3 and CD4BS MAbs reacted better with the oligomer and V2 and C5 tended to favor the monomer -- V3 MAbs 447-52D, 838-D, and 1334 bound with a 7-10 fold preference for the oligomer.
Gorny2000b
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: rgp120 derived from a R5X4 subtype B virus, HIV-1 W61D, was used to vaccinate healthy volunteers and the resulting sera were compared with sera from HIV-1 positive subjects and neutralizing MAbs -- TCLA strains showed enhanced 447-52D neutralization sensitivity relative to PBMC-adapted lines (32X increase between HIV-1(M2424/PBMC(p0)) and HIV-1(M2424/H9(p9)) and a >128X increase between HIV-1(W61D/PBMC) and HIV-1(W61D/SupT1) isolates)
Beddows1999
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: The presence of leukocyte function-associated molecule 1 (LFA-1) promotes virus infectivity and hinders neutralization, and anti-LFA-1 MAbs can enhance the neutralizing effect of anti-HIV V3 MAb 447-52D and anti-HIV CD4BS MAb IgG1b12 -- non-neutralizing anti-HIV CD4BS MAb 654-D did not become neutralizing in the presence of anti-LFA-1 MAbs.
Hioe1999
-
447-52D: MAb peptide-reactivity pattern clustered with the immunological related MAbs: 1334, 419, 504, 447, 453 and 537 -- the core amino acids GP tended to be critical for reactivity in this group -- 447 reacted with peptides containing GPGR, but also with many lacking this sequence (GPGQ, for example), and it failed to react with 2/14 peptides containing GPGR, illustrating the importance of context.
Zolla-Pazner1999a
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Review of clade specificity and anti-V3 HIV-1-Abs.
Zolla-Pazner1999b
(review, subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Using a whole virion-ELISA method, 18 human MAbs were tested for their ability to bind to a panel of 9 viruses from clades A, B, D, F, G, and H -- 447-52D was the most potent and cross-reactive of 18 human MAbs tested and was the only MAb which bound to virions from isolates CA20 (subtype F), CA13 (subtype H), and VI526 (subtype G)
Nyambi1998
(subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Kinetic parameters were measured, and the association rates were similar, but dissociation rate constants were quite variable for V3 MAbs, 1324E was comparable to 447-52D.
Gorny1998
(kinetics)
-
447-52D: Ab from gp120 vaccinated individuals prior to infection, who subsequently became HIV infected, could not achieve 90% neutralization of the primary virus by which the individuals were ultimately infected -- these viruses were not particularly refractive to neutralization, as determined by their susceptibility to neutralization by MAbs 2G12, IgG1b12, 2F5 and 447-52D.
Connor1998
-
447-52D: The MAb and Fab binding to the oligomeric form of gp120 and neutralization were highly correlated -- authors suggest that neutralization is determined by the fraction of Ab sites occupied on a virion irrespective of the epitope.
Parren1998
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Called 447-52-D -- The tip of the MN V3 loop was inserted into cold causing human rhinovirus 14 (HRV14) -- chimeras were immunoselected, and chimeric viruses were neutralized by anti-V3 loop antibodies, and 447-52D was among the Abs used -- chimeric viruses elicited potent NAbs in guinea pigs against ALA-1 and MN.
Smith1998
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Inhibits binding of Hx10 to both CD4 positive and negative HeLa cells.
Mondor1998
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Called 447-D -- 447-D resistance took longer to acquire in virus with the M184V substituted RT, and had the form (AAC N to TAC Y) at position 5 of the V3 loop, rather than the GPGR to GPGR resistance found with wildtype RT.
Inouye1998
-
447-52D: Used as a control for comparison to five V3 RF selected antibodies -- 447-52D was reactive with A, B, and C clade peptides, but not E.
Gorny1997
(subtype comparisons)
-
447-52D: Abs that recognize discontinuous epitopes can identify mimotopes from a phage peptide display library -- 447-52D has an epitope involving the tip of the V3 loop, that was previously studied with this method Keller1993 -- in Keller et al., with no competition, LxGPxR was the most common six-mer, 38% of the peptides -- after competition with a gp120 IIIB ligand (QRGPGR)i, RGPxR was the most common and one peptide had the sequence QRGPGR, showing type specific mimotopes can be enriched by strain specific ligand competition protocols Boots1997.
Keller1993,Boots1997
(antibody binding site, mimotopes)
-
447-52D: Called 447 -- gp120 can inhibit MIP-1alpha from binding to CCR5, but this inhibitory effect is blocked by pre-incubation of gp120 with three anti-V3 MAbs: 447, 257, 1027 -- MAb 670 which binds in the C5 region had no effect.
Hill1997
(co-receptor)
-
447-52D: Neutralizes TCLA strains but not primary isolates.
Parren1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Viral binding inhibition by 447-D was correlated with neutralization (all other neutralizing MAbs tested showed some correlation except 2F5)
Ugolini1997
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Four primary isolates showed distinct patterns of sensitivity to neutralization by polyclonal sera or plasma and MAbs -- BZ167 was the only isolate inhibited by all polyclonal sera and plasma tested, and was also neutralized by 8/17 MAbs, in particular anti-V3 loop (419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, and 838-D), anti-CD4bd (559/64-D, 654-D and 830-D and a cluster II of gp41 directed MAb (98-6) -- isolates 92HT593 and 91US056 were neutralized by V3 loop (419-D, and 447-52D)and cluster II gp41 (98-6) MAbs at higher concentrations -- US4 was neutralized by some of the polyclonal sera/plasma tested and not at all by MAbs individually or by a cocktail of ten MAbs consisting of 419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, 838-D, 559/64-D, 654-D, 450-D, 670-D, 1281-D and 98-6.
Hioe1997b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Tested using a resting cell neutralization assay.
Hioe1997
(assay or method development)
-
447-52D: Study shows neutralization is not predicted by MAb binding to JRFL monomeric gp120, but is associated with oligomeric Env binding -- 447-52D bound monomer, oligomer, and neutralized JRFL.
Fouts1997
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: In a multilaboratory blinded study, failed to consistently neutralize any of nine B clade primary isolates -- many of these isolates had the GPGR motif at the apex of the V3 loop.
DSouza1997
(assay or method development, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Review: called 447-52-D -- only four epitopes have been described which can stimulate a useful neutralizing response to a broad spectrum of primary isolates, represented by the binding sites of MAbs: 447-52-D, 2G12, Fab b12, and 2F5.
Sattentau1996
(variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
447-52D: Neutralizes JR-FL -- strongly inhibits gp120 interaction with CCR-5 in a MIP-1beta-CCR-5 competition study.
Trkola1996b
(co-receptor, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Called 447-52-D -- The sulfated polysaccharide curdlan sulfate (CRDS) binds to the Envelope of T-tropic viruses and neutralizes virus -- CRDS inhibits 447-52D binding.
Jagodzinski1996
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Neutralizing, no viral enhancing activity. Epitope provided as GPGR, but no details are given.
Forthal1995
(complement, enhancing activity)
-
447-52D: Review: the V3 loop motif GPGR is not common outside subtype B isolates, MAb 19b is more cross-reactive than 447-52D.
Moore1995c
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Binding affected by identity of amino acids flanking GPGR core -- poor breadth of primary virus neutralization.
Moore1995b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Neutralization of primary and prototype laboratory HIV-1 isolates using a resting cell assay enhances sensitivity.
Zolla-Pazner1995a
(assay or method development, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Serotyping study using flow-cytometry -- bound only to GPGR V3 loop tips.
Zolla-Pazner1995
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Ab-mediated activation of complement on HIV+ cells is higher than Ab independent activation---what has been termed "Ab independent" in fact results in part from IgM in normal human serum that is HIV-cross-reactive.
Saarloos1995
(complement)
-
447-52D: Called 447 -- The tip of the V3 loop was presented in a mucin backbone -- higher valency correlates with stronger affinity constant.
Fontenot1995
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Called 447d -- Formalin inactivation of virus at 0.1% formalin for 10 hours at 4 degrees was optimal for inactivation of virus while maintaining epitope integrity.
Sattentau1995
(vaccine antigen design)
-
447-52D: Competition studies with human sera from seroconverting individuals showed that anti-CD4 BS antibodies can arise very early in infection, comparable or prior to anti-V3 antibodies.
Moore1994d
(acute/early infection)
-
447-52D: Mild oxidation of carbohydrate moieties does not alter binding.
Gorny1994
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: GPGQ in MAL resulted in enhanced dissociation -- GPGQ in CM234 or K14T did not bind -- binding affected by identity of amino acids flanking GPGR core.
VanCott1994
(antibody binding site)
-
447-52D: Neutralization synergy in combination with CD4 binding domain MAbs.
Laal1994
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: Requires GPxR at the tip of the V3 loop, common in B clade -- neutralized primary isolates.
Conley1994
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Complement mediated virolysis of IIIB, but not in the presence of sCD4.
Spear1993
(complement)
-
447-52D: Additive neutralization of MN and SF2 when combined with CD4 binding site MAb F105 -- supra-additive neutralization of RF.
Cavacini1993
(antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: Peptide phage library showed that any of the residues ADGLMNQRS in the X position tolerated in peptides that react well with the antibody.
Keller1993
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Neutralizes MN and IIIB: GPGR, and binds SF2: GPGR.
Gorny1993
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Reacts with MN, NY5, CDC4, SF2, RF, WM52, and HXB2.
Karwowska1992a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
447-52D: Describes production of mAb 447-D by EBV transformation of PBMC from an HIV-infected individual, followed by fusion with a heteromyeloma. 60-fold increase in neutralization potency when combined 1:1 with human MAb 588-D.
Buchbinder1992
(antibody generation, antibody interactions)
-
447-52D: Requires GPXR at the tip of the V3 loop -- neutralizes a broad array of B clade lab isolates.
Gorny1992
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, variant cross-reactivity)
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Corti2010
Davide Corti, Johannes P. M. Langedijk, Andreas Hinz, Michael S. Seaman, Fabrizia Vanzetta, Blanca M. Fernandez-Rodriguez, Chiara Silacci, Debora Pinna, David Jarrossay, Sunita Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh, Betty Willems, Maria J. Zekveld, Hanna Dreja, Eithne O'Sullivan, Corinna Pade, Chloe Orkin, Simon A. Jeffs, David C. Montefiori, David Davis, Winfried Weissenhorn, Áine McKnight, Jonathan L. Heeney, Federica Sallusto, Quentin J. Sattentau, Robin A. Weiss, and Antonio Lanzavecchia. Analysis of Memory B Cell Responses and Isolation of Novel Monoclonal Antibodies with Neutralizing Breadth from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. PLoS One, 5(1):e8805, 2010. PubMed ID: 20098712.
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Emma T. Crooks, Penny L. Moore, Douglas Richman, James Robinson, Jeffrey A. Crooks, Michael Franti, Norbert Schülke, and James M. Binley. Characterizing Anti-HIV Monoclonal Antibodies and Immune Sera by Defining the Mechanism of Neutralization. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):101-113, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720980.
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Thaddeus M. Davenport, Della Friend, Katharine Ellingson, Hengyu Xu, Zachary Caldwell, George Sellhorn, Zane Kraft, Roland K. Strong, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Binding Interactions between Soluble HIV Envelope Glycoproteins and Quaternary-Structure-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies PG9 and PG16. J. Virol., 85(14):7095-7107, Jul 2011. PubMed ID: 21543501.
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Davis2009
Katie L. Davis, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Hui Li, Julie M. Decker, Olaf Kutsch, Lynn Morris, Aidy Salomon, Abraham Pinter, James A. Hoxie, Beatrice H. Hahn, Peter D. Kwong, and George M. Shaw. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 2 (HIV-2)/HIV-1 Envelope Chimeras Detect High Titers of Broadly Reactive HIV-1 V3-Specific Antibodies in Human Plasma. J. Virol., 83(3):1240-1259, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 19019969.
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Depetris2012
Rafael S Depetris, Jean-Philippe Julien, Reza Khayat, Jeong Hyun Lee, Robert Pejchal, Umesh Katpally, Nicolette Cocco, Milind Kachare, Evan Massi, Kathryn B. David, Albert Cupo, Andre J. Marozsan, William C. Olson, Andrew B. Ward, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, and John P Moore. Partial Enzymatic Deglycosylation Preserves the Structure of Cleaved Recombinant HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. J. Biol. Chem., 287(29):24239-24254, 13 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22645128.
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Derby2006
Nina R. Derby, Zane Kraft, Elaine Kan, Emma T. Crooks, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, James M. Binley, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Antibody Responses Elicited in Macaques Immunized with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) SF162-Derived gp140 Envelope Immunogens: Comparison with Those Elicited during Homologous Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4 and Heterologous HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 80(17):8745-8762, Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16912322.
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Derby2007
Nina R. Derby, Sean Gray, Elizabeth Wayner, Dwayne Campogan, Giorgos Vlahogiannis, Zane Kraft, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Isolation and Characterization of Monoclonal Antibodies Elicited by Trimeric HIV-1 Env gp140 Protein Immunogens. Virology, 366(2):433-445, 30 Sep 2007. PubMed ID: 17560621.
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Dervillez2010
Xavier Dervillez, Volker Klaukien, Ralf Dürr, Joachim Koch, Alexandra Kreutz, Thomas Haarmann, Michaela Stoll, Donghan Lee, Teresa Carlomagno, Barbara Schnierle, Kalle Möbius, Christoph Königs, Christian Griesinger, and Ursula Dietrich. Peptide Ligands Selected with CD4-Induced Epitopes on Native Dualtropic HIV-1 Envelope Proteins Mimic Extracellular Coreceptor Domains and Bind to HIV-1 gp120 Independently of Coreceptor Usage. J. Virol., 84(19):10131-10138, Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20660187.
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deTaeye2015
Steven W. de Taeye, Gabriel Ozorowski, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Miklos Guttman, Jean-Philippe Julien, Tom L. G. M. van den Kerkhof, Judith A. Burger, Laura K. Pritchard, Pavel Pugach, Anila Yasmeen, Jordan Crampton, Joyce Hu, Ilja Bontjer, Jonathan L. Torres, Heather Arendt, Joanne DeStefano, Wayne C. Koff, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Dirk Eggink, Ben Berkhout, Hansi Dean, Celia LaBranche, Shane Crotty, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, P. J. Klasse, Kelly K. Lee, John P. Moore, Ian A. Wilson, Andrew B. Ward, and Rogier W. Sanders. Immunogenicity of Stabilized HIV-1 Envelope Trimers with Reduced Exposure of Non-Neutralizing Epitopes. Cell, 163(7):1702-1715, 17 Dec 2015. PubMed ID: 26687358.
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deTaeye2018
Steven W. de Taeye, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Andrea Vecchione, Enzo Scutigliani, Kwinten Sliepen, Judith A. Burger, Patricia van der Woude, Anna Schorcht, Edith E. Schermer, Marit J. van Gils, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Ian A. Wilson, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Rogier W. Sanders. Stabilization of the gp120 V3 Loop through Hydrophobic Interactions Reduces the Immunodominant V3-Directed Non-Neutralizing Response to HIV-1 Envelope Trimers. J. Biol. Chem., 293(5):1688-1701, 2 Feb 2018. PubMed ID: 29222332.
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Dey2008
Antu K. Dey, Kathryn B. David, Neelanjana Ray, Thomas J. Ketas, Per J. Klasse, Robert W. Doms, and John P. Moore. N-Terminal Substitutions in HIV-1 gp41 Reduce the Expression of Non-Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins on the Virus. Virology, 372(1):187-200, 1 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18031785.
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Dhillon2007
Amandeep K. Dhillon, Helen Donners, Ralph Pantophlet, Welkin E. Johnson, Julie M. Decker, George M. Shaw, Fang-Hua Lee, Douglas D. Richman, Robert W. Doms, Guido Vanham, and Dennis R. Burton. Dissecting the Neutralizing Antibody Specificities of Broadly Neutralizing Sera from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Donors. J. Virol., 81(12):6548-6562, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17409160.
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Dhillon2008
Amandeep K. Dhillon, Robyn L. Stanfield, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Constance Williams, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Ian A. Wilson. Structure Determination of an Anti-HIV-1 Fab 447-52D-Peptide Complex from an Epitaxially Twinned Data Set. Acta. Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr., D64(7):792-802, Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18566514.
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Doria-Rose2010
Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Rachel M. Klein, Marcus G. Daniels, Sijy O'Dell, Martha Nason, Alan Lapedes, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Stephen A. Migueles, Richard T. Wyatt, Bette T. Korber, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Breadth of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific Neutralizing Activity in Sera: Clustering Analysis and Association with Clinical Variables. J. Virol., 84(3):1631-1636, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19923174.
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Douagi2010
Iyadh Douagi, Mattias N. E. Forsell, Christopher Sundling, Sijy O'Dell, Yu Feng, Pia Dosenovic, Yuxing Li, Robert Seder, Karin Loré, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam. Influence of Novel CD4 Binding-Defective HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens on Neutralizing Antibody and T-Cell Responses in Nonhuman Primates. J. Virol., 84(4):1683-1695, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19955308.
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DSouza1997
M. P. D'Souza, D. Livnat, J. A. Bradac, S. H. Bridges, the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Antibody Selection Working Group, and Collaborating Investigators. Evaluation of monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 primary isolates by neutralization assays: performance criteria for selecting candidate antibodies for clinical trials. J. Infect. Dis., 175:1056-1062, 1997. Five laboratories evaluated neutralization of nine primary B clade isolates by a coded panel of seven human MAbs to HIV-1 subtype B envelope. IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 showed potent and broadly cross-reactive neutralizing ability; F105, 447/52-D, 729-D, 19b did not neutralize the primary isolates. PubMed ID: 9129066.
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Eda2006
Yasuyuki Eda, Toshio Murakami, Yasushi Ami, Tadashi Nakasone, Mari Takizawa, Kenji Someya, Masahiko Kaizu, Yasuyuki Izumi, Naoto Yoshino, Shuzo Matsushita, Hirofumi Higuchi, Hajime Matsui, Katsuaki Shinohara, Hiroaki Takeuchi, Yoshio Koyanagi, Naoki Yamamoto, and Mitsuo Honda. Anti-V3 Humanized Antibody KD-247 Effectively Suppresses Ex Vivo Generation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 and Affords Sterile Protection of Monkeys against a Heterologous Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection. J. Virol., 80(11):5563-5570, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16699037.
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Eda2006a
Yasuyuki Eda, Mari Takizawa, Toshio Murakami, Hiroaki Maeda, Kazuhiko Kimachi, Hiroshi Yonemura, Satoshi Koyanagi, Kouichi Shiosaki, Hirofumi Higuchi, Keiichi Makizumi, Toshihiro Nakashima, Kiyoshi Osatomi, Sachio Tokiyoshi, Shuzo Matsushita, Naoki Yamamoto, and Mitsuo Honda. Sequential Immunization with V3 Peptides from Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Produces Cross-Neutralizing Antibodies against Primary Isolates with a Matching Narrow-Neutralization Sequence Motif. J. Virol., 80(11):5552-5562, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16699036.
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Fenyo2009
Eva Maria Fenyö, Alan Heath, Stefania Dispinseri, Harvey Holmes, Paolo Lusso, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Helen Donners, Leo Heyndrickx, Jose Alcami, Vera Bongertz, Christian Jassoy, Mauro Malnati, David Montefiori, Christiane Moog, Lynn Morris, Saladin Osmanov, Victoria Polonis, Quentin Sattentau, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Ruengpung Sutthent, Terri Wrin, and Gabriella Scarlatti. International Network for Comparison of HIV Neutralization Assays: The NeutNet Report. PLoS One, 4(2):e4505, 2009. PubMed ID: 19229336.
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Ferrantelli2002
Flavia Ferrantelli and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Neutralizing Antibodies Against HIV --- Back in the Major Leagues? Curr. Opin. Immunol., 14(4):495-502, Aug 2002. PubMed ID: 12088685.
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Fontenot1995
J. D. Fontenot, T. C. VanCott, B. S. Parekh, C. P. Pau, J. R. George, D. L. Birx, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, and J. M. Gatewood. Presentation of HIV V3 Loop Epitopes for Enhanced Antigenicity, Immunogenicity and Diagnostic Potential. AIDS, 9:1121-1129, 1995. PubMed ID: 8519447.
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Forsell2008
Mattias N. E. Forsell, Barna Dey, Andreas Mörner, Krisha Svehla, Sijy O'dell, Carl-Magnus Högerkorp, Gerald Voss, Rigmor Thorstensson, George M. Shaw, John R. Mascola, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, and Richard T. Wyatt. B Cell Recognition of the Conserved HIV-1 Co-Receptor Binding Site Is Altered by Endogenous Primate CD4. PLoS Pathog., 4(10):e1000171, 2008. PubMed ID: 18833294.
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Forsman2008
Anna Forsman, Els Beirnaert, Marlén M. I. Aasa-Chapman, Bart Hoorelbeke, Karolin Hijazi, Willie Koh, Vanessa Tack, Agnieszka Szynol, Charles Kelly, Áine McKnight, Theo Verrips, Hans de Haard, and Robin A Weiss. Llama Antibody Fragments with Cross-Subtype Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Neutralizing Properties and High Affinity for HIV-1 gp120. J. Virol., 82(24):12069-12081, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18842738.
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Forthal1995
D. N. Forthal, G. Landucci, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and W. E. Robinson, Jr. Functional Activities of 20 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 11:1095-1099, 1995. A series of tests were performed on 20 human monoclonal antibodies to assess their potential therapeutic utility. Antibodies were tested for potentially harmful complement-mediated antibody enhancing activity (C-ADE), and for potentially beneficial neutralizing activity and antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity ADCC. PubMed ID: 8554906.
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Forthal2009
Donald N. Forthal and Christiane Moog. Fc Receptor-Mediated Antiviral Antibodies. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):388-393, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048702.
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Fouts1997
T. R. Fouts, J. M. Binley, A. Trkola, J. E. Robinson, and J. P. Moore. Neutralization of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolate JR-FL by Human Monoclonal Antibodies Correlates with Antibody Binding to the Oligomeric Form of the Envelope Glycoprotein Complex. J. Virol., 71:2779-2785, 1997. To test whether antibody neutralization of HIV-1 primary isolates is correlated with the affinities for the oligomeric envelope glycoproteins, JRFL was used as a model primary virus and a panel of 13 human MAbs were evaluated for: half-maximal binding to rec monomeric JRFL gp120; half-maximal binding to oligomeric - JRFL Env expressed on the surface of transfected 293 cells; and neutralization of JRFL in a PBMC-based neutralization assay. Antibody affinity for oligomeric JRFL Env but not monomeric JRFL gp120 correlated with JRFL neutralization. PubMed ID: 9060632.
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Gao2005a
Feng Gao, Eric A. Weaver, Zhongjing Lu, Yingying Li, Hua-Xin Liao, Benjiang Ma, S Munir Alam, Richard M. Scearce, Laura L. Sutherland, Jae-Sung Yu, Julie M. Decker, George M. Shaw, David C. Montefiori, Bette T. Korber, Beatrice H. Hahn, and Barton F. Haynes. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of a Synthetic Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Group M Consensus Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 79(2):1154-1163, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15613343.
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Gazarian2013
Karlen G. Gazarian, Yadira Palacios-Rodríguez, Tatiana G. Gazarian, and Leonor Huerta. HIV-1 V3 Loop Crown Epitope-Focused Mimotope Selection by Patient Serum from Random Phage Display Libraries: Implications for the Epitope Structural Features. Mol. Immunol., 54(2):148-156, Jun 2013. PubMed ID: 23270686.
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Gonzalez2010
Nuria Gonzalez, Amparo Alvarez, and Jose Alcami. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and their Significance for HIV-1 Vaccines. Curr. HIV Res., 8(8):602-612, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21054253.
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Gorny1992
M. K. Gorny, A. J. Conley, S. Karwowska, A. Buchbinder, J.-Y. Xu, E. A. Emini, S. Koenig, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of Diverse Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants by an Anti-V3 Human Monoclonal Antibody. J. Virol., 66:7538-7542, 1992. PubMed ID: 1433529.
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Gorny1993
M. K. Gorny, J.-Y. Xu, S. Karwowska, A. Buchbinder, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Repertoire of Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies Specific for The V3 Domain of HIV-1 gp120. J. Immunol., 150:635-643, 1993. Characterizaton of 12 human MAbs that bind and neutralize the MN isolate with 50\% neutralization. Two of these antibodies also bound and neutralized IIIB: 447-52-D and 694/98-D; all others could not bind HXB2 peptides. All but two, 418-D and 412-D could bind to SF2 peptides. PubMed ID: 7678279.
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Gorny1994
M. K. Gorny, J. P. Moore, A. J. Conley, S. Karwowska, J. Sodroski, C. Williams, S. Burda, L. J. Boots, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Human Anti-V2 Monoclonal Antibody That Neutralizes Primary but Not Laboratory Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 68:8312-8320, 1994. Detailed characterization of the MAb 697-D. PubMed ID: 7525987.
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Gorny1997
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Thomas C. VanCott, Catarina Hioe, Zimra R. Israel, Nelson L. Michael, Anthony J. Conley, Constance Williams, Joseph A. Kessler II, Padmasree Chigurupati, Sherri Burda, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the V3 Loop of HIV-1 With Intra- and Interclade Cross-Reactivity. J. Immunol., 159:5114-5122, 1997. PubMed ID: 9366441.
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Gorny1998
M. K. Gorny, J. R. Mascola, Z. R. Israel, T. C. VanCott, C. Williams, P. Balfe, C. Hioe, S. Brodine, S. Burda, and S. Zolla-Pazner. A Human Monoclonal Antibody Specific for the V3 Loop of HIV Type 1 Clade E Cross-Reacts with Other HIV Type 1 Clades. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:213-221, 1998. PubMed ID: 9491911.
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Gorny2000b
M. K. Gorny, T. C. VanCott, C. Williams, K. Revesz, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Effects of oligomerization on the epitopes of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoproteins. Virology, 267:220-8, 2000. PubMed ID: 10662617.
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Gorny2002
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Sandra Cohen, Victoria R. Polonis, William J. Honnen, Samuel C. Kayman, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies Specific for Conformation-Sensitive Epitopes of V3 Neutralize Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates from Various Clades. J. Virol., 76(18):9035-9045, Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12186887.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2004
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Kathy Revesz, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Mark K. Louder, Christopher A. Anyangwe, Chavdar Krachmarov, Samuel C. Kayman, Abraham Pinter, Arthur Nadas, Phillipe N. Nyambi, John R. Mascola, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. The V3 Loop is Accessible on the Surface of Most Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates and Serves as a Neutralization Epitope. J. Virol., 78(5):2394-2404, Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 14963135.
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Gorny2005
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Leonidas Stamatatos, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Constance Williams, Xiao-Hong Wang, Sandra Cohen, Robert Staudinger, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Identification of a New Quaternary Neutralizing Epitope on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virus Particles. J. Virol., 79(8):5232-5237, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15795308.
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Gorny2006
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Xiao-Hong Wang, Sherri Burda, Tetsuya Kimura, Frank A. J. Konings, Arthur Nádas, Christopher A. Anyangwe, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Cross-Clade Neutralizing Activity of Human Anti-V3 Monoclonal Antibodies Derived from the Cells of Individuals Infected with Non-B Clades of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 80(14):6865-6872, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16809292.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Grovit-Ferbas2000
K. Grovit-Ferbas, J. F. Hsu, J. Ferbas, V. Gudeman, and I. S. Chen. Enhanced binding of antibodies to neutralization epitopes following thermal and chemical inactivation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 74(13):5802-9, Jul 2000. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/74/13/5802. PubMed ID: 10846059.
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Grundner2005
Christoph Grundner, Yuxing Li, Mark Louder, John Mascola, Xinzhen Yang, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Analysis of the Neutralizing Antibody Response Elicited in Rabbits by Repeated Inoculation with Trimeric HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins. Virology, 331(1):33-46, 5 Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15582651.
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Guenaga2015a
Javier Guenaga, Viktoriya Dubrovskaya, Natalia de Val, Shailendra K. Sharma, Barbara Carrette, Andrew B. Ward, and Richard T. Wyatt. Structure-Guided Redesign Increases the Propensity of HIV Env To Generate Highly Stable Soluble Trimers. J. Virol., 90(6):2806-2817, 30 Dec 2015. PubMed ID: 26719252.
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Guzzo2018
Christina Guzzo, Peng Zhang, Qingbo Liu, Alice L. Kwon, Ferzan Uddin, Alexandra I. Wells, Hana Schmeisser, Raffaello Cimbro, Jinghe Huang, Nicole Doria-Rose, Stephen D. Schmidt, Michael A. Dolan, Mark Connors, John R. Mascola, and Paolo Lusso. Structural Constraints at the Trimer Apex Stabilize the HIV-1 Envelope in a Closed, Antibody-Protected Conformation. mBio, 9(6), 11 Dec 2018. PubMed ID: 30538178.
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Haldar2011
Bijayesh Haldar, Sherri Burda, Constance Williams, Leo Heyndrickx, Guido Vanham, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Phillipe Nyambi. Longitudinal Study of Primary HIV-1 Isolates in Drug-Naïve Individuals Reveals the Emergence of Variants Sensitive to Anti-HIV-1 Monoclonal Antibodies. PLoS One, 6(2):e17253, 2011. PubMed ID: 21383841.
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Haynes2005
Barton F. Haynes, Judith Fleming, E. William St. Clair, Herman Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Renate Kunert, James Robinson, Richard M. Scearce, Kelly Plonk, Herman F. Staats, Thomas L. Ortel, Hua-Xin Liao, and S. Munir Alam. Cardiolipin Polyspecific Autoreactivity in Two Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies. Science, 308(5730):1906-1908, 24 Jun 2005. Comment in Science 2005 Jun 24;308(5730):1878-9. PubMed ID: 15860590.
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Haynes2006
Barton F. Haynes, Benjiang Ma, David C. Montefiori, Terri Wrin, Christos J. Petropoulos, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Cathrine. Denton, Shi-Mao Xia, Bette T. Korber, and Hua-Xin Liao. Analysis of HIV-1 Subtype B Third Variable Region Peptide Motifs for Induction of Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV-1 Primary Isolates. Virology, 345(1):44-55, 5 Feb 2006. PubMed ID: 16242749.
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Haynes2006a
Barton F. Haynes and David C. Montefiori. Aiming to Induce Broadly Reactive Neutralizing Antibody Responses with HIV-1 Vaccine Candidates. Expert Rev. Vaccines, 5(4):579-595, Aug 2006. PubMed ID: 16989638.
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He2002
Yuxian He, William J. Honnen, Chavdar P. Krachmarov, Michael Burkhart, Samuel C. Kayman, Jose Corvalan, and Abraham Pinter. Efficient Isolation of Novel Human Monoclonal Antibodies with Neutralizing Activity Against HIV-1 from Transgenic Mice Expressing Human Ig Loci. J. Immunol., 169(1):595-605, 1 Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12077293.
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Hill1997
C. M. Hill, H. Deng, D. Unutmaz, V. N. Kewalramani, L. Bastiani, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and D. R. Littman. Envelope glycoproteins from human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 and simian immunodeficiency virus can use human CCR5 as a coreceptor for viral entry and make direct CD4-dependent interactions with this chemokine receptor. J. Virol., 71:6296-6304, 1997. PubMed ID: 9261346.
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Hioe1997
C. Hioe, S. Burda, P. Chigurupati, S. Xu, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Resting Cell Neutralization Assay for HIV-1 Primary Isolates. Methods: A companion to Methods in Enzymology, 12:300-305, 1997. A technique is described for detecting the activity of neutralizing polyclonal or MAbs against HIV-1 primary isolates, using unstimulated PBMC as the target cell. PubMed ID: 9245610.
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Hioe1997b
C. E. Hioe, S. Xu, P. Chigurupati, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of HIV-1 Primary Isolates by Polyclonal and Monoclonal Human Antibodies. Int. Immunol., 9(9):1281-1290, Sep 1997. PubMed ID: 9310831.
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Hioe1999
C. E. Hioe, J. E. Hildreth, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Enhanced HIV Type 1 Neutralization by Human Anti-Glycoprotein 120 Monoclonal Antibodies in the Presence of Monoclonal Antibodies to Lymphocyte Function-Associated Molecule 1. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 15:523-531, 1999. PubMed ID: 10221529.
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Hioe2000
C. E. Hioe, G. J. Jones, A. D. Rees, S. Ratto-Kim, D. Birx, C. Munz, M. K. Gorny, M. Tuen, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Anti-CD4-Binding Domain Antibodies Complexed with HIV Type 1 Glycoprotein 120 Inhibit CD4+ T Cell-Proliferative Responses to Glycoprotein 120. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 16:893-905, 2000. PubMed ID: 10875615.
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Hioe2009
Catarina E. Hioe, Maria Luisa Visciano, Rajnish Kumar, Jianping Liu, Ethan A. Mack, Rachel E. Simon, David N. Levy, and Michael Tuen. The Use of Immune Complex Vaccines to Enhance Antibody Responses against Neutralizing Epitopes on HIV-1 Envelope gp120. Vaccine, 28(2):352-360, 11 Dec 2009. PubMed ID: 19879224.
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Hioe2010
Catarina E. Hioe, Terri Wrin, Michael S. Seaman, Xuesong Yu, Blake Wood, Steve Self, Constance Williams, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Anti-V3 Monoclonal Antibodies Display Broad Neutralizing Activities against Multiple HIV-1 Subtypes. PLoS One, 5(4):e10254, 2010. PubMed ID: 20421997.
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Hogan2018
Michael J. Hogan, Angela Conde-Motter, Andrea P. O. Jordan, Lifei Yang, Brad Cleveland, Wenjin Guo, Josephine Romano, Houping Ni, Norbert Pardi, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Shiu-Lok Hu, James A. Hoxie, and Drew Weissman. Increased Surface Expression of HIV-1 Envelope Is Associated with Improved Antibody Response in Vaccinia Prime/Protein Boost Immunization. Virology, 514:106-117, 15 Jan 2018. PubMed ID: 29175625.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Holl2006a
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Sylvie Schmidt, Thomas Decoville, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Efficient Inhibition of HIV-1 Replication in Human Immature Monocyte-Derived Dendritic Cells by Purified Anti-HIV-1 IgG without Induction of Maturation. Blood, 107(11):4466-4474, 1 Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16469871.
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Hoxie2010
James A. Hoxie. Toward an Antibody-Based HIV-1 Vaccine. Annu. Rev. Med., 61:135-52, 2010. PubMed ID: 19824826.
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Hu2007
Qinxue Hu, Naheed Mahmood, and Robin J. Shattock. High-Mannose-Specific Deglycosylation of HIV-1 gp120 Induced by Resistance to Cyanovirin-N and the Impact on Antibody Neutralization. Virology, 368(1):145-154, 10 Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 17658575.
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Huang2005
Chih-chin Huang, Min Tang, Mei-Yun Zhang, Shahzad Majeed, Elizabeth Montabana, Robyn L. Stanfield, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Bette Korber, Joseph Sodroski, Ian A. Wilson, Richard Wyatt, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure of a V3-Containing HIV-1 gp120 Core. Science, 310(5750):1025-1028, 11 Nov 2005. PubMed ID: 16284180.
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Huang2010
Kuan-Hsiang G. Huang, David Bonsall, Aris Katzourakis, Emma C. Thomson, Sarah J. Fidler, Janice Main, David Muir, Jonathan N. Weber, Alexander J. Frater, Rodney E. Phillips, Oliver G. Pybus, Philip J. R. Goulder, Myra O. McClure, Graham S. Cooke, and Paul Klenerman. B-Cell Depletion Reveals a Role for Antibodies in the Control of Chronic HIV-1 Infection. Nat. Commun., 1:102, 2010. PubMed ID: 20981030.
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Huber2007
M. Huber and A. Trkola. Humoral Immunity to HIV-1: Neutralization and Beyond. J. Intern. Med., 262(1):5-25, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17598812.
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Inouye1998
P. Inouye, E. Cherry, M. Hsu, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. A. Wainberg. Neutralizing Antibodies Directed against the V3 Loop Select for Different Escape Variants in a Virus with Mutated Reverse Transcriptase (M184V) Than in Wild-Type Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:735-740, 1998. The M184V substitution in RT yields high level resistance to 3TC and low level resistance to ddI and ddC, and alters the properties of RT. Virus containing the wt form of RT grown in the presence of the MAb 447-D develops 447-D resistance in 36 days, with the GPGR to GPGK substitutions (AGA(R) to AAA(K)). 447-D resistance took longer to acquire in virus with the M184V substituted RT, and had the form CTRPN to CTRPY (AAC(N) to TAC(Y)) at position 5 of the V3 loop. PubMed ID: 9643373.
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Jagodzinski1996
P. P. Jagodzinski, J. Wustner, D. Kmieciak, T. J. Wasik, A. Fertala, A. L. Sieron, M. Takahashi, T. Tsuji, T. Mimura, M. S. Fung, M. K. Gorny, M. Kloczewiak, Y. Kaneko, and D. Kozbor. Role of the V2, V3, and CD4-Binding Domains of GP120 in Curdlan Sulfate Neutralization Sensitivity of HIV-1 during Infection of T Lymphocytes. Virology, 226:217-227, 1996. PubMed ID: 8955041.
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Jiang2010
Xunqing Jiang, Valicia Burke, Maxim Totrov, Constance Williams, Timothy Cardozo, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Xiang-Peng Kong. Conserved Structural Elements in the V3 Crown of HIV-1 gp120. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(8):955-961, Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20622876.
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Johnson2017
Jacklyn Johnson, Yinjie Zhai, Hamid Salimi, Nicole Espy, Noah Eichelberger, Orlando DeLeon, Yunxia O'Malley, Joel Courter, Amos B. Smith, III, Navid Madani, Joseph Sodroski, and Hillel Haim. Induction of a Tier-1-Like Phenotype in Diverse Tier-2 Isolates by Agents That Guide HIV-1 Env to Perturbation-Sensitive, Nonnative States. J. Virol., 91(15), 1 Aug 2017. PubMed ID: 28490588.
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Kang2005
Sang-Moo Kang, Fu Shi Quan, Chunzi Huang, Lizheng Guo, Ling Ye, Chinglai Yang, and Richard W. Compans. Modified HIV Envelope Proteins with Enhanced Binding to Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies. Virology, 331(1):20-32, 5 Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15582650.
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Karwowska1992a
S. Karwowska, M. K. Gorny, A. Buchbinder, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Type-specific human monoclonal antibodies cross-react with the V3-loop of various HIV-1 isolates. Vaccines 92, :171-174, 1992. Editors: F. Brown, H. S. Ginsberg and R. Lerner, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.
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Keele2008
Brandon F. Keele, Elena E. Giorgi, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Julie M. Decker, Kimmy T. Pham, Maria G. Salazar, Chuanxi Sun, Truman Grayson, Shuyi Wang, Hui Li, Xiping Wei, Chunlai Jiang, Jennifer L. Kirchherr, Feng Gao, Jeffery A. Anderson, Li-Hua Ping, Ronald Swanstrom, Georgia D. Tomaras, William A. Blattner, Paul A. Goepfert, J. Michael Kilby, Michael S. Saag, Eric L. Delwart, Michael P. Busch, Myron S. Cohen, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Brian Gaschen, Gayathri S. Athreya, Ha Y. Lee, Natasha Wood, Cathal Seoighe, Alan S. Perelson, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Bette T. Korber, Beatrice H. Hahn, and George M. Shaw. Identification and Characterization of Transmitted and Early Founder Virus Envelopes in Primary HIV-1 Infection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(21):7552-7557, 27 May 2008. PubMed ID: 18490657.
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Keller1993
P. M. Keller, B. A. Arnold, A. R. Shaw, R. L. Tolman, F. Van Middlesworth, S. Bondy, V. K. Rusiecki, S. Koenig, S. Zolla-Pazner, P. Conard, E. A. Emini, and A. J. Conley. Identification of HIV Vaccine Candidate Peptides by Screening Random Phage Epitope Libraries. Virology, 193:709-716, 1993. A library of 15 mers was screened for reactivity with 447-52D. 100s of 15 mers reacted, of which 70 were sequenced. All but one contained the motif GPXR. PubMed ID: 7681612.
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Kessler2003
Naama Kessler, Anat Zvi, Min Ji, Michal Sharon, Osnat Rosen, Rina Levy, Miroslaw Gorny, Suzan Zolla-Pazner, and Jacob Anglister. Expression, Purification, and Isotope Labeling of the Fv of the Human HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody 447-52D for NMR Studies. Protein. Expr. Purif., 29(2):291-303, Jun 2003. PubMed ID: 12767822.
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Kimura2009
Tetsuya Kimura, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Miroslaw K. Gorny. Human Monoclonal Antibody 2909 Binds to Pseudovirions Expressing Trimers but not Monomeric HIV-1 Envelope Proteins. Hum. Antibodies, 18(1-2):35-40, 2009. PubMed ID: 19478397.
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Klein2013
Florian Klein, Ron Diskin, Johannes F. Scheid, Christian Gaebler, Hugo Mouquet, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Marie Pancera, Tongqing Zhou, Reha-Baris Incesu, Brooks Zhongzheng Fu, Priyanthi N. P. Gnanapragasam, Thiago Y. Oliveira, Michael S. Seaman, Peter D. Kwong, Pamela J. Bjorkman, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Somatic Mutations of the Immunoglobulin Framework Are Generally Required for Broad and Potent HIV-1 Neutralization. Cell, 153(1):126-138, 28 Mar 2013. PubMed ID: 23540694.
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Korber2009
Bette Korber and S. Gnanakaran. The Implications of Patterns in HIV Diversity for Neutralizing Antibody Induction and Susceptibility. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):408-417, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048705.
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Krachmarov2005
Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Phillipe N. Nyambi, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. Antibodies That Are Cross-Reactive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Clade A and Clade B V3 Domains Are Common in Patient Sera from Cameroon, but Their Neutralization Activity Is Usually Restricted by Epitope Masking. J. Virol., 79(2):780-790, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15613306.
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Krachmarov2006
C. P. Krachmarov, W. J. Honnen, S. C. Kayman, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and Abraham Pinter. Factors Determining the Breadth and Potency of Neutralization by V3-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies Derived from Subjects Infected with Clade A or Clade B Strains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 80(14):7127-7135, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16809318.
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Kraft2007
Zane Kraft, Nina R. Derby, Ruth A. McCaffrey, Rachel Niec, Wendy M. Blay, Nancy L. Haigwood, Eirini Moysi, Cheryl J. Saunders, Terri Wrin, Christos J. Petropoulos, M. Juliana McElrath, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Macaques Infected with a CCR5-Tropic Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV) Develop Broadly Reactive Anti-HIV Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 81(12):6402-6411, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17392364.
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Kramer2007
Victor G. Kramer, Nagadenahalli B. Siddappa, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Passive Immunization as Tool to Identify Protective HIV-1 Env Epitopes. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):642-55, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045119.
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Kulp2017
Daniel W. Kulp, Jon M. Steichen, Matthias Pauthner, Xiaozhen Hu, Torben Schiffner, Alessia Liguori, Christopher A. Cottrell, Colin Havenar-Daughton, Gabriel Ozorowski, Erik Georgeson, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Jordan R. Willis, Michael Kubitz, Yumiko Adachi, Samantha M. Reiss, Mia Shin, Natalia de Val, Andrew B. Ward, Shane Crotty, Dennis R. Burton, and William R. Schief. Structure-Based Design of Native-Like HIV-1 Envelope Trimers to Silence Non-Neutralizing Epitopes and Eliminate CD4 Binding. Nat. Commun., 8(1):1655, 21 Nov 2017. PubMed ID: 29162799.
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Kwon2015
Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Priyamvada Acharya, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Emma T. Crooks, Jason Gorman, M. Gordon Joyce, Miklos Guttman, Xiaochu Ma, Sandeep Narpala, Cinque Soto, Daniel S. Terry, Yongping Yang, Tongqing Zhou, Goran Ahlsen, Robert T. Bailer, Michael Chambers, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Aliaksandr Druz, Mark A. Hallen, Adam Harned, Tatsiana Kirys, Mark K. Louder, Sijy O'Dell, Gilad Ofek, Keiko Osawa, Madhu Prabhakaran, Mallika Sastry, Guillaume B. E. Stewart-Jones, Jonathan Stuckey, Paul V. Thomas, Tishina Tittley, Constance Williams, Baoshan Zhang, Hong Zhao, Zhou Zhou, Bruce R. Donald, Lawrence K. Lee, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Ulrich Baxa, Arne Schön, Ernesto Freire, Lawrence Shapiro, Kelly K. Lee, James Arthos, James B. Munro, Scott C. Blanchard, Walther Mothes, James M. Binley, Adrian B. McDermott, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Crystal Structure, Conformational Fixation and Entry-Related Interactions of Mature Ligand-Free HIV-1 Env. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 22(7):522-531, Jul 2015. PubMed ID: 26098315.
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Kwong2009a
Peter D. Kwong and Ian A. Wilson. HIV-1 and Influenza Antibodies: Seeing Antigens in New Ways. Nat. Immunol., 10(6):573-578, Jun 2009. PubMed ID: 19448659.
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Laal1994
Suman Laal, Sherri Burda, Miroslav K. Gorny, Sylwia Karwowska, Aby Buchbinder, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 68(6):4001-4008, Jun 1994. PubMed ID: 7514683.
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Law2007
Mansun Law, Rosa M. F. Cardoso, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Antigenic and Immunogenic Study of Membrane-Proximal External Region-Grafted gp120 Antigens by a DNA Prime-Protein Boost Immunization Strategy. J. Virol., 81(8):4272-4285, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17267498.
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Lewis1995
C. M. Lewis, G. F. Hollis, G. E. Mark, 3rd, J. S. Tung, and S. W. Ludmerer. Use of a Novel Mutagenesis Strategy, Optimized Residue Substitution, to Decrease the Off-Rate of an Anti-gp120 Antibody. Mol. Immunol., 32(14-15):1065-1072, Oct 1995. PubMed ID: 8544856.
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Li2005a
Ming Li, Feng Gao, John R. Mascola, Leonidas Stamatatos, Victoria R. Polonis, Marguerite Koutsoukos, Gerald Voss, Paul Goepfert, Peter Gilbert, Kelli M. Greene, Miroslawa Bilska, Denise L Kothe, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Xiping Wei, Julie M. Decker, Beatrice H. Hahn, and David C. Montefiori. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 env Clones from Acute and Early Subtype B Infections for Standardized Assessments of Vaccine-Elicited Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 79(16):10108-10125, Aug 2005. PubMed ID: 16051804.
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Li2007a
Yuxing Li, Stephen A. Migueles, Brent Welcher, Krisha Svehla, Adhuna Phogat, Mark K. Louder, Xueling Wu, George M. Shaw, Mark Connors, Richard T. Wyatt, and John R. Mascola. Broad HIV-1 Neutralization Mediated by CD4-Binding Site Antibodies. Nat. Med., 13(9):1032-1034, Sep 2007. PubMed ID: 17721546.
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Li2009c
Yuxing Li, Krisha Svehla, Mark K. Louder, Diane Wycuff, Sanjay Phogat, Min Tang, Stephen A. Migueles, Xueling Wu, Adhuna Phogat, George M. Shaw, Mark Connors, James Hoxie, John R. Mascola, and Richard Wyatt. Analysis of Neutralization Specificities in Polyclonal Sera Derived from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Individuals. J Virol, 83(2):1045-1059, Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19004942.
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Lin2007
George Lin and Peter L. Nara. Designing Immunogens to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):514-541, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045109.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Louder2005
Mark K. Louder, Anna Sambor, Elena Chertova, Tai Hunte, Sarah Barrett, Fallon Ojong, Eric Sanders-Buell, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Francine E. McCutchan, James D. Roser, Dana Gabuzda, Jeffrey D. Lifson, and John R. Mascola. HIV-1 Envelope Pseudotyped Viral Vectors and Infectious Molecular Clones Expressing the Same Envelope Glycoprotein Have a Similar Neutralization Phenotype, but Culture in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells Is Associated with Decreased Neutralization Sensitivity. Virology, 339(2):226-238, 1 Sep 2005. PubMed ID: 16005039.
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Lusso2005
Paolo Lusso, Patricia L. Earl, Francesca Sironi, Fabio Santoro, Chiara Ripamonti, Gabriella Scarlatti, Renato Longhi, Edward A. Berger, and Samuele E. Burastero. Cryptic Nature of a Conserved, CD4-Inducible V3 Loop Neutralization Epitope in the Native Envelope Glycoprotein Oligomer of CCR5-Restricted, but not CXCR4-Using, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Strains. J. Virol., 79(11):6957-6968, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890935.
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Ly2000
A. Ly and L. Stamatatos. V2 Loop Glycosylation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 Envelope Facilitates Interaction of this Protein with CD4 and CCR5 Receptors and Protects the Virus from Neutralization by Anti-V3 Loop and Anti-CD4 Binding Site Antibodies. J. Virol., 74:6769-6776, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888615.
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Martin2008
Grégoire Martin, Yide Sun, Bernadette Heyd, Olivier Combes, Jeffrey B Ulmer, Anne Descours, Susan W Barnett, Indresh K Srivastava, and Loïc Martin. A Simple One-Step Method for the Preparation of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens Based on a CD4 Mimic Peptide. Virology, 381(2):241-250, 25 Nov 2008. PubMed ID: 18835005.
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Martin2011
Grégoire Martin, Brian Burke, Robert Thaï, Antu K. Dey, Olivier Combes, Bernadette Heyd, Anthony R. Geonnotti, David C. Montefiori, Elaine Kan, Ying Lian, Yide Sun, Toufik Abache, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, Hocine Madaoui, Raphaël Guérois, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, Pascal Kessler, and Loïc Martin. Stabilization of HIV-1 Envelope in the CD4-Bound Conformation through Specific Cross-Linking of a CD4 Mimetic. J. Biol. Chem., 286(24):21706-21716, 17 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21487012.
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Martin-Garcia2005
Julio Martín-García, Simon Cocklin, Irwin M. Chaiken, and Francisco González-Scarano. Interaction with CD4 and Antibodies to CD4-Induced Epitopes of the Envelope gp120 from a Microglial Cell-Adapted Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 79(11):6703-6713, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890908.
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McCaffrey2004
Ruth A McCaffrey, Cheryl Saunders, Mike Hensel, and Leonidas Stamatatos. N-Linked Glycosylation of the V3 Loop and the Immunologically Silent Face of gp120 Protects Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 from Neutralization by Anti-gp120 and Anti-gp41 Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(7):3279-3295, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15016849.
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McCann2005
C. M. Mc Cann, R. J. Song, and R. M. Ruprecht. Antibodies: Can They Protect Against HIV Infection? Curr. Drug Targets Infect. Disord., 5(2):95-111, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15975016.
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McGuire2014
Andrew T. McGuire, Jolene A. Glenn, Adriana Lippy, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Diverse Recombinant HIV-1 Envs Fail to Activate B Cells Expressing the Germline B Cell Receptors of the Broadly Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Antibodies PG9 and 447-52D. J. Virol., 88(5):2645-2657, Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24352455.
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McKnight2007
Aine McKnight and Marlen M. I. Aasa-Chapman. Clade Specific Neutralising Vaccines for HIV: An Appropriate Target? Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):554-560, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045111.
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Mester2009
Brenda Mester, Revital Manor, Amit Mor, Boris Arshava, Osnat Rosen, Fa-Xiang Ding, Fred Naider, and Jacob Anglister. HIV-1 Peptide Vaccine Candidates: Selecting Constrained V3 Peptides with Highest Affinity to Antibody 447-52D. Biochemistry, 48(33):7867-7877, 25 Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19552398.
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Mishra2020
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Bimal Kumar Das, Sushil Kumar Kabra, Rakesh Lodha, and Kalpana Luthra. A Rare Mutation in an Infant-Derived HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Alters Interprotomer Stability and Susceptibility to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Targeting the Trimer Apex. J. Virol., 94(19), 15 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32669335.
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Mishra2020a
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Muzamil Ashraf Makhdoomi, Bimal Kumar Das, Rakesh Lodha, Sushil Kumar Kabra, and Kalpana Luthra. Broadly Neutralizing Plasma Antibodies Effective against Autologous Circulating Viruses in Infants with Multivariant HIV-1 Infection. Nat. Commun., 11(1):4409, 2 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32879304.
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Mondor1998
I. Mondor, S. Ugolini, and Q. J. Sattentau. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Attachment to HeLa CD4 Cells Is CD4 Independent and Gp120 Dependent and Requires Cell Surface Heparans. J. Virol., 72:3623-3634, 1998. PubMed ID: 9557643.
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Moore1994d
J. P. Moore, Y. Cao, D. D. Ho, and R. A. Koup. Development of the anti-gp120 antibody response during seroconversion to human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 68:5142-5155, 1994. Three seroconverting individuals were studied. The earliest detectable anti-gp120 antibodies were both conformational and anti-V3 loop, and could be detected only after the peak viremia has passed. No uniform pattern of autologous neutralizing anti-CD4BS or anti-V3 MAbs was observed. PubMed ID: 8035514.
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Moore1995b
J. P. Moore, Y. Cao, L. Qing, Q. J. Sattentau, J. Pyati, R. Koduri, J. Robinson, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, and D. D. Ho. Primary Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type I Are Relatively Resistant to Neutralization by Monoclonal Antibodies to gp120, and Their Neutralization Is Not Predicted by Studies with Monomeric gp120. J. Virol., 69:101-109, 1995. A panel of anti-gp120 MAbs and sera from HIV-1 infected individuals was tested for its ability to neutralize primary isolates. Most MAbs bound with high affinity to gp120 monomers from the various isolates, but were not effective at neutralizing. The MAb IgG1b12, which binds to a discontinuous anti-CD4 binding site epitope, was able to neutralize most of the primary isolates. PubMed ID: 7527081.
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Moore1995c
J. P. Moore and D. D. Ho. HIV-1 Neutralization: The Consequences of Adaptation to Growth on Transformed T-Cells. AIDS, 9(suppl A):S117-S136, 1995. This review considers the relative importance of a neutralizing antibody response for the development of a vaccine, and for disease progression during the chronic phase of HIV-1 infection. It suggests that T-cell immunity may be more important. The distinction between MAbs that can neutralize primary isolates, and those that are effective at neutralizing only laboratory adapted strains is discussed in detail. Alternative conformations of envelope and non-contiguous interacting domains in gp120 are discussed. The suggestion that soluble monomeric gp120 may serve as a viral decoy that diverts the humoral immune response it in vivo is put forth. PubMed ID: 8819579.
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Moore2006
Penny L. Moore, Emma T. Crooks, Lauren Porter, Ping Zhu, Charmagne S. Cayanan, Henry Grise, Paul Corcoran, Michael B. Zwick, Michael Franti, Lynn Morris, Kenneth H. Roux, Dennis R. Burton, and James M. Binley. Nature of Nonfunctional Envelope Proteins on the Surface of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 80(5):2515-2528, Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16474158.
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Mor2009
Amit Mor, Eugenia Segal, Brenda Mester, Boris Arshava, Osnat Rosen, Fa-Xiang Ding, Joseph Russo, Amnon Dafni, Fabian Schvartzman, Tali Scherf, Fred Naider, and Jacob Anglister. Mimicking the Structure of the V3 Epitope Bound to HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies. Biochemistry, 48(15):3288-3303, 21 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19281264.
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Musich2011
Thomas Musich, Paul J. Peters, Maria José Duenas-Decamp, Maria Paz Gonzalez-Perez, James Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Jonathan K. Ball, Katherine Luzuriaga, and Paul R. Clapham. A Conserved Determinant in the V1 Loop of HIV-1 Modulates the V3 Loop to Prime Low CD4 Use and Macrophage Infection. J. Virol., 85(5):2397-2405, Mar 2011. PubMed ID: 21159865.
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Nelson2007
Josh D. Nelson, Florence M. Brunel, Richard Jensen, Emma T. Crooks, Rosa M. F. Cardoso, Meng Wang, Ann Hessell, Ian A. Wilson, James M. Binley, Philip E. Dawson, Dennis R. Burton, and Michael B. Zwick. An Affinity-Enhanced Neutralizing Antibody against the Membrane-Proximal External Region of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41 Recognizes an Epitope between Those of 2F5 and 4E10. J. Virol., 81(8):4033-4043, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17287272.
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Nishiyama2009
Yasuhiro Nishiyama, Stephanie Planque, Yukie Mitsuda, Giovanni Nitti, Hiroaki Taguchi, Lei Jin, Jindrich Symersky, Stephane Boivin, Marcin Sienczyk, Maria Salas, Carl V. Hanson, and Sudhir Paul. Toward Effective HIV Vaccination: Induction of Binary Epitope Reactive Antibodies with Broad HIV Neutralizing Activity. J. Biol. Chem., 284(44):30627-30642, 30 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19726674.
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Nyambi1998
P. N. Nyambi, M. K. Gorny, L. Bastiani, G. van der Groen, C. Williams, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Mapping of Epitopes Exposed on Intact Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Virions: A New Strategy for Studying the Immunologic Relatedness of HIV-1. J. Virol., 72:9384-9391, 1998. 18 human MAbs binding to gp120 and gp41 were tested using a novel assay to test binding to intact HIV-1 virions. The new method involves using MAbs to the host proteins incorporated into virions to bind them to ELIZA plates. Antigenic conservation in epitopes of HIV-1 in clades A, B, D, F, G, and H was studied. MAbs were selected that were directed against V2, V3, CD4bd, C5 or gp41 regions. Antibodies against V2, the CD4BS, and sp41 showed weak and sporadic reactivities, while binding strongly to gp120, suggesting these epitopes are hidden when gp120 is in its native, quaternary structure. PubMed ID: 9765494.
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Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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ORourke2010
Sara M. O'Rourke, Becky Schweighardt, Pham Phung, Dora P. A. J. Fonseca, Karianne Terry, Terri Wrin, Faruk Sinangil, and Phillip W. Berman. Mutation at a Single Position in the V2 Domain of the HIV-1 Envelope Protein Confers Neutralization Sensitivity to a Highly Neutralization-Resistant Virus. J. Virol., 84(21):11200-11209, Nov 2010. PubMed ID: 20702624.
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Pantophlet2003b
Ralph Pantophlet, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Hyperglycosylated Mutants of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Monomeric gp120 as Novel Antigens for HIV Vaccine Design. J. Virol., 77(10):5889-8901, May 2003. PubMed ID: 12719582.
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Pantophlet2004
R. Pantophlet, I. A. Wilson, and D. R. Burton. Improved Design of an Antigen with Enhanced Specificity for the Broadly HIV-Neutralizing Antibody b12. Protein Eng. Des. Sel., 17(10):749-758, Oct 2004. PubMed ID: 15542540.
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Pantophlet2006
Ralph Pantophlet and Dennis R. Burton. GP120: Target for Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 24:739-769, 2006. PubMed ID: 16551265.
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Pantophlet2007
Ralph Pantophlet, Rowena O. Aguilar-Sino, Terri Wrin, Lisa A. Cavacini, and Dennis R. Burton. Analysis of the Neutralization Breadth of the Anti-V3 Antibody F425-B4e8 and Re-assessment of its Epitope Fine Specificity by Scanning Mutagenesis. Virology, 364(2):441-453, 1 Aug 2007. PubMed ID: 17418361.
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Pantophlet2008
Ralph Pantophlet, Terri Wrin, Lisa A. Cavacini, James E. Robinson, and Dennis R. Burton. Neutralizing Activity of Antibodies to the V3 Loop Region of HIV-1 gp120 Relative to Their Epitope Fine Specificity. Virology, 381(2):251-260, 25 Nov 2008. PubMed ID: 18822440.
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Pantophlet2010
Ralph Pantophlet. Antibody Epitope Exposure and Neutralization of HIV-1. Curr. Pharm. Des., 16(33):3729-3743, 2010. PubMed ID: 21128886.
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Park2000
E. J. Park, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and G. V. Quinnan. A global neutralization resistance phenotype of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is determined by distinct mechanisms mediating enhanced infectivity and conformational change of the envelope complex. J. Virol., 74:4183-91, 2000. PubMed ID: 10756031.
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Parren1997
P. W. Parren, M. C. Gauduin, R. A. Koup, P. Poignard, Q. J. Sattentau, P. Fisicaro, and D. R. Burton. Erratum to Relevance of the Antibody Response against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope to Vaccine Design. Immunol. Lett., 58:125-132, 1997. corrected and republished article originally printed in Immunol. Lett. 1997 Jun;57(1-3):105-112. PubMed ID: 9271324.
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Parren1998
P. W. Parren, I. Mondor, D. Naniche, H. J. Ditzel, P. J. Klasse, D. R. Burton, and Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralization of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by antibody to gp120 is determined primarily by occupancy of sites on the virion irrespective of epitope specificity. J. Virol., 72:3512-9, 1998. The authors propose that the occupancy of binding sites on HIV-1 virions is the major factor in determining neutralization, irrespective of epitope specificity. Neutralization was assayed T-cell-line-adapted HIV-1 isolates. Binding of Fabs to monomeric rgp120 was not correlated with binding to functional oligomeric gp120 or neutralization, while binding to functional oligomeric gp120 was highly correlated with neutralization. The ratios of oligomer binding/neutralization were similar for antibodies to different neutralization epitopes, with a few exceptions. PubMed ID: 9557629.
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Patel2008
Milloni B Patel, Noah G. Hoffman, and Ronald Swanstrom. Subtype-Specific Conformational Differences within the V3 Region of Subtype B and Subtype C Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Env Proteins. J. Virol., 82(2):903-916, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 18003735.
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Peressin2011
M. Peressin, V. Holl, S. Schmidt, T. Decoville, D. Mirisky, A. Lederle, M. Delaporte, K. Xu, A. M. Aubertin, and C. Moog. HIV-1 Replication in Langerhans and Interstitial Dendritic Cells Is Inhibited by Neutralizing and Fc-Mediated Inhibitory Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(2):1077-1085, Jan 2011. PubMed ID: 21084491.
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Phogat2007
S. Phogat, R. T. Wyatt, and G. B. Karlsson Hedestam. Inhibition of HIV-1 Entry by Antibodies: Potential Viral and Cellular Targets. J. Intern. Med., 262(1):26-43, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17598813.
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Pinter2004
Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Yuxian He, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The V1/V2 Domain of gp120 Is a Global Regulator of the Sensitivity of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates to Neutralization by Antibodies Commonly Induced upon Infection. J. Virol., 78(10):5205-5215, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113902.
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Pinter2005
Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Paul D'Agostino, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The C108g Epitope in the V2 Domain of gp120 Functions as a Potent Neutralization Target When Introduced into Envelope Proteins Derived from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates. J. Virol., 79(11):6909-6917, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890930.
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Poignard2003
Pascal Poignard, Maxime Moulard, Edwin Golez, Veronique Vivona, Michael Franti, Sara Venturini, Meng Wang, Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. Heterogeneity of Envelope Molecules Expressed on Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Particles as Probed by the Binding of Neutralizing and Nonneutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 77(1):353-365, Jan 2003. PubMed ID: 12477840.
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Pugach2004
Pavel Pugach, Shawn E. Kuhmann, Joann Taylor, Andre J. Marozsan, Amy Snyder, Thomas Ketas, Steven M. Wolinsky, Bette T. Korber, and John P. Moore. The Prolonged Culture of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Primary Lymphocytes Increases its Sensitivity to Neutralization by Soluble CD4. Virology, 321(1):8-22, 30 Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 15033560.
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Pugach2008
Pavel Pugach, Thomas J. Ketas, Elizabeth Michael, and John P. Moore. Neutralizing Antibody and Anti-Retroviral Drug Sensitivities of HIV-1 Isolates Resistant to Small Molecule CCR5 Inhibitors. Virology, 377(2):401-407, 1 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18519143.
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Pugach2015
Pavel Pugach, Gabriel Ozorowski, Albert Cupo, Rajesh Ringe, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Ronald Derking, Helen J. Kim, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de Los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Jean-Philippe Julien, Dennis R. Burton, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, P. J. Klasse, Andrew B. Ward, and John P. Moore. A Native-Like SOSIP.664 Trimer Based on an HIV-1 Subtype B env Gene. J. Virol., 89(6):3380-3395, Mar 2015. PubMed ID: 25589637.
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Ringe2011
Rajesh Ringe, Deepak Sharma, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Sanjay Phogat, Arun Risbud, Madhuri Thakar, Ramesh Paranjape, and Jayanta Bhattacharya. A Single Amino Acid Substitution in the C4 Region in gp120 Confers Enhanced Neutralization of HIV-1 by Modulating CD4 Binding Sites and V3 Loop. Virology, 418(2):123-132, 30 Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21851958.
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Robinson2010
James E. Robinson, Kelly Franco, Debra Holton Elliott, Mary Jane Maher, Ashley Reyna, David C. Montefiori, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Zane Kraft, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Quaternary Epitope Specificities of Anti-HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Generated in Rhesus Macaques Infected by the Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4. J. Virol., 84(7):3443-3453, Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20106929.
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Rosen2005
Osnat Rosen, Jordan Chill, Michal Sharon, Naama Kessler, Brenda Mester, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Jacob Anglister. Induced Fit in HIV-Neutralizing Antibody Complexes: Evidence for Alternative Conformations of the gp120 V3 Loop and the Molecular Basis for Broad Neutralization. Biochemistry, 44(19):7250-7158, 17 May 2005. PubMed ID: 15882063.
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Ruprecht2011
Claudia R. Ruprecht, Anders Krarup, Lucy Reynell, Axel M. Mann, Oliver F. Brandenberg, Livia Berlinger, Irene A. Abela, Roland R. Regoes, Huldrych F. Günthard, Peter Rusert, and Alexandra Trkola. MPER-Specific Antibodies Induce gp120 Shedding and Irreversibly Neutralize HIV-1. J. Exp. Med., 208(3):439-454, 14 Mar 2011. PubMed ID: 21357743.
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Saarloos1995
M. N. Saarloos, T. F. Lint, and G. T. Spear. Efficacy of HIV-Specific and `Antibody-Independent' Mechanisms for Complement Activation by HIV-Infected Cells. Clin. Exp. Immunol., 99:189-195, 1995. PubMed ID: 7851010.
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Sabin2010
Charles Sabin, Davide Corti, Victor Buzon, Mike S. Seaman, David Lutje Hulsik, Andreas Hinz, Fabrizia Vanzetta, Gloria Agatic, Chiara Silacci, Lara Mainetti, Gabriella Scarlatti, Federica Sallusto, Robin Weiss, Antonio Lanzavecchia, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Crystal Structure and Size-Dependent Neutralization Properties of HK20, a Human Monoclonal Antibody Binding to the Highly Conserved Heptad Repeat 1 of gp41. PLoS Pathog., 6(11):e1001195, 2010. PubMed ID: 21124990.
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Sanders2013
Rogier W. Sanders, Ronald Derking, Albert Cupo, Jean-Philippe Julien, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Helen J. Kim, Claudia Blattner, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Marit J. van Gils, C. Richter King, Ian A. Wilson, Andrew B. Ward, P. J. Klasse, and John P. Moore. A Next-Generation Cleaved, Soluble HIV-1 Env Trimer, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, Expresses Multiple Epitopes for Broadly Neutralizing but not Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 9(9):e1003618, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 24068931.
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Sattentau1995
Q. J. Sattentau, S. Zolla-Pazner, and P. Poignard. Epitope Exposure on Functional, Oligomeric HIV-1 gp41 Molecules. Virology, 206:713-717, 1995. Most gp41 epitopes are masked when associated with gp120 on the cell surface. Weak binding of anti-gp41 MAbs can be enhanced by treatment with sCD4. MAb 2F5 binds to a membrane proximal epitope which binds in the presence of gp120 without sCD4. PubMed ID: 7530400.
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Sattentau1995b
Q. J. Sattentau. Conservation of HIV-1 gp120 Neutralizing Epitopes after Formalin Inactivation. AIDS, 9:1383-1385, 1995. PubMed ID: 8605064.
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Sattentau1996
Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody. Curr. Opin. Immunol., 8:540-545, 1996. Review. PubMed ID: 8794008.
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Scheid2009
Johannes F. Scheid, Hugo Mouquet, Niklas Feldhahn, Michael S. Seaman, Klara Velinzon, John Pietzsch, Rene G. Ott, Robert M. Anthony, Henry Zebroski, Arlene Hurley, Adhuna Phogat, Bimal Chakrabarti, Yuxing Li, Mark Connors, Florencia Pereyra, Bruce D. Walker, Hedda Wardemann, David Ho, Richard T. Wyatt, John R. Mascola, Jeffrey V. Ravetch, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Broad Diversity of Neutralizing Antibodies Isolated from Memory B Cells in HIV-Infected Individuals. Nature, 458(7238):636-640, 2 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19287373.
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Seaman2010
Michael S. Seaman, Holly Janes, Natalie Hawkins, Lauren E. Grandpre, Colleen Devoy, Ayush Giri, Rory T. Coffey, Linda Harris, Blake Wood, Marcus G. Daniels, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Alan Lapedes, Victoria R Polonis, Francine E. McCutchan, Peter B. Gilbert, Steve G. Self, Bette T. Korber, David C. Montefiori, and John R. Mascola. Tiered Categorization of a Diverse Panel of HIV-1 Env Pseudoviruses for Assessment of Neutralizing Antibodies. J Virol, 84(3):1439-1452, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19939925.
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Selvarajah2005
Suganya Selvarajah, Bridget Puffer, Ralph Pantophlet, Mansun Law, Robert W. Doms, and Dennis R. Burton. Comparing Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of Engineered gp120. J. Virol., 79(19):12148-12163, Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16160142.
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Sharon2002
Michal Sharon, Matthias Görlach, Rina Levy, Yehezkiel Hayek, and Jacob Anglister. Expression, Purification, and Isotope Labeling of a gp120 V3 Peptide and Production of a Fab from a HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody for NMR Studies. Protein Expr. Purif., 24(3):374-383, Apr 2002. PubMed ID: 11922753.
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Sharpe2004
Simon Sharpe, Naama Kessler, Jacob A. Anglister, Wai-Ming Yau, and Robert Tycko. Solid-State NMR Yields Structural Constraints on the V3 Loop from HIV-1 Gp120 Bound to the 447-52D Antibody Fv Fragment. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 126(15):4979-4990, 21 Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15080704.
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Shen2010
Xiaoying Shen, S. Moses Dennison, Pinghuang Liu, Feng Gao, Frederick Jaeger, David C. Montefiori, Laurent Verkoczy, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, and Georgia D. Tomaras. Prolonged Exposure of the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane Proximal Region with L669S Substitution. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(13):5972-5977, 30 Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20231447.
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Sheppard2007a
Neil C. Sheppard, Sarah L. Davies, Simon A. Jeffs, Sueli M. Vieira, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Production and Characterization of High-Affinity Human Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins in a Mouse Model Expressing Human Immunoglobulins. Clin. Vaccine Immunol., 14(2):157-167, Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 17167037.
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Shibata2007
Junji Shibata, Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Akiko Honda, Atsushi Koito, Toshio Murakami, and Shuzo Matsushita. Impact of V2 Mutations on Escape from a Potent Neutralizing Anti-V3 Monoclonal Antibody during In Vitro Selection of a Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 81(8):3757-3768, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17251298.
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Shmelkov2011
Evgeny Shmelkov, Arthur Nadas, James Swetnam, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Timothy Cardozo. Indirect Detection of an Epitope-Specific Response to HIV-1 gp120 Immunization in Human Subjects. PLoS One, 6(11):e27279, 2011. PubMed ID: 22076145.
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Shmelkov2014
Evgeny Shmelkov, Chavdar Krachmarov, Arsen V. Grigoryan, Abraham Pinter, Alexander Statnikov, and Timothy Cardozo. Computational Prediction of Neutralization Epitopes Targeted by Human Anti-V3 HIV Monoclonal Antibodies. PLoS One, 9(2):e89987, 2014. PubMed ID: 24587168.
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Sirois2007
Suzanne Sirois, Mohamed Touaibia, Kuo-Chen Chou, and Rene Roy. Glycosylation of HIV-1 gp120 V3 Loop: Towards the Rational Design of a Synthetic Carbohydrate Vaccine. Curr. Med. Chem., 14(30):3232-3242, 2007. PubMed ID: 18220757.
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Smalls-Mantey2012
Adjoa Smalls-Mantey, Nicole Doria-Rose, Rachel Klein, Andy Patamawenu, Stephen A. Migueles, Sung-Youl Ko, Claire W. Hallahan, Hing Wong, Bai Liu, Lijing You, Johannes Scheid, John C. Kappes, Christina Ochsenbauer, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity against Primary HIV-Infected CD4+ T Cells Is Directly Associated with the Magnitude of Surface IgG Binding. J. Virol., 86(16):8672-8680, Aug 2012. PubMed ID: 22674985.
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Smith1998
A. D. Smith, S. C. Geisler, A. A. Chen, D. A. Resnick, B. M. Roy, P. J. Lewi, E. Arnold, and G. F. Arnold. Human Rhinovirus Type 14: Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) V3 Loop Chimeras from a Combinatorial Library Induce Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses against HIV-1. J. Virol., 72:651-659, 1998. The tip of the MN V3 loop, IGPGRAFYTTKN, was inserted into cold-causing human rhinovirus 14 (HRV14) and chimeras were immunoselected using MAbs 447-52-D, 694/98-D, NM-01, and 59.1, for good presentation of the V3 antigenic region. The selected chimeric viruses were neutralized by anti-V3 loop MAbs. The chimeric viruses elicited potent NAbs against ALA-1 and MN in guinea pigs. PubMed ID: 9420270.
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Spear1993
G. T. Spear, D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, A. L. Landay, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Complement activation by human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. J. Virol., 67:53-59, 1993. This study looked at the ability of 16 human MAbs to activate complement. MAbs directed against the V3 region could induce C3 deposition on infected cells and virolysis of free virus, but antibodies to the CD4BS and C-terminal region and two regions in gp41 could induce no complement mediated effects. Pre-treatment with sCD4 could increase complement-mediated effects of anti-gp41 MAbs, but decreased the complement-mediated effects of V3 MAbs. Anti-gp41 MAbs were able to affect IIIB but not MN virolysis, suggesting spontaneous shedding of gp120 on IIIB virions exposes gp41 epitopes. IgG isotype did not appear to have an effect on virolysis or C3 deposition. PubMed ID: 7677959.
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Sreepian2009
Apichai Sreepian, Jongruk Permmongkol, Wannee Kantakamalakul, Sontana Siritantikorn, Nattaya Tanlieng, and Ruengpung Sutthent. HIV-1 Neutralization by Monoclonal Antibody against Conserved Region 2 and Patterns of Epitope Exposure on the Surface of Native Viruses. J. Immune Based Ther. Vaccines, 7:5, 2009. PubMed ID: 19821992.
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Srivastava2002
Indresh K. Srivastava, Leonidas Stamatatos, Harold Legg, Elaine Kan, Anne Fong, Stephen R. Coates, Louisa Leung, Mark Wininger, John J. Donnelly, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Purification and Characterization of Oligomeric Envelope Glycoprotein from a Primary R5 Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus. J. Virol., 76(6):2835-2847, Mar 2002. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/76/6/2835. PubMed ID: 11861851.
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Srivastava2005
Indresh K. Srivastava, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Role of Neutralizing Antibodies in Protective Immunity Against HIV. Hum. Vaccin., 1(2):45-60, Mar-Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 17038830.
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Srivastava2008
Indresh K. Srivastava, Elaine Kan, Yide Sun, Victoria A. Sharma, Jimna Cisto, Brian Burke, Ying Lian, Susan Hilt, Zohar Biron, Karin Hartog, Leonidas Stamatatos, Ruben Diaz-Avalos, R Holland Cheng, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Comparative Evaluation of Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins Derived from Subtype C and B HIV-1 R5 Isolates. Virology, 372(2):273-290, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18061231.
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Stanfield2005
Robyn L. Stanfield and Ian A. Wilson. Structural Studies of Human HIV-1 V3 Antibodies. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):73-80, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720977.
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Stanfield2006
Robyn L. Stanfield, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Ian A. Wilson. Crystal Structures of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Neutralizing Antibody 2219 in Complex with Three Different V3 Peptides Reveal a New Binding Mode for HIV-1 Cross-Reactivity. J. Virol., 80(12):6093-6105, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731948.
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Swetnam2010
James Swetnam, Evgeny Shmelkov, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Timothy Cardozo. Comparative Magnitude of Cross-Strain Conservation of HIV Variable Loop Neutralization Epitopes. PLoS One, 5(12):e15994, 2010. PubMed ID: 21209919.
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Tasca2008
Silvana Tasca, Siu-Hong Ho, and Cecilia Cheng-Mayer. R5X4 Viruses Are Evolutionary, Functional, and Antigenic Intermediates in the Pathway of a Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Coreceptor Switch. J. Virol., 82(14):7089-7099, Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18480460.
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Teeraputon2005
Sirilak Teeraputon, Suda Louisirirojchanakul, and Prasert Auewarakul. N-Linked Glycosylation in C2 Region of HIV-1 Envelope Reduces Sensitivity to Neutralizing Antibodies. Viral Immunol., 18(2):343-353, Summer 2005. PubMed ID: 16035946.
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Tomaras2011
Georgia D. Tomaras, James M. Binley, Elin S. Gray, Emma T. Crooks, Keiko Osawa, Penny L. Moore, Nancy Tumba, Tommy Tong, Xiaoying Shen, Nicole L. Yates, Julie Decker, Constantinos Kurt Wibmer, Feng Gao, S. Munir Alam, Philippa Easterbrook, Salim Abdool Karim, Gift Kamanga, John A. Crump, Myron Cohen, George M. Shaw, John R. Mascola, Barton F. Haynes, David C. Montefiori, and Lynn Morris. Polyclonal B Cell Responses to Conserved Neutralization Epitopes in a Subset of HIV-1-Infected Individuals. J. Virol., 85(21):11502-11519, Nov 2011. PubMed ID: 21849452.
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Totrov2010
Maxim Totrov, Xunqing Jiang, Xiang-Peng Kong, Sandra Cohen, Chavdar Krachmarov, Aidy Salomon, Constance Williams, Michael S. Seaman, Ruben Abagyan, Timothy Cardozo, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Shixia Wang, Shan Lu, Abraham Pinter, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Structure-Guided Design and Immunological Characterization of Immunogens Presenting the HIV-1 gp120 V3 Loop on a CTB Scaffold. Virology, 405(2):513-523, 30 Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20663531.
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Trkola1996b
A. Trkola, T. Dragic, J. Arthos, J. M. Binley, W. C. Olson, G. P. Allaway, C. Cheng-Mayer, J. Robinson, P. J. Maddon, and J. P. Moore. CD4-Dependent, Antibody-Sensitive Interactions between HIV-1 and Its Co-Receptor CCR-5. Nature, 384:184-187, 1996. CCR-5 is a co-factor for fusion of HIV-1 strains of the non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) phenotype with CD4+ T-cells. CD4 binding greatly increases the efficiency of gp120-CCR-5 interaction. Neutralizing MAbs against the V3 loop and CD4-induced epitopes on gp120 inhibited the interaction of gp120 with CCR-5, without affecting gp120-CD4 binding. PubMed ID: 8906796.
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Ugolini1997
S. Ugolini, I. Mondor, P. W. H. I Parren, D. R. Burton, S. A. Tilley, P. J. Klasse, and Q. J. Sattentau. Inhibition of Virus Attachment to CD4+ Target Cells Is a Major Mechanism of T Cell Line-Adapted HIV-1 Neutralization. J. Exp. Med., 186:1287-1298, 1997. PubMed ID: 9334368.
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Upadhyay2014
Chitra Upadhyay, Luzia M. Mayr, Jing Zhang, Rajnish Kumar, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Arthur Nádas, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Catarina E. Hioe. Distinct Mechanisms Regulate Exposure of Neutralizing Epitopes in the V2 and V3 Loops of HIV-1 Envelope. J. Virol., 88(21):12853-12865, Nov 2014. PubMed ID: 25165106.
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Vaine2010
Michael Vaine, Shixia Wang, Qin Liu, James Arthos, David Montefiori, Paul Goepfert, M. Juliana McElrath, and Shan Lu. Profiles of Human Serum Antibody Responses Elicited by Three Leading HIV Vaccines Focusing on the Induction of Env-Specific Antibodies. PLoS One, 5(11):e13916, 2010. PubMed ID: 21085486.
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VanCott1994
T. C. VanCott, F. R. Bethke, V. R. Polonis, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, R. R. Redfield, and D. L. Birx. Dissociation Rate of Antibody-gp120 Binding Interactions Is Predictive of V3-Mediated Neutralization of HIV-1. J. Immunol., 153:449-459, 1994. Using surface plasmon resonance it was found that the rate of the dissociation of the MAb-gp120 complex, but not the association rate, correlated with MAbs ability to neutralize homologous virus (measured by 50\% inhibition of p24 production). Association constants were similar for all MAbs tested, varying less than 4-fold. Dissociation rate constants were quite variable, with 100-fold differences observed. PubMed ID: 7515931.
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vanGils2011
Marit J. van Gils, Evelien M. Bunnik, Brigitte D. Boeser-Nunnink, Judith A. Burger, Marijke Terlouw-Klein, Naomi Verwer, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Longer V1V2 Region with Increased Number of Potential N-Linked Glycosylation Sites in the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Protects against HIV-Specific Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(14):6986-6995, Jul 2011. PubMed ID: 21593147.
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Varadarajan2005
Raghavan Varadarajan, Deepak Sharma, Kausik Chakraborty, Mayuri Patel, Michael Citron, Prem Sinha, Ramkishor Yadav, Umar Rashid, Sarah Kennedy, Debra Eckert, Romas Geleziunas, David Bramhill, William Schleif, Xiaoping Liang, and John Shiver. Characterization of gp120 and Its Single-Chain Derivatives, gp120-CD4D12 and gp120-M9: Implications for Targeting the CD4i Epitope in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Vaccine Design. J. Virol., 79(3):1713-1723, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15650196.
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Vermeire2009
Kurt Vermeire, Kristel Van Laethem, Wouter Janssens, Thomas W. Bell, and Dominique Schols. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Escape from Cyclotriazadisulfonamide-Induced CD4-Targeted Entry Inhibition Is Associated with Increased Neutralizing Antibody Susceptibility. J. Virol., 83(18):9577-9583, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 19570853.
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Verrier2001
F. Verrier, A. Nadas, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Additive effects characterize the interaction of antibodies involved in neutralization of the primary dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolate 89.6. J. Virol., 75(19):9177--86, Oct 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/19/9177. PubMed ID: 11533181.
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Visciano2008
Maria Luisa Visciano, Michael Tuen, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Catarina E. Hioe. In Vivo Alteration of Humoral Responses to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp120 by Antibodies to the CD4-Binding Site of gp120. Virology, 372(2):409-420, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18054978.
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Wang2007a
Bao-Zhong Wang, Weimin Liu, Sang-Moo Kang, Munir Alam, Chunzi Huang, Ling Ye, Yuliang Sun, Yingying Li, Denise L. Kothe, Peter Pushko, Terje Dokland, Barton F. Haynes, Gale Smith, Beatrice H. Hahn, and Richard W. Compans. Incorporation of High Levels of Chimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins into Virus-Like Particles. J. Virol., 81(20):10869-10878, Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17670815.
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Wu2008
Xueling Wu, Anna Sambor, Martha C. Nason, Zhi-Yong Yang, Lan Wu, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Soluble CD4 Broadens Neutralization of V3-Directed Monoclonal Antibodies and Guinea Pig Vaccine Sera against HIV-1 Subtype B and C Reference Viruses. Virology, 380(2):285-295, 25 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18804254.
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Wu2010
Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Yuxing Li, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, William R. Schief, Michael S. Seaman, Tongqing Zhou, Stephen D. Schmidt, Lan Wu, Ling Xu, Nancy S. Longo, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Diane L. Wycuff, Yu Feng, Martha Nason, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, Peter D. Kwong, Mario Roederer, Richard T. Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Rational Design of Envelope Identifies Broadly Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies to HIV-1. Science, 329(5993):856-861, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616233.
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Xu2010
Hengyu Xu, Likai Song, Mikyung Kim, Margaret A. Holmes, Zane Kraft, George Sellhorn, Ellis L. Reinherz, Leonidas Stamatatos, and Roland K. Strong. Interactions between Lipids and Human Anti-HIV Antibody 4E10 Can Be Reduced without Ablating Neutralizing Activity. J. Virol., 84(2):1076-1088, Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 19906921.
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Yamamoto2008
Hiroyuki Yamamoto and Tetsuro Matano. Anti-HIV Adaptive Immunity: Determinants for Viral Persistence. Rev. Med. Virol., 18(5):293-303, Sep-Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18416450.
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Yang2010a
Qiang Yang, Cishan Li, Yadong Wei, Wei Huang, and Lai-Xi Wang. Expression, Glycoform Characterization, and Antibody-Binding of HIV-1 V3 Glycopeptide Domain Fused with Human IgG1-Fc. Bioconjug. Chem., 21(5):875-883, 19 May 2010. PubMed ID: 20369886.
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Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
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York2001
J. York, K. E. Follis, M. Trahey, P. N. Nyambi, S. Zolla-Pazner, and J. H. Nunberg. Antibody binding and neutralization of primary and T-cell line-adapted isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 75(6):2741--52, Mar 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/6/2741. PubMed ID: 11222697.
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Yoshimura2006
Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Junji Shibata, Tetsuya Kimura, Akiko Honda, Yosuke Maeda, Atsushi Koito, Toshio Murakami, Hiroaki Mitsuya, and Shuzo Matsushita. Resistance Profile of a Neutralizing Anti-HIV Monoclonal Antibody, KD-247, that Shows Favourable Synergism with Anti-CCR5 Inhibitors. AIDS, 20(16):2065-2073, 24 Oct 2006. PubMed ID: 17053352.
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Yu2010
Bin Yu, Dora P. A. J. Fonseca, Sara M. O'Rourke, and Phillip W. Berman. Protease Cleavage Sites in HIV-1 gp120 Recognized by Antigen Processing Enzymes Are Conserved and Located at Receptor Binding Sites. J. Virol., 84(3):1513-1526, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19939935.
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Yu2018
Wen-Han Yu, Peng Zhao, Monia Draghi, Claudia Arevalo, Christina B. Karsten, Todd J. Suscovich, Bronwyn Gunn, Hendrik Streeck, Abraham L. Brass, Michael Tiemeyer, Michael Seaman, John R. Mascola, Lance Wells, Douglas A. Lauffenburger, and Galit Alter. Exploiting Glycan Topography for Computational Design of Env Glycoprotein Antigenicity. PLoS Comput. Biol., 14(4):e1006093, Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29677181.
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Yuste2006
Eloisa Yuste, Hannah B. Sanford, Jill Carmody, Jacqueline Bixby, Susan Little, Michael B. Zwick, Tom Greenough, Dennis R. Burton, Douglas D. Richman, Ronald C. Desrosiers, and Welkin E. Johnson. Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Engrafted with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Epitopes: Replication, Neutralization, and Survey of HIV-1-Positive Plasma. J. Virol., 80(6):3030-3041, Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16501112.
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Zhou2010
Tongqing Zhou, Ivelin Georgiev, Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Kaifan Dai, Andrés Finzi, Young Do Kwon, Johannes F. Scheid, Wei Shi, Ling Xu, Yongping Yang, Jiang Zhu, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Joseph Sodroski, Lawrence Shapiro, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody VRC01. Science, 329(5993):811-817, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616231.
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Zolla-Pazner1995
S. Zolla-Pazner, J. O'Leary, S. Burda, M. K. Gorny, M. Kim, J. Mascola, and F. McCutchan. Serotyping of primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates from diverse geographic locations by flow cytometry. J. Virol., 69:3807-3815, 1995. A set of 13 human MAbs to a variety of epitopes were tested against a panel of primary isolates of HIV-1, representing different genetic clades. The V3 loop tended to be B clade restricted, and a single gp120 C-terminus binding antibody was clade specific. Two other gp120 C-terminus binding antibodies were group specific. PubMed ID: 7745728.
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Zolla-Pazner1995a
S. Zolla-Pazner and S. Sharpe. A Resting Cell Assay for Improved Detection of Antibody-Mediated Neutralization of HIV Type 1 Primary Isolates. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 11:1449-1458, 1995. PubMed ID: 8679288.
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Zolla-Pazner1999a
S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, P. N. Nyambi, T. C. VanCott, and A. Nadas. Immunotyping of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV): An Approach to Immunologic Classification of HIV. J. Virol., 73:4042-4051, 1999. 21 human anti-V3 MAbs were studied with respect to cross-clade reactivity and immunological relationship to other human anti-V3 MAbs. Broad cross-reactivities were observed, and V3 peptides were grouped into immunotypes that contained peptides from several clades. PubMed ID: 10196300.
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Zolla-Pazner1999b
S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, and P. N. Nyambi. The implications of antigenic diversity for vaccine development. Immunol. Lett., 66:159-64, 1999. PubMed ID: 10203049.
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Zwick2003a
Michael B. Zwick, Robert Kelleher, Richard Jensen, Aran F. Labrijn, Meng Wang, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. A Novel Human Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Is V1, V2, and V3 Loop Dependent and Helps Delimit the Epitope of the Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Immunoglobulin G1 b12. J. Virol., 77(12):6965-6978, Jun 2003. PubMed ID: 12768015.
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vandenKerkhof2013
Tom L. G. M. van den Kerkhof, K. Anton Feenstra, Zelda Euler, Marit J. van Gils, Linda W. E. Rijsdijk, Brigitte D. Boeser-Nunnink, Jaap Heringa, Hanneke Schuitemaker, and Rogier W. Sanders. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Signatures That Correlate with the Development of Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Activity. Retrovirology, 10:102, 23 Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 24059682.
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Spencer2021
David A. Spencer, Delphine C. Malherbe, Nestor Vazquez Bernat, Monika Adori, Benjamin Goldberg, Nicholas Dambrauskas, Heidi Henderson, Shilpi Pandey, Tracy Cheever, Philip Barnette, William F. Sutton, Margaret E. Ackerman, James J. Kobie, D. Noah Sather, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, Nancy L. Haigwood, and Ann J. Hessell. Polyfunctional Tier 2-Neutralizing Antibodies Cloned following HIV-1 Env Macaque Immunization Mirror Native Antibodies in a Human Donor. J Immunol, 206(5):999-1012 doi, Mar 2021. PubMed ID: 33472907
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Wieczorek2023
Lindsay Wieczorek, Eric Sanders-Buell, Michelle Zemil, Eric Lewitus, Erin Kavusak, Jonah Heller, Sebastian Molnar, Mekhala Rao, Gabriel Smith, Meera Bose, Amy Nguyen, Adwitiya Dhungana, Katherine Okada, Kelly Parisi, Daniel Silas, Bonnie Slike, Anuradha Ganesan, Jason Okulicz, Tahaniyat Lalani, Brian K. Agan, Trevor A. Crowell, Janice Darden, Morgane Rolland, Sandhya Vasan, Julie Ake, Shelly J. Krebs, Sheila Peel, Sodsai Tovanabutra, and Victoria R. Polonis. Evolution of HIV-1 envelope towards reduced neutralization sensitivity, as demonstrated by contemporary HIV-1 subtype B from the United States. PLoS Pathog, 19(12):e1011780 doi, Dec 2023. PubMed ID: 38055771
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Wang2023
Shuishu Wang, Flavio Matassoli, Baoshan Zhang, Tracy Liu, Chen-Hsiang Shen, Tatsiana Bylund, Timothy Johnston, Amy R. Henry, I-Ting Teng, Prabhanshu Tripathi, Jordan E. Becker, Anita Changela, Ridhi Chaudhary, Cheng Cheng, Martin Gaudinski, Jason Gorman, Darcy R. Harris, Myungjin Lee, Nicholas C. Morano, Laura Novik, Sijy O'Dell, Adam S. Olia, Danealle K. Parchment, Reda Rawi, Jesmine Roberts-Torres, Tyler Stephens, Yaroslav Tsybovsky, Danyi Wang, David J. Van Wazer, Tongqing Zhou, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Richard A. Koup, Lawrence Shapiro, Daniel C. Douek, Adrian B. McDermott, and Peter D. Kwong. HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies elicited in humans by a prefusion-stabilized envelope trimer form a reproducible class targeting fusion peptide. Cell Rep, 42(7):112755 doi, Jul 2023. PubMed ID: 37436899
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Sliepen2019
Kwinten Sliepen, Byung Woo Han, Ilja Bontjer, Petra Mooij, Fernando Garces, Anna-Janina Behrens, Kimmo Rantalainen, Sonu Kumar, Anita Sarkar, Philip J. M. Brouwer, Yuanzi Hua, Monica Tolazzi, Edith Schermer, Jonathan L. Torres, Gabriel Ozorowski, Patricia van der Woude, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Marielle J. van Breemen, Juan Miguel Camacho-Sanchez, Judith A. Burger, Max Medina-Ramirez, Nuria Gonzalez, Jose Alcami, Celia LaBranche, Gabriella Scarlatti, Marit J. van Gils, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, Andrew B. Ward, Gerrit Koopman, John P. Moore, Robin J. Shattock, Willy M. Bogers, Ian A. Wilson, and Rogier W. Sanders. Structure and immunogenicity of a stabilized HIV-1 envelope trimer based on a group-M consensus sequence. Nat Commun, 10(1):2355 doi, May 2019. PubMed ID: 31142746
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Displaying record number 509
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Vaccine Details
Notes
Showing 8 of
8 notes.
-
H902: Humoral responses in rats immunized with a pseudovirion vaccine targeting membrane-anchored HIV Env, induced into a fusion intermediate conformation, were analysed. Sera from immunized rats failed to neutralize homologous YU2 and heterologous BH10 HIV, in addition, sera form these animals led to an enhancement of infection. The enhancing activity of sera was attributed to contaminating cellular proteins. H902 was able to neutralize only BH10, however, the neutralizing activity of this MAb was completely masked when mixed with rat sera exhibiting enhancing activity.
Bosch2009
(neutralization)
-
902: 902 did not bind to monomeric nor to oligomeric gp41, it bound to gp120. Binding of this Ab to H9/IIIB-infected cells gave a weak signal which was slightly decreased by sCD4 pretreatment. Binding to H9/MN-infected cells gave no signal regardless of sCD4 pretreatment. Sera from both long-term survivors and AIDS patients enhanced binding of 902 to H9/IIIB-infected cells.
Usami2005
(antibody binding site, rate of progression)
-
902: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of the V3 MAbs 694-98D and 447-52D, that both bind near the tip of the loop, was decreased by both thrombin and trypsin, 932 binding was only decreased by trypsin.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
902: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 522.
-
902: V3-BH10 peptide with loop-structure inhibits IL-2 induced T-cell proliferation, thought to be due to altering intracellular signaling, and MAb 908 can block the peptide inhibition.
Sakaida1997
-
902: Used as a control in a study of the influence of oligomeric structure of Env in determining the repertoire of the Ab response.
Earl1994
-
902: Epitope may be partially masked or altered in the oligomeric molecule.
Broder1994
-
902: Strain specific neutralization of HIV.
Chesebro1988
References
Showing 9 of
9 references.
Chesebro1988
B. Chesebro and K. Wehrly. Development of a Sensitive Quantitative Focal Assay for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infectivity. J. Virol., 62:3779-3788, 1988. PubMed ID: 3047430.
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Laman1993
J. D. Laman, M. M. Schellekens, G. K. Lewis, J. P. Moore, T. J. Matthews, J. P. M. Langedijk, R. H. Meloen, W. J. A. Boersma, and E. Claassen. A Hidden Region in the Third Variable Domain of HIV-1 IIIB gp120 Identified by a Monoclonal Antibody. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 9:605-612, 1993. A peptide (FVTIGKIGNMRQAHC) induced MAb binds to the carboxy-terminal flank of the V3-loop, but the epitope is only exposed on gp120 when it is treated with SDS-DTT. PubMed ID: 8369165.
Show all entries for this paper.
Broder1994
C.C. Broder, P.L. Earl, D. Long, S.T. Abedon, B. Moss, and R.W. Doms. Antigenic implications of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope quaternary structure: Oligomer-specific and -sensitive monoclonal antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 91:11699-11703, 1994. 35 anti-gp41 and 27 anti-gp120 murine MAbs generated by immunization with oligomeric HIV-1 IIIB envelope were studied. These MAbs tended to react with conformational epitopes. 21 of the anti-gp41 MAbs reacted preferentially with oligomeric env, while only 1 of the anti-gp120 MAbs reacted more strongly with the oligomer, and 14 of the anti-gp120 preferentially recognized monomeric env. PubMed ID: 7972127.
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Earl1994
P. L. Earl, C. C. Broder, D. Long, S. A. Lee, J. Peterson, S. Chakrabarti, R. W. Doms, and B. Moss. Native oligomeric human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Envelope glycoprotein elicits diverse monoclonal antibody reactivities. J. Virol., 68:3015-3026, 1994. In a study of the repertoire of response to oligomeric versus monomeric Env protein, 138 murine MAbs were generated in response to an immunogen that was a gp120/bp41 oligomeric molecule that was not cleaved due to a mutation in the cleavage site. The oligomeric molecule was found to elicit a response that was very different than the monomer. Most MAbs were conformational, many were to gp41 or if in gp120, to the CD4 BS. Few MAbs to linear V3 epitopes were produced in response to oligomeric protein, though this was a common specificity in response to immunization with gp120 monomeric protein. PubMed ID: 7512157.
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Sakaida1997
H. Sakaida, T. Murakami, S. Kawamata, T. Hattori, and T. Uchiyama. V3 Loop of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Suppresses Interleukin 2-Induced T Cell Growth. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:151-159, 1997. See comments in AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 13:633 (1997). PubMed ID: 9007200.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Usami2005
Osamu Usami, Peng Xiao, Hong Ling, Yi Liu, Tadashi Nakasone, and Toshio Hattori. Properties of Anti-gp41 Core Structure Antibodies, Which Compete with Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients. Microbes Infect., 7(4):650-657, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15823513.
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Bosch2009
Valerie Bosch, Tanya Pfeiffer, Gerard Devitt, Ina Allespach, Thomas Ebensen, Vanessa Emerson, Carlos A. Guzman, and Oliver T. Keppler. HIV Pseudovirion Vaccine Exposing Env ``fusion intermediates''---Response to Immunisation in Human CD4/CCR5-Transgenic Rats. Vaccine, 27(16):2202-2212, 6 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19428834.
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Mizukami1988
Tamio Mizukami, Thomas R. Fuerst, Edward A. Berger, and Bernard Moss. Binding Region for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Epitopes for HIV-Blocking Monoclonal Antibodies of the CD4 Molecule Defined by Site-Directed Mutagenesis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 85(23):9273-9277, Dec 1988. PubMed ID: 2461565.
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Displaying record number 506
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record as JSON.
MAb ID |
694/98-D (694/98, 694.8, 694/98D, 694-98D) |
HXB2 Location |
Env(314-317) DNA(7164..7175) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp120( IIIB) |
Research Contact |
Dr. Zolla-Pazner, Veterans Affairs Center, NY, NY. zollas01@endeavor.med.nyu.edu |
Epitope |
GRAF
|
Epitope Alignment
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp120 V3 // V3 glycan (V3g) |
Neutralizing |
L |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG1λ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody interactions, antibody sequence, binding affinity, effector function, enhancing activity, neutralization, review, structure, vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity |
Notes
Showing 36 of
36 notes.
-
694/98D: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 694/98D is discussed as the V3 region-targeting, neutralizing anti-gp120 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a linear epitope.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
694/98-D: This study analyzed the neutralization sensitivity of sequential HIV-1 primary isolates during their natural evolution in 5 subtype B and CRF02_AG HIV-1 infected drug naive individuals to 13 anti-HIV-1 MAbs (including this MAb) directed at epitopes in the V2, V3, CD4bd and carbohydrates. Patient viruses evolved to become more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed at epitopes at V2, V3 and CDbd, indicating that cross sectional studies are inadequate to define the neutralization spectrum of MAb neutralization with primary HIV-1 isolates.
Haldar2011
(neutralization)
-
694/98: Two V3-scaffold immunogen constructs were designed and expressed using 3D structures of cholera toxin B (CTB), V3 in the gp120 context, and V3 bound to 447-52D MAb. The construct (V3-CTB) presenting the complete V3 was recognized by 694/98 and by the large majority of other MAbs (18/24), indicating correctly folded and exposed MAb epitopes. V3-CTB induced V3-binding Abs and Abs displaying cross-clade neutralizing activity in immunized rabbits. Short V3-CTB construct, presenting a V3 fragment in conformation observed in complex with 447-52D, bound to fewer MAbs (10/24). 694/98 retained the same binding affinities for this construct as for the V3-CTB, indicating that it utilizes a binding mode similar to that of 447-52D.
Totrov2010
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, structure)
-
694/98-D: Six gp120 proteins (LAI, JRFL, MN, BAL, YU-2 and 93MW959) in complex with MAb 654-D had higher reactivity with 694/98-D compared to the uncomplexed gp120. Also, gp120 in complex with CD4bs Abs 559/64-D, 1570 and 1027-30D displayed significantly higher levels of reactivity than uncomplexed gp120, whereas gp120 in complex with C2 MAbs 1006-30D and 847-D did not. Enhanced reactivity was also observed for gp120 in complex with V2 MAbs 697-D and 2158.
Hioe2009
(binding affinity)
-
694/98-D: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:2-5*04, IGHD:5-12, D-RF:3, IGHJ:4. There was a preferential usage of the VH5-51 gene segment for V3 Abs. The usage of the VH4 family for the V3 Abs was restricted to only one gene segment, VH4-59, and the VH3 gene family was used at a significantly lower level by these Abs. The V3 Abs preferentially used the JH3 and D2-15 gene segments.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
694/98-D: Post-attachment enhancement (PAE), which augmented the level of HIV-1 cell infection by 1.4-fold, was significantly inhibited by 694/98-D MAb. 694/98-D was also shown to suppress the fluidity of the viral and plasma envelopes. It is suggested that the binding of 694/98-D to the viral surface could affect steric alternations of the viral envelope and restrain the envelope from enhancing its fluidity. Thus, suppression of the fluidity of viral envelope could be one additional mechanism for virus neutralization by 694/98-D.
Harada2008
(antibody interactions, enhancing activity, neutralization)
-
694/98D: A significantly higher level of 694/98D bound to gp120 complexed with six different anti-CD4bs Abs than to gp120 alone or in complex with other non-CD4bs Abs, indicating that binding of anti-CD4bs Abs to gp120 increases exposure of specific V3 MAb epitopes. Immunization of mice with gp120 in complex with 694/98D did not elicit higher and faster gp120-specific Ab responses than immunization with gp120 alone or gp120 in complex with other mAbs, in contrast to immunization with gp120/anti-CD4bs MAb complexes. Sera from gp120-694/98D immunized mice showed weak or no neutralizing activity against both homologous and heterologous HIV-1 isolates.
Visciano2008
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
694/98D: This MAb bound with high affinity to gp120IIIb. 694/98D did not disassociate from gp120 at acidic pH, but it had no inhibitory effect on gp120 antigen presentation by MHC class II. 694/98D had minimal effect on the rate of gp120 fragmentation by lysosomal enzyme digestion.
Tuen2005
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
694-98D: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of the V3 MAb 694-98D to its epitope was decreased by both thrombin and trypsin.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
694/98-D: Called 694/98. V3 MAb neutralization is influenced by retaining the epitope, exposure on the intact virion, mobility during CD4-induced conformational change, and affinity. Anti-V3 MAbs selected using V3 peptides neutralize less effectively than V3 MAbs selected using fusion proteins or gp120, suggesting antigenic conformation is important. This MAb was selected using IIIB gp120.
Gorny2004
(antibody binding site)
-
694/98D: This review provides summaries of Abs that bind to HIV-1 Env. There are many V3 MAbs, many neutralize some TCLA strains, and a subset can also neutralize some primary isolates.
Gorny2003
(variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
694/98D: scFv 4KG5 reacts with a conformational epitope that is formed by the V1V2 and V3 loops and the bridging sheet (C4) region of gp120 and is influenced by carbohydrates. Of a panel of MAbs tested, only NAb b12 enhanced 4KG5 binding to gp120 JRFL. MAbs to the following regions diminished 4KG5 binding: V2 loop, V3 loop, V3-C4 region, CD4BS. MAbs directed against C1, CD4i, C5 regions didn't impact 4KG5 binding. These results suggest that the orientation or dynamics of the V1/V2 and V3 loops restricts CD4BS access on the envelope spike, and IgG1b12 can uniquely remain unaffected by these loops. This was one of the V3 MAbs used.
Zwick2003a
(antibody interactions)
-
694/98-D: Called 694 -- Transgenic mice carrying human genes allowing production of fully human MAbs were used to rapidly create a panel of anti-HIV gp120 MAb producing hybridomas by immunization with HIV SF162 gp120 -- the previously described human MAbs 5145A(CD4BS) , 4117C (plus others, V3) and 697D (and SC258, V2) were used as controls.
He2002
-
694/98-D: Called 694/98D -- Truncation of the gp41 cytoplasmic domain of X4, R5, and X4R5 viruses forces a conformation that more closely resembles the CD4 bound state of the external Envelope, enhancing binding of CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d and of CD4BS MAbs F105, b12, and in most cases of glycosylation site dependent MAb 2G12 and the anti-gp41 MAb 246D -- in contrast, binding of the anti-V2 MAb 697D and the anti-V3 MAb 694/98D were not affected -- viruses bearing the truncation were more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs 48d, b12, and 2G12 -- the anti-C5 MAb 1331A was used to track levels of cell surface expression of the mutated proteins.
EdwardsBH2002
-
694/98-D: Called 694/98D -- six mutations in MN change the virus from a high-infectivity neutralization resistant phenotype to low-infectivity neutralization sensitive -- V3, CD4BS, and CD4i MAbs are 20-100 fold more efficient at neutralizing the sensitive form -- the mutation L544P reduced binding of all MAbs against gp120 by causing conformational changes.
Park2000
-
694/98-D: A panel of 47 human MAbs was tested against 26 HIV-1 group M primary isolates from clades A through H -- 19 V3 MAbs were tested, and of 494 combinations, 44% displayed some viral binding -- V3 MAbs tended to have the most cross-reactive binding to clade A, B, C, and D isolates, less to E, F, G, and H -- 694/98-D showed intermediate reactivity.
Nyambi2000
-
694/98-D: A Semliki Forest virus (SFV) expression system carrying BX08 env was used to study the conformation of gp120 -- intracytoplasmic gp120 was recognized by the anti-V3 MAbs K24 and F5.5, while gp120 at the plasma membrane was detected only by conformation dependent MAbs 2G12, 670-D and 694/98D and not linear V3 MAbs -- expression in rat brain also showed that surface-expressed Env was recognized only by the conformation-dependent antibodies and not by anti-V3 antibodies.
Altmeyer1999
-
694/98-D: MAb peptide reactivity pattern clustered with immunological related MAbs: 1108, 386, 268, 311, 257, 694.8 -- the amino acids HI tended to be critical for reactivity in this group.
Zolla-Pazner1999a
-
694/98-D: Review of clade specificity and anti-V3 HIV-1-Abs.
Zolla-Pazner1999b
-
694/98-D: In a study of the influence of the glycan at position 306 of the V3 loop on MAb recognition, anti-V3 MAbs were found to neutralize an HIV-BRU mutant virus that lacks the V3 loop glycan more efficiently than HIV-BRU.
Schonning1998
-
694/98-D: Using a whole virion-ELISA method, 18 human MAbs were tested for their ability to bind to a panel of 9 viruses from clades A, B, D, F, G, and H -- 694/98-D bound only to B and D clade virions and had limited cross reactivity.
Nyambi1998
-
694/98-D: Neutralization synergy was observed when the MAbs 694/98-D (V3), 2F5 (gp41), and 2G12 (gp120 discontinuous) were used in combination, and even greater neutralizing potential was seen with the addition of a fourth MAb, F105 (CD4 BS)
Li1998
-
694/98-D: The tip of the MN V3 loop was inserted into cold causing human rhinovirus 14 (HRV14) -- chimeras were immunoselected, and chimeric viruses were neutralized by anti-V3 loop antibodies, and 694/98-D was among the Abs used -- chimeric viruses elicited potent NAbs in guinea pigs against ALA-1 and MN.
Smith1998
-
694/98-D: Used to study pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis Hu-PBL-SCID mice infected by an intraperitoneal injection of HIV-1 LAI -- MAb half-life in plasma in mice is 9 days -- 2 hours post-694/98-D mice were challenged with LAI, and at an Ab concentration of 1.32 mg/Kg, 50% of the mice were infected -- one of the infected mice carried the resistant form GRTF rather than GRAF (critical amino acids for binding are GRA) -- post-exposure prophylaxis was effective if delivered 15 min post-exposure, but declined to 50% if delivered 60 min post-exposure, and similar time constraints have been observed for HIVIG, 2F5 and 2G12, in contrast to MAb BAT123 that could protect delivered 4 hours post infection.
Andrus1998
-
694/98-D: One of 14 human MAbs tested for ability to neutralize a chimeric SHIV-vpu+, which expressed HIV-1 IIIB env -- could only achieve 50% neutralization alone -- all Ab combinations tested showed synergistic neutralization -- 694/98-D has synergistic response with MAbs F105, 15e, b12, 2F5, 17b, 2G12, and 48d, and with HIVIG.
Li1997
-
694/98-D: ADCC activity, and no viral enhancing activity. Epitope provided as GPAF, but no details are given.
Forthal1995
(effector function)
-
694/98-D: Serotyping study using flow-cytometry -- bound GRAX bearing virus in 10/11 cases -- somewhat conformation dependent.
Zolla-Pazner1995
-
694/98-D: Human HIV-1 infected sera and MAb 694/98 have high reactivity to MN and RF infected H9 cells, but Genentech rec gp120 IIIB vaccine recipients do not.
VanCott1995
-
694/98-D: MAbs against the glycosphingolipid GalCer block HIV infection of normally susceptible CD4 negative cells from the brain and colon -- V3 MAbs can inhibit gp120 binding to GalCer in vitro -- binding of GalCer to gp120 inhibited but did not completely block MAb binding.
Cook1994
-
694/98-D: GRVY did not alter peptide binding -- GRVI and GQAW enhanced dissociation -- GQVF and GQAL did not bind.
VanCott1994
-
694/98-D: Potent neutralization of IIIB -- no neutralization synergy in combination with CD4 binding domain MAbs.
Laal1994
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694/98-D: 50% neutralization of HIV-IIIB at a concentration of 0.15mug/ml.
Gorny1994
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694/98-D: Called 694-D -- complement mediated virolysis of IIIB, but not in the presence of sCD4.
Spear1993
-
694/98-D: Neutralizes MN and IIIB (GRAF) -- binds SF2 (GRAF) -- binding reactivity: MN, IIIB, SF2, NY5, RF, CDC4, WM52.
Gorny1993
-
694/98-D: Type-specific lab isolate neutralization was observed -- binds with 1-3 fold greater affinity to gp120 than to peptides.
Gorny1992
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694/98-D:
Skinner1988
References
Showing 39 of
39 references.
Isolation Paper
Gorny1992
M. K. Gorny, A. J. Conley, S. Karwowska, A. Buchbinder, J.-Y. Xu, E. A. Emini, S. Koenig, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of Diverse Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants by an Anti-V3 Human Monoclonal Antibody. J. Virol., 66:7538-7542, 1992. PubMed ID: 1433529.
Show all entries for this paper.
Altmeyer1999
R. Altmeyer, E. Mordelet, M. Girard, and C. Vidal. Expression and detection of macrophage tropic HIV-1 gp120 in the brain using conformation-dependent antibodies. Virology, 259:314-21, 1999. PubMed ID: 10388656.
Show all entries for this paper.
Andrus1998
L. Andrus, A. M. Prince, I. Bernal, P. McCormack, D. H. Lee, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Passive immunization with a human immunodeficiency virus type 1- neutralizing monoclonal antibody in Hu-PBL-SCID mice: isolation of a neutralization escape variant. J. Infect. Dis., 177:889-97, 1998. PubMed ID: 9534960.
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Cavacini1993
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, A. Buchbinder, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. R. Posner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the V3 Loop of HIV-1 gp120 Mediate Variable and Distinct Effects on Binding and Viral Neutralization by a Human Monoclonal Antibody to the CD4 Binding Site. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 6:353-358, 1993. PubMed ID: 8455141.
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Cook1994
D. G. Cook, J. Fantini, S. L. Spitalnik, and F. Gonzalez-Scarano. Binding of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 HIV-1 gp120 to Galactosylceramide (GalCer): Relationship to the V3 Loop. Virol., 201:206-214, 1994. Antibodies against GalCer can block infection of CD4-negative cells from the brain and colon that are susceptible to HIV infection. This paper explores the ability of a panel of MAbs to inhibit binding of gp120 to GalCer, and also of the binding of GalCer to inhibit MAb-gp120 interaction. MAbs to the V3 loop and GalCer showed mutual inhibition of binding to gp120, and anti-CD4 binding site MAbs showed reduced inhibition. N- and C-terminal MAbs didn't influence GalCer binding. PubMed ID: 8184533.
Show all entries for this paper.
EdwardsBH2002
Bradley H. Edwards, Anju Bansal, Steffanie Sabbaj, Janna Bakari, Mark J. Mulligan, and Paul A. Goepfert. Magnitude of Functional CD8+ T-Cell Responses to the Gag Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Correlates Inversely with Viral Load in Plasma. J. Virol., 76(5):2298-2305, Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11836408.
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Forthal1995
D. N. Forthal, G. Landucci, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and W. E. Robinson, Jr. Functional Activities of 20 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 11:1095-1099, 1995. A series of tests were performed on 20 human monoclonal antibodies to assess their potential therapeutic utility. Antibodies were tested for potentially harmful complement-mediated antibody enhancing activity (C-ADE), and for potentially beneficial neutralizing activity and antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity ADCC. PubMed ID: 8554906.
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Gorny1993
M. K. Gorny, J.-Y. Xu, S. Karwowska, A. Buchbinder, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Repertoire of Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies Specific for The V3 Domain of HIV-1 gp120. J. Immunol., 150:635-643, 1993. Characterizaton of 12 human MAbs that bind and neutralize the MN isolate with 50\% neutralization. Two of these antibodies also bound and neutralized IIIB: 447-52-D and 694/98-D; all others could not bind HXB2 peptides. All but two, 418-D and 412-D could bind to SF2 peptides. PubMed ID: 7678279.
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Gorny1994
M. K. Gorny, J. P. Moore, A. J. Conley, S. Karwowska, J. Sodroski, C. Williams, S. Burda, L. J. Boots, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Human Anti-V2 Monoclonal Antibody That Neutralizes Primary but Not Laboratory Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 68:8312-8320, 1994. Detailed characterization of the MAb 697-D. PubMed ID: 7525987.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2004
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Kathy Revesz, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Mark K. Louder, Christopher A. Anyangwe, Chavdar Krachmarov, Samuel C. Kayman, Abraham Pinter, Arthur Nadas, Phillipe N. Nyambi, John R. Mascola, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. The V3 Loop is Accessible on the Surface of Most Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates and Serves as a Neutralization Epitope. J. Virol., 78(5):2394-2404, Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 14963135.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Haldar2011
Bijayesh Haldar, Sherri Burda, Constance Williams, Leo Heyndrickx, Guido Vanham, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Phillipe Nyambi. Longitudinal Study of Primary HIV-1 Isolates in Drug-Naïve Individuals Reveals the Emergence of Variants Sensitive to Anti-HIV-1 Monoclonal Antibodies. PLoS One, 6(2):e17253, 2011. PubMed ID: 21383841.
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Harada2008
Shinji Harada, Kazuaki Monde, Yuetsu Tanaka, Tetsuya Kimura, Yosuke Maeda, and Keisuke Yusa. Neutralizing Antibodies Decrease the Envelope Fluidity of HIV-1. Virology, 370(1):142-150, 5 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17900650.
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He2002
Yuxian He, William J. Honnen, Chavdar P. Krachmarov, Michael Burkhart, Samuel C. Kayman, Jose Corvalan, and Abraham Pinter. Efficient Isolation of Novel Human Monoclonal Antibodies with Neutralizing Activity Against HIV-1 from Transgenic Mice Expressing Human Ig Loci. J. Immunol., 169(1):595-605, 1 Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12077293.
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Hioe2009
Catarina E. Hioe, Maria Luisa Visciano, Rajnish Kumar, Jianping Liu, Ethan A. Mack, Rachel E. Simon, David N. Levy, and Michael Tuen. The Use of Immune Complex Vaccines to Enhance Antibody Responses against Neutralizing Epitopes on HIV-1 Envelope gp120. Vaccine, 28(2):352-360, 11 Dec 2009. PubMed ID: 19879224.
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Laal1994
Suman Laal, Sherri Burda, Miroslav K. Gorny, Sylwia Karwowska, Aby Buchbinder, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 68(6):4001-4008, Jun 1994. PubMed ID: 7514683.
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Li1997
A. Li, T. W. Baba, J. Sodroski, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Robinson, M. R. Posner, H. Katinger, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, T.-C. Chou, and R. M Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of a Chimeric SIV/HIV Type 1 Virus with Combinations of Human Anti-HIV Type 1 Envelope Monoclonal Antibodies or Hyperimmune Globulins. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:647-656, 1997. Multiple combinations of MAbs were tested for their ability to synergize neutralization of a SHIV construct containing HIV IIIB env. All of the MAb combinations tried were synergistic, suggesting such combinations may be useful for passive immunotherapy or immunoprophylaxis. Because SHIV can replicate in rhesus macaques, such approaches can potentially be studied in an it in vivo monkey model. PubMed ID: 9168233.
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Li1998
A. Li, H. Katinger, M. R. Posner, L. Cavacini, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Sodroski, T. C. Chou, T. W. Baba, and R. M. Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIV-vpu+ by Triple and Quadruple Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies and High-Titer Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Immunoglobulins. J. Virol., 72:3235-3240, 1998. PubMed ID: 9525650.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Nyambi1998
P. N. Nyambi, M. K. Gorny, L. Bastiani, G. van der Groen, C. Williams, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Mapping of Epitopes Exposed on Intact Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Virions: A New Strategy for Studying the Immunologic Relatedness of HIV-1. J. Virol., 72:9384-9391, 1998. 18 human MAbs binding to gp120 and gp41 were tested using a novel assay to test binding to intact HIV-1 virions. The new method involves using MAbs to the host proteins incorporated into virions to bind them to ELIZA plates. Antigenic conservation in epitopes of HIV-1 in clades A, B, D, F, G, and H was studied. MAbs were selected that were directed against V2, V3, CD4bd, C5 or gp41 regions. Antibodies against V2, the CD4BS, and sp41 showed weak and sporadic reactivities, while binding strongly to gp120, suggesting these epitopes are hidden when gp120 is in its native, quaternary structure. PubMed ID: 9765494.
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Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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Park2000
E. J. Park, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and G. V. Quinnan. A global neutralization resistance phenotype of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is determined by distinct mechanisms mediating enhanced infectivity and conformational change of the envelope complex. J. Virol., 74:4183-91, 2000. PubMed ID: 10756031.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Schonning1998
K. Schonning, A. Bolmstedt, J. Novotny, O. S. Lund, S. Olofsson, and J. E. Hansen. Induction of Antibodies against Epitopes Inaccessible on the HIV Type 1 Envelope Oligomer by Immunization with Recombinant Monomeric Glycoprotein 120. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:1451-1456, 1998. PubMed ID: 9824323.
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Skinner1988
M. A. Skinner, R. Ting, A. J. Langlois, K. J. Weinhold, H. K. Lyerly, K. Javaherian, and T. J. Matthews. Characteristics of a Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody to the HIV Envelope Glycoprotein. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 4:187-197, 1988. PubMed ID: 2456088.
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Smith1998
A. D. Smith, S. C. Geisler, A. A. Chen, D. A. Resnick, B. M. Roy, P. J. Lewi, E. Arnold, and G. F. Arnold. Human Rhinovirus Type 14: Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) V3 Loop Chimeras from a Combinatorial Library Induce Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses against HIV-1. J. Virol., 72:651-659, 1998. The tip of the MN V3 loop, IGPGRAFYTTKN, was inserted into cold-causing human rhinovirus 14 (HRV14) and chimeras were immunoselected using MAbs 447-52-D, 694/98-D, NM-01, and 59.1, for good presentation of the V3 antigenic region. The selected chimeric viruses were neutralized by anti-V3 loop MAbs. The chimeric viruses elicited potent NAbs against ALA-1 and MN in guinea pigs. PubMed ID: 9420270.
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Spear1993
G. T. Spear, D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, A. L. Landay, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Complement activation by human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. J. Virol., 67:53-59, 1993. This study looked at the ability of 16 human MAbs to activate complement. MAbs directed against the V3 region could induce C3 deposition on infected cells and virolysis of free virus, but antibodies to the CD4BS and C-terminal region and two regions in gp41 could induce no complement mediated effects. Pre-treatment with sCD4 could increase complement-mediated effects of anti-gp41 MAbs, but decreased the complement-mediated effects of V3 MAbs. Anti-gp41 MAbs were able to affect IIIB but not MN virolysis, suggesting spontaneous shedding of gp120 on IIIB virions exposes gp41 epitopes. IgG isotype did not appear to have an effect on virolysis or C3 deposition. PubMed ID: 7677959.
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Totrov2010
Maxim Totrov, Xunqing Jiang, Xiang-Peng Kong, Sandra Cohen, Chavdar Krachmarov, Aidy Salomon, Constance Williams, Michael S. Seaman, Ruben Abagyan, Timothy Cardozo, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Shixia Wang, Shan Lu, Abraham Pinter, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Structure-Guided Design and Immunological Characterization of Immunogens Presenting the HIV-1 gp120 V3 Loop on a CTB Scaffold. Virology, 405(2):513-523, 30 Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20663531.
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Tuen2005
Michael Tuen, Maria Luisa Visciano, Peter C. Chien, Jr., Sandra Cohen, Pei-de Chen, James Robinson, Yuxian He, Abraham Pinter, Miroslaw K Gorny, and Catarina E Hioe. Characterization of Antibodies that Inhibit HIV gp120 Antigen Processing and Presentation. Eur. J. Immunol., 35(9):2541-2551, Sep 2005. PubMed ID: 16106369.
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VanCott1994
T. C. VanCott, F. R. Bethke, V. R. Polonis, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, R. R. Redfield, and D. L. Birx. Dissociation Rate of Antibody-gp120 Binding Interactions Is Predictive of V3-Mediated Neutralization of HIV-1. J. Immunol., 153:449-459, 1994. Using surface plasmon resonance it was found that the rate of the dissociation of the MAb-gp120 complex, but not the association rate, correlated with MAbs ability to neutralize homologous virus (measured by 50\% inhibition of p24 production). Association constants were similar for all MAbs tested, varying less than 4-fold. Dissociation rate constants were quite variable, with 100-fold differences observed. PubMed ID: 7515931.
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VanCott1995
T. C. VanCott, F. R. Bethke, D. S. Burke, R. R. Redfield, and D. L. Birx. Lack of Induction of Antibodies Specific for Conserved, Discontinuous Epitopes of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein by Candidate AIDS Vaccines. J. Immunol., 155:4100-4110, 1995. The Ab response in both HIV-1 infected and uninfected volunteers immunized with HIV-1 rec envelope subunit vaccines (Genentech gp120IIIB, MicroGeneSys gp160IIIB, or ImmunoAG gp160IIIB) preferentially induced Abs reactive only to the denatured form of gp120. This may explain the inability of the vaccinee sera to neutralize primary HIV-1 isolates. PubMed ID: 7561123.
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Visciano2008
Maria Luisa Visciano, Michael Tuen, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Catarina E. Hioe. In Vivo Alteration of Humoral Responses to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp120 by Antibodies to the CD4-Binding Site of gp120. Virology, 372(2):409-420, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18054978.
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Zhang2002
Peng Fei Zhang, Peter Bouma, Eun Ju Park, Joseph B. Margolick, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Michael N. Flora, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. A Variable Region 3 (V3) Mutation Determines a Global Neutralization Phenotype and CD4-Independent Infectivity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Associated with a Broadly Cross-Reactive, Primary Virus-Neutralizing Antibody Response. J. Virol., 76(2):644-655, Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11752155.
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Zolla-Pazner1995
S. Zolla-Pazner, J. O'Leary, S. Burda, M. K. Gorny, M. Kim, J. Mascola, and F. McCutchan. Serotyping of primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates from diverse geographic locations by flow cytometry. J. Virol., 69:3807-3815, 1995. A set of 13 human MAbs to a variety of epitopes were tested against a panel of primary isolates of HIV-1, representing different genetic clades. The V3 loop tended to be B clade restricted, and a single gp120 C-terminus binding antibody was clade specific. Two other gp120 C-terminus binding antibodies were group specific. PubMed ID: 7745728.
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Zolla-Pazner1997
S. Zolla-Pazner, C. Alving, R. Belshe, P. Berman, S. Burda, P. Chigurupati, M. L. Clements ML, A. M. Duliege, J. L. Excler, C. Hioe, J. Kahn, M. J. McElrath, S. Sharpe, F. Sinangil, K. Steimer, M. C. Walker, N. Wassef, and S. Xu. Neutralization of a clade B primary isolate by sera from human immunodeficiency virus-uninfected recipients of candidate AIDS vaccines. J. Infect. Dis., 175:764-774, 1997. Comment in J Infect Dis 1997 Nov;176(5):1410-2. Clade B primary isolate BZ167 was neutralized, using a new assay, by sera from HIV-uninfected volunteers in vaccine trials. PubMed ID: 9086128.
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Zolla-Pazner1999a
S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, P. N. Nyambi, T. C. VanCott, and A. Nadas. Immunotyping of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV): An Approach to Immunologic Classification of HIV. J. Virol., 73:4042-4051, 1999. 21 human anti-V3 MAbs were studied with respect to cross-clade reactivity and immunological relationship to other human anti-V3 MAbs. Broad cross-reactivities were observed, and V3 peptides were grouped into immunotypes that contained peptides from several clades. PubMed ID: 10196300.
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Zolla-Pazner1999b
S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, and P. N. Nyambi. The implications of antigenic diversity for vaccine development. Immunol. Lett., 66:159-64, 1999. PubMed ID: 10203049.
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Zwick2003a
Michael B. Zwick, Robert Kelleher, Richard Jensen, Aran F. Labrijn, Meng Wang, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. A Novel Human Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Is V1, V2, and V3 Loop Dependent and Helps Delimit the Epitope of the Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Immunoglobulin G1 b12. J. Virol., 77(12):6965-6978, Jun 2003. PubMed ID: 12768015.
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Displaying record number 783
Download this epitope
record as JSON.
MAb ID |
246-D (SZ-246.D, 246, 246D) |
HXB2 Location |
Env(590-597) DNA(7992..8015) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp41(gp41 579-604 HXB2) |
Research Contact |
Susan Zolla-Pazner (Zollas01@mcrcr6.med.nyu), NYU Med Center, NY, NY |
Epitope |
QQLLGIWG
|
Epitope Alignment
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp41 cluster I |
Neutralizing |
no View neutralization details |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG1κ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, binding affinity, complement, dendritic cells, effector function, enhancing activity, germline, immunotherapy, kinetics, mutation acquisition, neutralization, polyclonal antibodies, review, SIV, structure, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion |
Notes
Showing 42 of
42 notes.
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246D: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
246D: To investigate the role of non-neutralizing Abs (nnAbs) on HIV-1 infection in vivo, the study devised a replication-competent HIV-1 reporter virus that expressed a heterologous HA-tag on the surface of infected cells and virions. Anti-HA antibodies bound to, but did not neutralize, the reporter virus in vitro. However, anti-HA protected against infection in humanized mice and strongly selected for nnAb-resistant viruses in an entirely Fc-dependent manner. Similar results were also obtained with tier 2 HIV-1 viruses using 246D. While nnAbs are less effective than broadly neutralizing antibodies against HIV-1 in vitro and in vivo, the data show that nnAbs can protect against and alter the course of HIV-1 infection in vivo.
Horwitz2017
(neutralization, immunotherapy)
-
246-D: The study identified a primary HIV-1 Env variant from patient 653116 (GenBank MT023027) that consistently supports >300% increased viral infectivity in the presence of autologous or heterologous HIV-positive plasma. In the absence of HIV-positive plasma, viruses with this Env exhibited reduced infectivity that was not due to decreased CD4 binding. This phenotype was mapped to a change Q563R, in the gp41 heptad repeat 1 (HR1) region. The authors provide evidence that Q563R reduces viral infection by disrupting formation of the gp41 six-helix bundle required for virus-cell membrane fusion. Anti-cluster I monoclonal antibodies (240-D, 246-D, F240, T32) targeting HR1 and the C-C loop of gp41 restored infectivity defects observed with Q563R. Viruses with the Q563R mutation were shown to have increased sensitivity to MPER mAbs (10E8, 7H6, 2F5, Z13e1, 4E10).
Joshi2020
(mutation acquisition, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
246D: The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
246-D: Nanodiscs (discoidal lipid bilayer particles of 10-17 nm surrounded by membrane scaffold protein) were used to incorporate Env complexes for the purpose of vaccine platform generation. The Env-NDs (Env-NDs) were characterized for antigenicity and stability by non-NAbs and NAbs. Most NAb epitopes in gp41 MPER and in the gp120:gp41 interface were well exposed while non-NAb cell surface epitopes were generally masked. Anti-gp41 non-NAb 246-D, binds at a fraction of the binding of 2G12 to Env-ND, and this binding is sensitive to glutaraldehyde treatment .
Witt2017
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
246-D: Env from of a highly neutralization-resistant isolate, CH120.6, was shown to be very stable and conformationally-homogeneous. Its gp140 trimer retains many antigenic properties of the intact Env, while its monomeric gp120 exposes more epitopes. Thus trimer organization and stability are important determinants for occluding epitopes and conferring resistance to antibodies. Among a panel of 21 mAbs, CH120.6 was resistant to neutralization by all non-neutralizing and strain-specific mAbs (including 246-D), regardless of the location of their epitopes. It was weakly neutralized by several broadly-neutralizing mAbs (VRC01, NIH45-46, 12A12, PG9, PG16, PGT128, 4E10, and 10E8), and well neutralized by only 2 (PGT145 and 10-1074).
Cai2017
(neutralization)
-
246-D: Two stable homogenous gp140 Env trimer spikes, Clade A 92UG037.8 Env and Clade C C97ZA012 Env, were identified. 293T cells stably transfected with either presented fully functional surface timers, 50% of which were uncleaved. A panel of neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs were tested for binding to the trimers. Non-neutralizing Cluster I Ab, 246-D did not bind cell surface or neutralize 92UG037.8 HIV-1 isolate though it did bind gp160 minus its C-terminus (gp160ΔCT) weakly, and was able to bind well in the presence of sCD4.
Chen2015
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
246-D: A panel of NAbs and non-neutralizing Abs (NoNAbs) displaying the highest Fc γR-mediated inhibitory activity and significant ADCC were selected and formulated in a microbicidal gel and tested for their antiviral activity against SHIVSF162P3 vaginal challenge in non-human primates. Combination of 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10 fully prevented vaginal transmission. Two NoNAbs 246-D and 4B3 had no impact on viral acquisition, but reduced plasma viral load.
Moog2014
(effector function, SIV)
-
246-D: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 246D is discussed as the Cluster I region and Principal Immune Domain (PID) targeting non-neutralizing anti-gp41 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a linear epitope.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
246-D: The capacity of 246-D to block completely the activity of the anti-HIV peptide T20 was investigated. T20 inhibited the fusion or syncytia formation between co-cultured CHO-WT cells expressing HIV-1 HXB2 envelope glycoprotein on their surface and HeLaT4 cells. 246-D was not able to block the anti-fusion effect of T20.
Vincent2012
(antibody interactions)
-
246-D: A role for enhancing antibodies in early HIV infection was studied in longitudinal samples with primary viruses and autologous sera derived sequentially from recently infected individuals, using a T cell line naturally expressing the complement receptor 2 (CR2). Early produced non-neutralizing antibodies enhanced viral infectivity. Complement-mediated antibody-dependent enhancement (C’-ADE) was consistent and dramatic with infection-enhancing levels >350-fold in some cases. C’-ADE activity declined as a neutralizing response to the early virus emerged, but later virus isolates that had escaped the neutralizing response had an increased capacity for enhanced infection by autologous antibodies. MAb 246-D was used for comparison and enhanced infection of the TCLA strain IIIB up to 3.7-fold, comparable to previous reports.
Willey2011
(enhancing activity, polyclonal antibodies)
-
246-D: Prefusion (gp140), prehairpin intermediate (gp41-inter) and postfusion (gp41-post) constructs were developed to define conformational states recognized by non-neutralizing cluster II Abs. gp41-inter was re-constructed replacing the six helix bundle with GCN4. 246-D bound tightly to both gp41-inter and GCN4-gp41-inter constructs, suggesting no structural distortion due to six helix bundle replacement with GCN4.
Frey2010
(binding affinity, structure)
-
246: 246 bound to both SF162 wild type and SF162 mutant, carrying only the monomeric form of the Env protein, virions and transfected cells.
Kimura2009
(binding affinity)
-
246D: 246D recognized trimeric, dimeric and monomeric forms of cross-linked sgp140(-) Env glycoprotein, indicating that the epitope of this MAb is accessible on different oligomeric forms of soluble envelope proteins.
Yuan2009
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: Although a substantial increase in neutralization potency of MPER-specific Abs 4E10 and 2F5 was observed in cells expressing FcγR I and IIb, no such effect was observed for 246-D.
Perez2009
(neutralization)
-
246-D: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:1-69*01, IGHD:6-19, D-RF:2, IGHJ:4. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner.
Gorny2009
(germline)
-
246-D: Post-attachment enhancement (PAE), which augmented the level of HIV-1 cell infection by 1.4-fold, was not inhibited by 246-D non-neutralizing mAb, but was inhibited by anti-V3 neutralizing mAbs 0.5β and 694/98-D. Unlike the neutralizing Abs, 246-D did not suppress the fluidity of the viral and plasma envelopes. It is suggested that the binding of the neutralizing Abs to the viral surface could affect steric alternations of the viral envelope and restrain the envelope from enhancing its fluidity. Thus, suppression of the fluidity of viral envelope could be one additional mechanism for virus neutralization by anti-V3 neutralizing mAbs.
Harada2008
(antibody interactions, enhancing activity, neutralization)
-
246-D: 246-D reacted with maltose-binding proteins MBP30 and MBP32, containing both HR1 and HR2 domains of gp41, and with MBP37, containing only the HR2 domain, but not with MBP-HR1, containing only the HR1 domain. In addition, 246-D did not react with MBP44/N36, MBP-HR1/T20, MBP-HR1/H44, and MBP-HR1/C23 complexes.
Vincent2008
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: Molecular mechanism of neutralization by MPER antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10, was studied using preparations of trimeric HIV-1 Env protein in the prefusion, the prehairpin intermediate and postfusion conformations. MAb 246-D was used to analyze antigenic properties of construct 92UG-gp140-Fd, derived from isolate 92UG037.8 and stabilized by a C-terminal foldon tag. 92UG-gp140-Fd trimer binds 246-D. There is also strong binding of 246-D with plasmin cleaved 92UG-gp140-Fd.
Frey2008
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
246D: Point mutations in the highly conserved structural motif LLP-2 within the intracytoplasmic tail of gp41 resulted in conformational alterations of both gp41 and gp120. The alterations did not affect virus CD4 binding, coreceptor binding site exposure, or infectivity of the virus, but did result in decreased binding and neutralization by certain MAbs and human sera. 246D exhibited similar levels of binding to both the LLP-2 mutant and wildtype viruses, indicating that its epitope was not altered by the mutation.
Kalia2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
246D: 246D was found to bind to both monomeric and oligomeric gp41. Binding of this Ab to H9/IIIB-infected cells gave a strong signal which was increased by sCD4 pretreatment. Binding to H9/MN-infected cells gave a low signal which increased dramatically with sCD4 pretreatment.
Usami2005
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: This Ab was shown to inhibit HIV-1 BaL replication in macrophages but not in PHA-stimulated PBMCs. It is suggested that inhibition of HIV replication by this Ab for macrophages and iDCs occurs by an IgG-FcγR-dependent interaction leading to endocytosis and degradation of HIV particles. It is also suggested that this Ab is directed against epitopes distinct from those recognized by NAbs and that it will not impair virus entry into PBMCs but that it could participate in the protection of mucosal HIV transmission by preventing the infection of macrophages and iDCs.
Holl2006
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
246-D: Called 246D. The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. gp41 MAbs 246D, 98.6, 50-69, were decreased by trypsin, unaltered by thrombin, while NAb 2F5 binding was increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: One of 24 MAbs and Fabs in this database that bind to the highly immunogenic gp41 cluster I region (aa 579 - 604). Only one of these has any neutralizing potential, clone 3.
Gorny2003
(review)
-
246-D: Anti-gp41 MAbs were tested in a cell-cell fusion system to investigate the antigenic changes in gp41 during binding and fusion. Cluster I MAbs 50-69, F240, 240-D,3D6, and 246-D recognize a nonhelical hydrophobic region, positions 598-604, that forms a disulfide loop in the six-helix bundle. Cluster II MAbs 98-6 and 126-6 recognized residues 644-663 of gp41, a portion of the second heptad repeat. These MAbs were found to behave similarly, so 50-69 and 98-6 were used as representatives. Exposure of cluster I and cluster II epitopes required CD4 expression on HIV HXB2 Env expressing HeLa target cells, but not the CXCR4 co-receptor. Binding to CD4 exposed hidden cluster I and II epitopes. The MAbs were found to bind to gp120/gp41 complexes, not to gp41 after shedding of gp120, and were localized to at fusing-cell interfaces. Kinetic and binding results indicate that these MAbs are exposed in transitional structures during the fusion process, possibly the prehairpin intermediate prior to co-receptor binding, although other intermediate structures may be involved. They do not bind once syncytia begin to show extensive cytoplasmic mixing. These MAbs failed to inhibit fusion. The NAb 2F5 has a very different behavior in this study.
Finnegan2002
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
246-D: Alanine mutations were introduced into the N- and C-terminal alpha-helices of gp41 to destabilize interhelical packing interactions in order to study their inhibitory effect on viral infectivity. These mutations were shown to inhibit viral replication though affecting the conformational transition to the fusion-active form of gp41, and allow increased inhibition by gp41 peptides. 2F5 sensitivity is increased in the mutated viruses, presumably because 2F5s neutralization activity is focused on the transition to the fusion active state. No other gp41 MAb against tested, including NC-1, 50-69D, 1281, 98-6D, 246-D and F240, neutralized the parental or the fusion-deficient mutated viruses.
Follis2002
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 1245.
-
246-D: Called 246D -- Truncation of the gp41 cytoplasmic domain of X4, R5, and X4R5 viruses forces a conformation that more closely resembles the CD4 bound state of the external Envelope, enhancing binding of CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d and of CD4BS MAbs F105, b12, and in most cases of glycosylation site dependent MAb 2G12 and the anti-gp41 MAb 246D -- in contrast, binding of the anti-V2 MAb 697D and the anti-V3 MAb 694/98D were not affected -- viruses bearing the truncation were more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs 48d, b12, and 2G12 -- the anti-C5 MAb 1331A was used to track levels of cell surface expression of the mutated proteins.
EdwardsBH2002
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: Called 246 -- Conformation-dependent anti-V3 loop Abs may be more cross-reactive, so six new V3 MAbs were generated -- the six new MAbs all bind to the tip of the V3 loop and cross-compete with the MAb 447-52D and are conformationally sensitive -- MAbs showed cross-clade binding to native, intact virions and the strength binding was highly correlated with percent neutralization using the ghost cell or PHA blast assay -- five well-characterized MAbs were used as controls: anti-V3 447-52D (anti-V3 MAb for competition and neutralization studies), 654 (anti-CD4BS used as a conformation-sensitive MAb control), 1331A (anti-C5 used as a linear binding site MAb control), and MAb 246 (anti-gp41 MAb that bound to primary isolates of all clades tested, A, B, C, D, F and CRF01 (clade E).
Gorny2002
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
246-D: A panel of 12 MAbs was used to identify those that could neutralize the dual-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 89.6 -- six gave significant neutralization at 2 to 10 ug/ml: 2F5, 50-69, IgG1b12, 447-52D, 2G12, and 670-D six did not have neutralizing activity: 654-D, 4.8D, 450-D, 246-D, 98-6, and 1281 -- no synergy, only additive effects were seen for pairwise combinations of MAbs, and antagonism was noted between gp41 MAbs 50-69 and 98-6, as well as 98-6 and 2F5.
Verrier2001
(antibody interactions)
-
246-D: 26 HIV-1 group M isolates (clades A to H) were tested for binding to 47 MAbs, including 5 cluster I anti-gp41 MAbs which showed good cross clade reactivity -- 246-D bound strongly or moderately to all 26 HIV-1 group M clades viruses tested and showed the strongest binding of all anti-Env MAbs tested, including the V3 and C5 region MAbs -- notes core epitope as LLGI -- no neutralizing activity was observed when 246-D was tested with five isolates.
Nyambi2000
(subtype comparisons)
-
246-D: Core epitope aa 591 to 597, a cluster I epitope that does not bind to either a peptide complex that approximates the core of the fusogenic form of gp41 or the individual peptides N51 and C43 that form this structure -- MAbs 181-D and 246-D had similar properties.
Gorny2000a
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: This antibody, along with murine MAb D61, can be blocked by any of a group of 8 conformational MAbs (M10, D41, D54, T4, T6, T9, T10 and T35).
Earl1997
(antibody interactions)
-
246-D: Four primary isolates showed distinct patterns of sensitivity to neutralization by polyclonal sera or plasma and MAbs -- BZ167 was the only isolate inhibited by all polyclonal sera and plasma tested, and was also neutralized by 8/17 MAbs, in particular anti-V3 loop (419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, and 838-D), anti-CD4bd (559/64-D, 654-D and 830-D and a cluster II of gp41 directed MAb (98-6) -- isolates 92HT593 and 91US056 were neutralized by V3 loop (419-D, and 447-52D)and cluster II gp41 (98-6) MAbs at higher concentrations and 246-D neutralized 91US056 -- US4 was neutralized by some of the polyclonal sera/plasma tested and not at all by MAbs individually or by a cocktail of ten MAbs consisting of 419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, 838-D, 559/64-D, 654-D, 450-D, 670-D, 1281-D and 98-6.
Hioe1997b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
246-D: Mutations in BH10 gp160, W596Y and T605A, as well as deletions of 605-609 (TTAVP) and 597-609 (GCSGKLICTTAVP), abrogate binding of enhancing MAbs 86, 240D, 50-69, and 246-D -- 5/6 enhancing MAbs identified to date bind to the immunodominant region 579-613.
Mitchell1998
(antibody binding site)
-
246-D: Ab-mediated activation of complement on HIV+ cells is higher than Ab independent activation---what has been termed "Ab independent" in fact results in part from IgM in normal human serum that is HIV-cross-reactive.
Saarloos1995
(complement)
-
246-D: Virions complexed to gp41 Ab facilitate presentation of p66 RT epitopes to Th cells.
Manca1995
-
246-D: No neutralizing activity, both ADCC and viral enhancing activity. Epitope numbering is provided as gp160 592-595, but no details are given.
Forthal1995
(complement, effector function, enhancing activity)
-
246-D: Called SZ-246.D.
Eddleston1993
-
246-D: No neutralizing activity, some enhancing activity.
Robinson1991
(enhancing activity, neutralization)
-
246-D: Did not mediate deposition of complement component C3 on HIV infected cells unless cells were pre-incubated with sCD4.
Spear1993
(complement)
-
246-D: Fine mapping indicates core is LLGI. The isotype is given as IgG1-kappa.
Xu1991
(antibody binding site, antibody generation)
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Cai2017
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P. L. Earl, C. C. Broder, R. W. Doms, and B. Moss. Epitope map of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp41 derived from 47 monoclonal antibodies produced by immunization with oligomeric envelope protein. J. Virol., 71:2674-84, 1997. PubMed ID: 9060620.
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M. Eddleston, J. C. de la Torre, J.-Y. Xu, N. Dorfman, A. Notkins, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. B. A. Oldstone. Molecular Mimicry Accompanying HIV-1 Infection: Human Monoclonal Antibodies That Bind to gp41 and to Astrocytes. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 10:939-944, 1993. In this paper, three anti-HIV-1 gp41 specific MAbs were found to react with astrocytes: 98-6, 167-7 and 15G1. Reactive astrocytes in the hippocampus were most prominently involved, and the antibodies stained no other cell type in the brain, kidney or liver. All three mapped to a conformationally dependent epitope between aa 644-663. PubMed ID: 7506553.
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Bradley H. Edwards, Anju Bansal, Steffanie Sabbaj, Janna Bakari, Mark J. Mulligan, and Paul A. Goepfert. Magnitude of Functional CD8+ T-Cell Responses to the Gag Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Correlates Inversely with Viral Load in Plasma. J. Virol., 76(5):2298-2305, Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11836408.
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Kathryn E. Follis, Scott J. Larson, Min Lu, and Jack H. Nunberg. Genetic Evidence that Interhelical Packing Interactions in the gp41 Core Are Critical for Transition of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein to the Fusion-Active State. J. Virol., 76(14):7356-7362, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12072535.
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D. N. Forthal, G. Landucci, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and W. E. Robinson, Jr. Functional Activities of 20 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 11:1095-1099, 1995. A series of tests were performed on 20 human monoclonal antibodies to assess their potential therapeutic utility. Antibodies were tested for potentially harmful complement-mediated antibody enhancing activity (C-ADE), and for potentially beneficial neutralizing activity and antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity ADCC. PubMed ID: 8554906.
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Frey2008
Gary Frey, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Marco Morelli, Yifan Cheng, and Bing Chen. A Fusion-Intermediate State of HIV-1 gp41 Targeted by Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(10):3739-3744, 11 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18322015.
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Frey2010
Gary Frey, Jia Chen, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Michael M. Freeman, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Bing Chen. Distinct Conformational States of HIV-1 gp41 Are Recognized by Neutralizing and Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(12):1486-1491, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21076402.
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M. K. Gorny and S. Zolla-Pazner. Recognition by Human Monoclonal Antibodies of Free and Complexed Peptides Representing the Prefusogenic and Fusogenic Forms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 74:6186-6192, 2000. PubMed ID: 10846104.
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Miroslaw K. Gorny, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Sandra Cohen, Victoria R. Polonis, William J. Honnen, Samuel C. Kayman, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies Specific for Conformation-Sensitive Epitopes of V3 Neutralize Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates from Various Clades. J. Virol., 76(18):9035-9045, Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12186887.
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Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Shinji Harada, Kazuaki Monde, Yuetsu Tanaka, Tetsuya Kimura, Yosuke Maeda, and Keisuke Yusa. Neutralizing Antibodies Decrease the Envelope Fluidity of HIV-1. Virology, 370(1):142-150, 5 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17900650.
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C. E. Hioe, S. Xu, P. Chigurupati, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of HIV-1 Primary Isolates by Polyclonal and Monoclonal Human Antibodies. Int. Immunol., 9(9):1281-1290, Sep 1997. PubMed ID: 9310831.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Vandana Kalia, Surojit Sarkar, Phalguni Gupta, and Ronald C. Montelaro. Antibody Neutralization Escape Mediated by Point Mutations in the Intracytoplasmic Tail of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 79(4):2097-2107, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15681412.
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Kimura2009
Tetsuya Kimura, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Miroslaw K. Gorny. Human Monoclonal Antibody 2909 Binds to Pseudovirions Expressing Trimers but not Monomeric HIV-1 Envelope Proteins. Hum. Antibodies, 18(1-2):35-40, 2009. PubMed ID: 19478397.
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Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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F. Manca, D. Fenoglio, M. T. Valle, G. L. Pira, A. Kunkl, R. S. Balderas, R. G. Baccala, D. H. Kono, A. Ferraris, D. Saverino, F. Lancia, L. Lozzi, and A. N. Theofilopoulos. Human T helper cells specific for HIV reverse transcriptase: possible role in intrastructural help for HIV envelope-specific antibodies. Eur. J. Immunol., 25:1217-1223, 1995. PubMed ID: 7539750.
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W. M. Mitchell, L. Ding, and J. Gabriel. Inactivation of a Common Epitope Responsible for the Induction of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement of HIV. AIDS, 12:147-156, 1998. PubMed ID: 9468363.
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Moog2014
C. Moog, N. Dereuddre-Bosquet, J.-L. Teillaud, M. E. Biedma, V. Holl, G. Van Ham, L. Heyndrickx, A. Van Dorsselaer, D. Katinger, B. Vcelar, S. Zolla-Pazner, I. Mangeot, C. Kelly, R. J. Shattock, and R. Le Grand. Protective Effect of Vaginal Application of Neutralizing and Nonneutralizing Inhibitory Antibodies Against Vaginal SHIV Challenge in Macaques. Mucosal Immunol., 7(1):46-56, Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 23591718.
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Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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Peressin2011
M. Peressin, V. Holl, S. Schmidt, T. Decoville, D. Mirisky, A. Lederle, M. Delaporte, K. Xu, A. M. Aubertin, and C. Moog. HIV-1 Replication in Langerhans and Interstitial Dendritic Cells Is Inhibited by Neutralizing and Fc-Mediated Inhibitory Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(2):1077-1085, Jan 2011. PubMed ID: 21084491.
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Perez2009
Lautaro G. Perez, Matthew R. Costa, Christopher A. Todd, Barton F. Haynes, and David C. Montefiori. Utilization of Immunoglobulin G Fc Receptors by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: A Specific Role for Antibodies against the Membrane-Proximal External Region of gp41. J. Virol., 83(15):7397-7410, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19458010.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Robinson1991
W. E. Robinson, M. K. Gorny, J.-Y. Xu, W. M. Mitchell, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Two Immunodominant Domains of gp41 Bind Antibodies Which Enhance Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection In Vitro. J. Virol., 65:4169-4176, 1991. PubMed ID: 2072448.
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Saarloos1995
M. N. Saarloos, T. F. Lint, and G. T. Spear. Efficacy of HIV-Specific and `Antibody-Independent' Mechanisms for Complement Activation by HIV-Infected Cells. Clin. Exp. Immunol., 99:189-195, 1995. PubMed ID: 7851010.
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Spear1993
G. T. Spear, D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, A. L. Landay, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Complement activation by human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. J. Virol., 67:53-59, 1993. This study looked at the ability of 16 human MAbs to activate complement. MAbs directed against the V3 region could induce C3 deposition on infected cells and virolysis of free virus, but antibodies to the CD4BS and C-terminal region and two regions in gp41 could induce no complement mediated effects. Pre-treatment with sCD4 could increase complement-mediated effects of anti-gp41 MAbs, but decreased the complement-mediated effects of V3 MAbs. Anti-gp41 MAbs were able to affect IIIB but not MN virolysis, suggesting spontaneous shedding of gp120 on IIIB virions exposes gp41 epitopes. IgG isotype did not appear to have an effect on virolysis or C3 deposition. PubMed ID: 7677959.
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Usami2005
Osamu Usami, Peng Xiao, Hong Ling, Yi Liu, Tadashi Nakasone, and Toshio Hattori. Properties of Anti-gp41 Core Structure Antibodies, Which Compete with Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients. Microbes Infect., 7(4):650-657, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15823513.
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Verrier2001
F. Verrier, A. Nadas, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Additive effects characterize the interaction of antibodies involved in neutralization of the primary dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolate 89.6. J. Virol., 75(19):9177--86, Oct 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/19/9177. PubMed ID: 11533181.
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Vincent2008
Nadine Vincent, Amadou Kone, Blandine Chanut, Frédéric Lucht, Christian Genin, and Etienne Malvoisin. Antibodies Purified from Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients by Affinity on the Heptad Repeat Region 1/Heptad Repeat Region 2 Complex of gp41 Neutralize HIV-1 Primary Isolates. AIDS, 22(16):2075-2085, 18 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18832871.
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Vincent2012
Nadine Vincent and Etienne Malvoisin. Ability of Antibodies Specific to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein to Block the Fusion Inhibitor T20 in a Cell-Cell Fusion Assay. Immunobiology, 217(10):943-950, Oct 2012. PubMed ID: 22387075.
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Willey2011
Suzanne Willey, Marlén M. I. Aasa-Chapman, Stephen O'Farrell, Pierre Pellegrino, Ian Williams, Robin A. Weiss, and Stuart J. D. Neil. Extensive Complement-Dependent Enhancement of HIV-1 by Autologous Non-Neutralising Antibodies at Early Stages of Infection. Retrovirology, 8:16, 2011. PubMed ID: 21401915.
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Witt2017
Kristen C. Witt, Luis Castillo-Menendez, Haitao Ding, Nicole Espy, Shijian Zhang, John C. Kappes, and Joseph Sodroski. Antigenic Characterization of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) Envelope Glycoprotein Precursor Incorporated into Nanodiscs. PLoS One, 12(2):e0170672, 2017. PubMed ID: 28151945.
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Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
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Yuan2009
Wen Yuan, Xing Li, Marta Kasterka, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Joseph Sodroski. Oligomer-Specific Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) gp41 Envelope Glycoprotein Ectodomain Recognized by Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 25(3):319-328, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19292593.
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Sliepen2019
Kwinten Sliepen, Byung Woo Han, Ilja Bontjer, Petra Mooij, Fernando Garces, Anna-Janina Behrens, Kimmo Rantalainen, Sonu Kumar, Anita Sarkar, Philip J. M. Brouwer, Yuanzi Hua, Monica Tolazzi, Edith Schermer, Jonathan L. Torres, Gabriel Ozorowski, Patricia van der Woude, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Marielle J. van Breemen, Juan Miguel Camacho-Sanchez, Judith A. Burger, Max Medina-Ramirez, Nuria Gonzalez, Jose Alcami, Celia LaBranche, Gabriella Scarlatti, Marit J. van Gils, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, Andrew B. Ward, Gerrit Koopman, John P. Moore, Robin J. Shattock, Willy M. Bogers, Ian A. Wilson, and Rogier W. Sanders. Structure and immunogenicity of a stabilized HIV-1 envelope trimer based on a group-M consensus sequence. Nat Commun, 10(1):2355 doi, May 2019. PubMed ID: 31142746
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Displaying record number 815
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record as JSON.
MAb ID |
2F5 (IAM 2F5, IAM-41-2F5, IAM2F5, c2F5) |
HXB2 Location |
Env(662-667) DNA(8208..8225) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp41(662-667) |
Research Contact |
Hermann Katinger, Institute of Applied Microbiology, Vienna, or Polymun Scientific Inc., Vienna, Austria |
Epitope |
ELDKWA
|
Epitope Alignment
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp41 MPER (membrane proximal external region) |
Neutralizing |
L P (tier 2) View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG3κ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
acute/early infection, adjuvant comparison, anti-idiotype, antibody binding site, antibody gene transfer, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, assay or method development, autoantibody or autoimmunity, autologous responses, binding affinity, brain/CSF, broad neutralizer, co-receptor, complement, computational prediction, contact residues, dendritic cells, drug resistance, dynamics, early treatment, effector function, elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, enhancing activity, escape, genital and mucosal immunity, germline, glycosylation, HAART, ART, HIV exposed persistently seronegative (HEPS), HIV reservoir/latency/provirus, immunoprophylaxis, immunotherapy, immunotoxin, isotype switch, kinetics, memory cells, mimics, mimotopes, mother-to-infant transmission, mutation acquisition, neutralization, polyclonal antibodies, rate of progression, responses in children, review, SIV, structure, subtype comparisons, supervised treatment interruptions (STI), therapeutic vaccine, transmission pair, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion |
Notes
Showing 591 of
591 notes.
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2F5: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A SHIV carrying a highly neutralization-sensitive Env (SHIVCNE40) was passaged in macaques. SHIVCNE40 developed enhanced replication kinetics associated with neutralization resistance against autologous serum, CD4-Ig, and several nAbs (17b, 3BNC117, N6, PGT145, PGT121, PGT128, 35O22, 2F5, 10E8). A gp41 substitution, E658K, was the major determinant for this resistance. Structural modeling and functional verification indicate that the substitution disrupts an intermolecular salt bridge with the neighboring protomer, thereby promoting fusion and facilitating immune evasion. This effect is applicable across many HIV-1 viruses of diverse subtypes. These results highlight the critical role of gp41 in shaping the neutralization profile and conformation of Env during viral adaptation. The unique intermolecular salt bridge could potentially be utilized for rational vaccine design involving more stable HIV-1 Env trimers.
Wang2019
(mutation acquisition, neutralization, structure)
-
2F5: A panel of 30 contemporary subtype B pseudoviruses (PSVs) was generated. Neutralization sensitivities of these PSVs were compared with subtype B strains from earlier in the pandemic using 31 nAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CH02, CH03, CH04, 830A, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 10-1074, 2192, 2219, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, b12, NIH45-46, VRC01, VRC03, 3BNC117, HJ16, sCD4, 10E8, 4E10, 2F5, 7H6, 2G12, 35O22). A significant reduction in Env neutralization sensitivity was observed for 27 out of 31 nAbs for the contemporary, as compared to earlier-decade subtype B PSVs. A decline in neutralization sensitivity was observed across all Env domains; the nAbs that were most potent early in the pandemic suffered the greatest decline in potency over time. A metaanalysis demonstrated this trend across multiple subtypes. As HIV-1 Env diversification continues, changes in Env antigenicity and neutralization sensitivity should continue to be evaluated to inform the development of improved vaccine and antibody products to prevent and treat HIV-1.
Wieczorek2023
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
2F5: Pseudoviruses were made from 13 env sequences of subtypes A6 and CRF63_02A6, based on genetic variants of HIV-1 circulating in the Siberian Federal District. Neutralization of these viruses was tested for 8 bnAbs. Most of the pseudoviruses were sensitive to neutralization by VRC01, PGT126, and 10E8, moderately sensitive to PG9 and 4E10, and resistant to 2G12, PG16, and 2F5. All obtained variants of pseudoviruses were CCR5-tropic.
Rudometova2022
(co-receptor, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5:This study identified a B cell lineage of bNAbs in an HIV-1 elite post-treatment controller (ePTC; donor: PTC-005002). Circulating viruses in PTC escaped bNAb pressure but remained sensitive to autologous neutralization by other Ab populations. 2F5 was used as a reference control IgG. 2F5, 4E10 and 10E8 were used as positive controls, and mGO53 as a negative control in determining reactivity of IgG Abs and conserved neutralizing epitopes in the autologous virus isolated from PTC-005002.
Molinos-Albert2023
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: This study reports the glycan binding specificities and atomic level details of PG16 epitope and somatic mechanisms of clonal antibody diversification. MAb 2F5 was positive in an assay of autoreactivity.
Pancera2013
(autoantibody or autoimmunity)
-
2F5: A panel of 58 mAbs was cloned from a rhesus macaque immunized with envelope glycoprotein immunogens developed from HIV-1 clade B-infected human donor VC10014. Neutralizing mAbs predominantly targeted linear epitopes in the V3 region in the cradle orientation (V3C), with others targeting the V3 ladle orientation (V3L), the CD4 binding site, C1, C4, or gp41. Nonneutralizing mAbs bound C1, C5, or undetermined gp120 conformational epitopes. Neutralization potency strongly correlated with the magnitude of binding to infected primary macaque splenocytes and to the level of ADCC, but did not correlate with ADCP. MAbs were traced to 23 of 72 functional IgHV germline alleles. Neutralizing V3C mAbs displayed minimal nucleotide SHM in the H chain V region (3.77%), indicating that relatively little affinity maturation was needed to achieve in-clade neutralization breadth. This study underscores the polyfunctional nature of vaccine-elicited tier 2-neutralizing V3 Abs and demonstrates partial reproduction of a human donor’s Ab response through nonhuman primate vaccination. Several previously-isolated mAbs were used in binding assays: b12, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, 2558, 2219, 1006-15D, 447-52D, 10-1074, 830A, 2F5, F240, PGDM1400, 2219.
Spencer2021
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
2F5: This study analyzed Env sequences of early HIV-1 clonal variants from 31 individuals from the Amsterdam Cohort Studies with diverse levels of heterologous neutralization at 2-4 years post-seroconversion. A number of Env signatures coincided with neutralization development. These included a statistically shorter variable region 1 and a lower probability of glycosylation. Induction of neutralization was associated with a lower probability of glycosylation at position 332, which is involved in the epitopes of many bnAbs. 2G12 and PGT126 were tested for their ability to block infectivity by patient viruses with predicted glycosylation at N332; the NLS glycosylation motif was associated with resistance to these mAbs more often than the NIS glycosylation motif. Sequence Harmony software identified amino acid changes associated with the development of heterologous neutralization. These residues mapped to various Env subdomains, but in particular to the first and fourth variable region, as well as the underlying α2 helix of the third constant region. These findings imply that the development of heterologous neutralization might depend on specific characteristics of early Env. Env signatures that correlate with the induction of neutralization might be relevant for the design of effective HIV-1 vaccines. Primary virus isolates from 21 of the patients were assayed for neutralization by 11 well-known nAbs (b12, VRC01, 447-52D, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126, PG9, PG16, PGT145, 2F5, 4E10).
vandenKerkhof2013
(glycosylation, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: The polyclonal response of human subjects VC20013 and VC10014 demonstrated increasing neutralization breadth against a panel of HIV-1 isolates over time. Full-length functional env genes were cloned longitudinally from these subjects from months after infection through 2.6 to 5.8 years of infection. Motifs associated with the development of breadth in published, cross-sectional studies were found in the viral sequences of both subjects. To test the immunogenicity of envelope vaccines derived from time points obtained during and after broadening of neutralization activity within these subjects, rabbits were coimmunized 4 times with selected multiple gp160 DNAs and gp140-trimeric envelope proteins. In an assay of rabbit polyclonal responses, the most rapid and persistent neutralization of multiclade tier 1 viruses was elicited by envelopes that were circulating in plasma at time points prior to the development of 50% neutralization breadth in both human subjects. The breadth elicited in rabbits was not improved by exposure to later envelope variants. Env immunogen sequences were tested for binding to a panel of well studied mAbs of various binding types (VRC01, HJ16, b12, b6, PG9, PGT121, 2G12, 2F5, F240); all gp140s bound to weak or non-neutralizing antibodies b6 and F240. MAb b6 also bound BG505 SOSIP, while F240 did not, suggesting that cluster I gp41 epitopes, which become exposed during gp120 shedding, are more easily accessed on these trimers than on BG505-SOSIP. These data have implications for vaccine development in describing a target time point to identify optimal env immunogens.
Malherbe2014
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: This study explored the basis of the neutralization resistance of tier 3 virus 253-11 (subtype CRF02_AG). Virus 253-11 was resistant to neutralization by 17b, b12, VRC03, F105, SCD4, CH12, Z13e1, PG16, PGT145, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 39F, F240, and 35O22; the virus was sensitive to 3BNC117, NIH45-46G54W, VRC01, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10, PG9, VRC26.26, 10-1074, and PGT151. Virus 253-11 was strikingly resistant to most tested antibodies that target V3/glycans, despite possessing key potential N-linked glycosylation sites, especially N301 and N332, needed for the recognition of this class of antibodies. The resistance of 253-11 was not associated with an unusually long V1/V2 loop, nor with polymorphisms in the V3 loop and N-linked glycosylation sites. The 253-11 MPER was rarely recognized by sera, but was more often recognized in a chimera consisting of a HIV-2 backbone with the 253-11 MPER, suggesting steric or kinetic hindrance of the MPER. Mutations in the 253-11 MPER previously reported to increase the lifetime of the prefusion Env conformation (Y681H, L669S), decreased the resistance of 253-11 to several mAbs, presumably destabilizing its otherwise stable, closed trimer structure. A crystal structure of a recombinant 253-11 SOSIP trimer revealed that the heptad repeat helices in gp41 are drawn in close proximity to the trimer axis and that gp120 protomers also showed a relatively compact form around the trimer axis.
Moyo2018
(neutralization, structure)
-
2F5: This study used directed evolution to overcome the instability and heterogeneity of a primary Env isolate (ADA) in order to design better immunogens. HIV-1 virions were subjected to iterative cycles of destabilization and replication to select for Envs with enhanced stability. Several mutations in Env were associated with increased trimer stability, primarily in the heptad repeat regions of gp41 and V1 of gp120. Mutations from the most stable Envs were combined into a variant Env, termed "comb-mut", with superior homogeneity and stability. Comb-mut had greater binding affinity for PGT128, PG9, PG16, 2G12, VRC01, b12, and CD4-IgG2, but decreased binding to 4E10, 2F5, b6, 19b, 17b, 7B2, and D50. Comb-mut was more sensitive to neutralization by PG9. One specific mutation (K574) was shown to decrease the neutralization IC50 of mAbs b12, 2F5, 4E10, b6, 2G12, 8K8 and inhibitors sCD4, T-20, and PF-68742. Several of the Env substitutions were shown to stabilize Env spikes from HIV-1 clades A, B, and C. Spike stabilizing mutations may be useful in the development of Env immunogens that stably retain native, trimeric structure.
Leaman2013
(mimics, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Persistent (VP-1) and Non-persistent (VP-2) viruses were compared in a longitudinal study of a cross-reactive neutralizing serum-possessing patient, Patient B (H19554) over 9 years. Persisting VP-1 viral clones had more mutations in variable loops V1V2 and constant region C3 of Env, particularly in the number of PNGS (potential N-linked glycosylation sites) in V1V2. While VP-1 in vitro virus chimeras showed slower replication kinetics than VP-2, there was no neutralization sensitivity change based on whether they were R5 or X4 variants. The gp160 Env was longer in the VP-2 population; but both VP-1 and VP-2 chimeras had widely varying sensitivities to bnAb 2F5.
vanGils2011a
(glycosylation, mutation acquisition, escape)
-
2F5: This paper describes the development and characterization of soluble, cleaved SOSIP gp140 Env trimers using a JR-FL background. In addition to a stabilizing disulfide bond, mediated by engineered mutations A501C and T605C that are also present in SOS gp140 proteins, SOSIP gp140 proteins have an I559P mutation (aka “IP”) that increases trimer stability. Further analyses suggested that I559P destabilizes the N-terminal helix necessary for the six-helix bundle structure in the postfusion conformation. Immunoprecipitation assays with mAbs CD4-IgG2, b12 (aka IgG1b12), 17b, 2F5, 2.2B and 4D4 demonstrated that I559P did not alter expected structural epitopes when compared to SOS gp140 proteins. MAb b12 was able to bind efficiently to its epitope, located close to the C terminus of gp41, on both SOS and SOSIP gp140 proteins.
Sanders2002a
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: REVIEW: This review discusses isotype switching. Several anti-HIV mAbs are mentioned as having isotype switch variants: F105, F425 B4e8, F240, 2F5, and PGT121.
Janda2016
(isotype switch, review)
-
2F5: A recombinant native-like Env SOSIP trimer, AMC009, was developed based on viral founder sequences of elite neutralizer H18877. The subtype B AMC009 Env was defined as a Tier 2 virus based on a neutralization assay against well known nAbs (VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, CH01, PG9, PG16, PGDM1400, 10-1074, PGT128, PGT121, PGT151, VRC34.01, 2G12, 2F5, 4E10, DH511.2.K3_4, 10E8, and the mAb mixture CH01-31).The AMC009 SOSIP protein formed stable native-like trimers that displayed multiple bnAb epitopes. Its overall structure was similar to that of BG505 SOSIP.664, and it resembled one from another elite neutralizer, AMC011, in having a dense and complete glycan shield. When tested as immunogens in rabbits, AMC009 trimers did not induce autologous neutralizing antibody responses efficiently, while the AMC011 trimers did so very weakly, outcomes that may reflect the completeness of their glycan shields. The AMC011 trimer induced antibodies that occasionally cross-neutralized heterologous tier 2 viruses, sometimes at high titer. Cross-neutralizing antibodies were more frequently elicited by a trivalent combination of AMC008, AMC009, and AMC011 trimers, all derived from subtype B viruses. Each of these three individual trimers could deplete the nAb activity from rabbit sera. Mapping the polyclonal sera by electron microscopy revealed that antibodies of multiple specificities could bind to sites on both autologous and heterologous trimers.
Schorcht2020
(neutralization, vaccine-induced immune responses, structure)
-
2F5: A chronic HIV-1 infected patient (CBJC504) had neutralizing activity against Env MPER. Fifty full-length HIV-1 env genes were isolated from the patient’s plasma at 2 time points (2006 and 2009). The neutralization sensitivity of 14 Env pseudoviruses to autologous plasma and mAbs 4E10, 2F5, and 10E8 was evaluated. Env sequencing revealed that the diversity of Env increased over time, and 4 mutation positions in MPER acquired mutations (659D, 662K, 671S, and 677N/R). The K677R mutation increased the IC50 values of pseudoviruses approximately twofold for 4E10 and 2F5, and E659D increased the IC50 up to ninefold for 4E10 and fourfold for 2F5. These 2 mutations also decreased the contact between gp41 and mAbs. Almost all mutant pseudoviruses were resistant to autologous plasma at both time points. These findings shed light on MPER evolution.
Tang2023
(autologous responses, mutation acquisition, neutralization, escape, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: HIV-1 bnAbs require high levels of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)-catalyzed somatic mutations. Probable mutations occur at sites of frequent AID activity, while improbable mutations occur where AID activity is infrequent. The paper introduced the ARMADiLLO program, which estimates how probable a particular mAb mutation is, and thus the key improbable mutations were defined for a panel of 26 bnAbs. The number of improbable mutations ranged from 7 (PGT128) to 23 (VRC01 and 35O22); 2F5 had 10 improbable mutations out of 31 total AA mutations, and 0 indels. Single-amino acid reversion mutants were made for key improbable mutations of 3 bnAbs (CH235, VRC01, and BF520.1), and these mutant mAbs were tested for their neutralization ability. The study also noted that bnAbs that had relatively small numbers of improbable single somatic mutations had other unusual characteristics that were due to additional improbable events, such as indels (PGT128) or extraordinary CDR H3 lengths (VRC26.25).
Wiehe2018
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The study assessed the breadths and potencies of 14 bnAbs against 36 viruses reactivated from peripheral blood CD4+ T cells from ARV-treated HIV-infected individuals by using paired neutralization and infected cell binding assays. Infected cell binding correlated with virus neutralization for 10 of 14 antibodies (VRC01, VRC07-523, 3BNC117, N6, PGT121, 10-1074, PGDM1400, PG9, 10E8, and 10E8v4-V5R-100cF). For example, the correlation for 3BNC117 had r=0.82 and P<0.0001. Heterogeneity was observed, however, with a lack of significant correlation for 2G12, CAP256.VRC26.25, 2F5, and 4E10. The study also performed paired infected cell binding and ADCC assays by using two reservoir virus isolates in combination with 9 bNAbs, and the results were consistent with previous studies indicating that infected cell binding is moderately predictive of ADCC activity for bNAbs with matched Fc domains. These data provide guidance on the selection of antibodies for clinical trials.
Ren2018
(effector function, neutralization, binding affinity, HIV reservoir/latency/provirus)
-
2F5: The authors review Fc effector functions, which cooperatively with Fab neutralization functions, could be used passively as immunotherapeutic or immunoprophylactic agents of HIV reservoir control or even infection prevention. One effector function, antibody-dependent complement-mediated lysis (ADCML), is seen with IgG1 and IgG3 anti-V1/V2 glycan bnAbs, PG9, PG16, PGT145; but not with 2F5, 4E10, 2G12, VRC01 and 3BNC117 unless they are delivered with anti-regulators of complement activation (RCA) antibodies. Another effector function, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) can slow disease progression by NK-mediated degranulation of infected cells that are coated by bnAbs whose Fc region is recognized by the low affinity NK receptor, FcγRIIIA (or CD16). Strong ADCC was induced by NIH45-46, 3BNC117, 10-1074, PGT121 and 10E8, with intermediate activity for PG16 and VRC01, but no ADCC activation for 12A12, 8ANC195 and 4E10. A final effector function, antibody-dependent phagocytosis (ADP) also eliminates infected cells but through phagocytosis mediated by Fc portions of coating anti-HIV antibodies interacting with other FcγR (or FcαR) on the surface of granulocytes, monocytes or macrophages. This protective mode is less well studied but bnAbs like VRC01 have been engineered to increase phagocytosis by neutrophils. Protein engineering of bispecifics against the surface of infected or reservoir virus cells has potential in the future.
Danesh2020
(antibody interactions, assay or method development, complement, effector function, immunoprophylaxis, neutralization, immunotherapy, early treatment, review, broad neutralizer, HIV reservoir/latency/provirus)
-
2F5: This study assessed cross-reactivity of anti-HIV-1 antibodies with SARS-CoV-2. In binding ELISA and surface binding assays, several nAbs showed significant binding with the RBD and S2P regions of SARS-CoV-2 (VRC07.523LS, N6, NIH45-46G54W, Z13e1, 4E10, 2F5). VRC07.523LS (but not VRC01 or VRC03) cross-reacted with the RBD and S2P of SARS-CoV-2. In a neutralization assay, these nAbs showed weak neutralization of a SARS-CoV-2 pseudovirus. BnAb N6 had the highest potency, with an IC50 of approximately 1.0 μg/ml, but N6 failed to neutralize live SARS-CoV-2 virus. Polyclonal sera from 10 HIV-1-infected children were tested for binding and neutralization; all 10 showed significant binding to both RBD and S2P, and 3 children showed potent and near-complete neutralization of SARS-CoV-2 pseudoviruses (AIIMS329, AIIMS330, AIIMS346). The study suggests that human Abs that tolerate extensive epitope variability can be leveraged to neutralize pathogens with related antigenic profiles.
Mishra2021
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: In vertically-infected infant AIIMS731, a rare HIV-1 mutation in hypervariable loop 2 (L184F) was studied. In patient sequences, this mutation was present in the majority of clones. A panel of 6 V2 bnAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CAP256.25, and CH01) was assayed for neutralization of 6 patient viral clones. The AIIMS731 viral variants segregated into 4 neutralization-sensitive and 2 resistant clones; sensitive clones carried 184F, while resistant clones carried the rare 184L mutation. A large panel of bnAbs targeting non-V2 epitopes was used to assess the neutralization of the 6 patient viral variants. The bnAb panel consisted of V3/N332 glycan supersite bnAbs (10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, and PGT135), CD4bs bnAbs (VRC01, VRC03, VRC07-523LS, N6, 3BNC117, and NIH45-46 G54W), a silent face-targeting bnAb (PG05), fusion peptide and gp120-gp41 interface bnAbs (PGT151, 35O22, and N123-VRC34.01), and MPER bnAbs (10E8, 4E10, and 2F5). All of these bnAbs had similar neutralization efficiencies for all 6 clones, suggesting that the L184F mutation was specific for viral escape from neutralization by V2 apex bnAbs. A panel of non-neutralizing mAbs (V3 loop-targeting non-nAbs 447-52D and 19b, and CD4-induced non-nAbs 17b, A32, 48d, and b6), were also assessed; 2 of the variants (the same 2 susceptible to the V2 bnAbs) showed moderate neutralization by 447-52D, 19b, 17b, and 48d. The structure of ligand-free BG505 SOSIP trimer revealed that the side chain of L184 was outward facing and did not make significant intraprotomeric interactions, but upon mutating L184 to F184, a disruption of the accessible surface between the bulky side chain of F184 on one protomer and R165 on the neighboring protomer was seen. Thus, the L184F mutation resulted in increased susceptibility to neutralization by antibodies known to target the relatively more open conformation of Env on tier 1 viruses, suggesting that the rare L184F mutation allowed Env to sample more open states resembling the CD4-bound conformation where the CCR5 binding site is exposed.
Mishra2020
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: Five novel functional HIV-1/HCV monoclonal cross-reactive antibodies (180, 692, 688, 803, and KP1-8) with diverse epitope specificities were isolated from a chronically HIV-1/HCV co-infected donor, VC10014, and characterized. MAb 2F5 was used as a positive control for binding to strain MN gp41.
Pilewski2023
-
2F5: HIV-1 env genes were sequenced from 16 mother/infant transmitting pairs. Infant transmitted-founder (T/F) and representative maternal non-transmitted Env variants were identified and used to generate pseudoviruses for paired maternal plasma neutralization analysis. Eighteen out of 21 (85%) infant T/F Env pseudoviruses were neutralization resistant to paired maternal plasma, while all infant T/F viruses were neutralization sensitive to a panel of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (2G12, CH01, PG9, PG16, PGT121, PGT126, DH429, b12, VRC01, NIH45-46, CH31, 4E10, 2F5, 10E8, DH512) and variably sensitive to heterologous plasma neutralizing antibodies. Antibody mixture CH01/31 was used as a positive control for neutralization. The infant T/F pseudoviruses were overall more neutralization resistant to paired maternal plasma in comparison to pseudoviruses from maternal non-transmitted variants. These findings suggest that autologous neutralization of circulating viruses by maternal plasma antibodies select for neutralization-resistant viruses that initiate peripartum transmission, raising the speculation that enhancement of this response at the end of pregnancy could reduce infant HIV-1 infection risk.
Kumar2018
(neutralization, acute/early infection, mother-to-infant transmission, transmission pair)
-
2F5: Novel Env clones of subtypes G (n=15) and F (n=7) were produced and tested for neutralization and coreceptor usage. All 15 subtype G-enveloped pseudoviruses were resistant to neutralization by MAbs b12 and 2G12, while a majority were neutralized by 2F5 and 4E10. All 7 subtype F pseudoviruses were resistant to 2F5 and b12, 6 were resistant to 2G12, and 6 were neutralized by 4E10. Coreceptor usage testing revealed that 21 of 22 envelopes were CCR5-tropic, including all 15 subtype G envelopes, 7 of which were from patients with CD4 T cell counts <200/ml. TriMab (a mixture of b12 + 2G12 + 2F5) neutralized only four (27%) viruses, and this activity correlated with that of the 2F5 component. These results confirm the broadly neutralizing activity of 4E10 on envelope clones across all tested group M clades, including subtypes G and F, reveal the resistance of most subtype F pseudoviruses to broadly neutralizing MAbs b12, 2G12, and 2F5, and suggest that, similarly to subtype C, CXCR4 tropism is uncommon in subtype G, even at advanced stages of infection.
Revilla2011
(neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Rabbits were immunized with a DNA vaccine encoding JR-CSF gp120. Five sera with potent autologous neutralizing activity were selected and compared with a human neutralizing plasma (Z23) and monoclonal antibodies targeting various regions of gp120 (VRC01, b12, b6, F425, 2F5, 2G12, and X5). The rabbit sera contained different neutralizing activities dependent on C3 and V5, C3 and V4, or V4 regions of the glycan-rich outer domain of gp120. All sera showed enhanced neutralizing activity toward an Env variant that lacked a glycosylation site in V4. The JR-CSF gp120 epitopes recognized by the sera were distinct from those of the mAbs. The activity of one serum required specific glycans that are also important for 2G12 neutralization, and this serum blocked the binding of 2G12 to gp120. The findings show that different fine specificities can achieve potent neutralization of HIV-1, yet this strong activity does not result in improved breadth.
Narayan2013
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: The study identified a primary HIV-1 Env variant from patient 653116 (GenBank MT023027) that consistently supports >300% increased viral infectivity in the presence of autologous or heterologous HIV-positive plasma. In the absence of HIV-positive plasma, viruses with this Env exhibited reduced infectivity that was not due to decreased CD4 binding. This phenotype was mapped to a change Q563R, in the gp41 heptad repeat 1 (HR1) region. The authors provide evidence that Q563R reduces viral infection by disrupting formation of the gp41 six-helix bundle required for virus-cell membrane fusion. Anti-cluster I monoclonal antibodies (240-D, 246-D, F240, T32) targeting HR1 and the C-C loop of gp41 restored infectivity defects observed with Q563R. Viruses with the Q563R mutation were shown to have increased sensitivity to MPER mAbs (10E8, 7H6, 2F5, Z13e1, 4E10).
Joshi2020
(mutation acquisition, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
2F5: Plasma from donor PG13 was found to have MPER neutralization activity, and mAb PGZL1 was isolated. When compared to a 4E10, PGZL1 was found to share similar crystal structure, contacts, and some common germline genes, but its neutralization and polyreactivity were less strong. The germline gene usage of PGZL1 was compared with other MPER antibodies: 4E10, VRC42.01, 10E8, DH511.2, DH517, Z13, and 2F5.
Zhang2019a
(neutralization, structure, contact residues, germline)
-
2F5: An R5 virus isolated from chronic patient NAB01 (Patient Record# 4723) was adapted in culture to growth in the presence of target cells expressing reduced levels of CD4. Entry kinetics of the virus were altered, and these alterations resulted in extended exposure of CD4-induced neutralization-sensitive epitopes to CD4. Adapted and control viruses were assayed for their neutralization by a panel of neutralizing antibodies targeting several different regions of Env (PGT121, PGT128, 1-79, 447-52d, b6, b12, VRC01, 17b, 4E10, 2F5, Z13e1). Adapted viruses showed greater sensitivity to antibodies targeting the CD4 binding site and the V3 loop. This evolution of Env resulted in increased CD4 affinity but decreased viral fitness, a phenomenon seen also in the immune-privileged CNS, particularly in macrophages.
Beauparlant2017
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion, dynamics, kinetics)
-
2F5: The Chinese HIV Reference Laboratory produced 124 pseudoviruses from patients with subtype B, BC, and CRF01 infections. These viruses were assigned to tiers based on their neutralization by a panel of patient sera. Their neutralization sensitivities were also measured against a panel of well-characterized mAbs (2F5, b12, 2G12, 4E10, 10E8, VRC01, VRC-CH31, CH01, PG9, PG16, PGT121, PGT126).
Nie2020
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Pseudoviruses were produced from 37 Env clones of BC subtypes from chronically-infected patients from several regions of China. Neutralization was tested for mAbs 4E10 and 2F5. Three signature sites were identified in association with sensitivity to neutralization: L22, S29, and N706.
Wang2011b
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This study characterized 3 lineages of MPER-targeting mAbs (VRC42, VRC43 & VRC46) isolated from subject RV217-40512 plasma 646 days after the first HIV RNA+ sample (pRNA+), but detectable by next-generation sequencing (NGS) by day 154 pRNA+ which was prior to superinfection between days 330 & 401 pRNA+. MAb VRC46.01 was most similar to known MPER-targeting bnAb 2F5 in a neutralization fingerprint analysis. In this study, 2F5 neutralized 58% of 208 diverse pseudoviruses with a median IC50 of 2.01 μg/ml against sensitive viruses. 2F5 was able to recognize the clade B, but not the clade C, full MPER epitope and the minimal epitope ALDKWA (near N-terminus MPER, 662-667).
Krebs2019
(antibody binding site, neutralization, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: Novel Env pseudoviruses were derived from 22 patients in China infected with subtype CRF01_AE viruses. Neutralization IC50 was determined for 11 bNAbs: VRC01, NIH45-46G54W, 3BNC117, PG9, PG16, 2G12, PGT121, 10-1074, 2F5, 4E10, and 10E8. The CRF01_AE pseudoviruses exhibited different susceptibility to these bNAbs. Overall, 4E10, 10E8, and 3BNC117 neutralized all 22 env-pseudotyped viruses, followed by NIH45-46G54W and VRC01, which neutralized more than 90% of the viruses. 2F5, PG9, and PG16 showed only moderate breadth, while the other three bNAbs neutralized none of these pseudoviruses. Specifically, 10E8, NIH45-46G54Wand 3BNC117 showed the highest efficiency, combining neutralization potency and breadth. Mutations at position 160, 169, 171 were associated with resistance to PG9 and PG16, while loss of a potential glycan at position 332 conferred insensitivity to V3-glycan-targeting bNAbs. These results may help in choosing bNAbs that can be used preferentially for prophylactic or therapeutic approaches in China.
Wang2018a
(assay or method development, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: HIV Env glycoproteins were expressed by incorporation into live attenuated rubella viral vectors strain RA27/3. These vectors can stably express Env core derived glycoproteins ranging in size up to 363 amino acids from HIV clade C strain 426c. By themselves, the vectors elicited modest Ab titers to the Env insert. But the combination of rubella/env prime followed by a homologous protein boost gave a strong response. Env 426c antigens were immunoprecipitated and detected by western blot with monoclonal 2F5 specific for an MPER tag present on the constructs.
Virnik2018
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: This study looks at the role of somatic mutations within antibody variable and framework regions (FWR) in bNAbs and how these mutations alter thermostability and neutralization as the Ab lineage reaches maturation. The emergence and selection of different mutations in the complementarity-determining and framework regions are necessary to maintain a balance between antibody function and stability. The study shows that all major classes of bNAbs (DH270, CH103, CH235, VRC01, PGT lineage etc.) have lower thermostability than their corresponding inferred UCA antibodies. Fab interdomain flexibility mutations are selected early in Ab development.
Henderson2019
(neutralization, antibody lineage, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: The authors used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to define the structure of the HIV-1 MPER when linked to the transmembrane domain (MPER-TMD) in the context of a lipid bilayer. In particular, they looked at the accessibility of the MPER-TMD to 2F5, 4E10, 10E8 and DH570. The MPER appears to be accessible up to ∼10% of the time to the 2F5, 4E10, and 10E8 Fabs but ∼40% of time to the DH570 Fab. To assess possible functional roles for the MPER in membrane fusion, they generated 17 Env mutants using the sequence of a clade A isolate, 92UG037.8, mutating each of the three structural elements: hydrophobic core, turn, and kink. Mutants W670A (hydrophobic core), F673A (turn), and W680A (kink), while still sensitive to VRC01, became much more resistant to the trimer-specific bNAbs and also gained sensitivity to b6, 3791, and 17b. All mutants with changes at W666 in the hydrophobic core and K683 at the kink lost infectivity almost completely. For the rest of the mutants, infectivity ranged from 4.3 to 50.8% of that of the wild type, showing that key residues important for stabilizing the MPER structure are also critical for Env-induced membrane fusion activity, especially in the context of viral infection.
Fu2018
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: Isolation of human MPER-targeting mAb, E10, from an HIV-1-infected patient sample by single B cell sorting and single cell PCR has been reported. E10 had lower neutralization activity than mAb b12 but higher ADCC activity than mAb 2F5 at low concentrations. Positive responses to 3 overlapping consensus B clade linear 15mer peptides identified a 2F5-specific epitope core of ELDKWA immediately downstream of the E10 epitope. MAb 2F5 was also used as a positive standard for cardiolipin binding assessing autoreactivity and MPER peptide fusion protein F7-Fc binding.
Yang2018
(antibody binding site, autoantibody or autoimmunity)
-
2F5: Two HIV-1-infected individuals, VC10014 and VC20013, were monitored from early infection until well after they had developed broadly neutralizing activity. The bNAb activity developed about 1 year after infection and mapped to a single epitope in both subjects. Isolates from each subject, taken at five different time points, were tested against monoclonal bNAbs: VRC01, B12, 2G12, PG9, PG16, 4E10, and 2F5. In subject VC10014, the bNAb activity developed around 1 year postinfection and targeted an epitope that overlaps the CD4-BS and is similar to (but distinct from) bNAb HJ16. In the case of VC20013, the bNAb activity targeted a novel epitope in the MPER that is critically dependent on residue 677 (mutation K677N). All of the isolates from VC20013 were sensitive to both 2F5 and 4E10.
Sather2014
(neutralization, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: This study demonstrated that bNAb signatures can be utilized to engineer HIV-1 Env vaccine immunogens eliciting Ab responses with greater neutralization breadth. Data from four large virus panels were used to comprehensively map viral signatures associated with bNAb sensitivity, hypervariable region characteristics, and clade effects. The bNAb signatures defined for the V2 epitope region were then employed to inform immunogen design in a proof-of-concept exploration of signature-based epitope targeted (SET) vaccines. V2 bNAb signature-guided mutations were introduced into Env 459C to create a trivalent vaccine which resulted in increased breadth of nAb responses compared with Env 459C alone. The 4 MPER bNAbs studied were grouped by epitope, either 2F5 or 4E10/10E8/DH511. Clade C showed resistance to 2F5 which might be explained by absence of conserved Ala, A667.
Bricault2019
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, computational prediction, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: Improvements to the standardization of the HIV-1 pseudovirus production procedure by implementing an automated system for aliquoting of HIV-1 pseudovirus stocks up to liter-scale are described. The automated platform and the aliquoting process were validated on as accuracy, precision, specificity and robustness. Lot-to-lot variations and virus stock integrity were assessed through two parallel neutralization assays run with the automatically aliquoted HIV pseudovirus and a manually aliquoted reference virus of the same type, by using five control reagents: sCD4, b12, 2F5, 4E10 and TriMab consisting of 2G12, IgG1b12 and 2F5.
Schultz2018
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Polyreactive properties of natural and artificially engineered HIV-1 bNAbs were studied, with almost 60% of the tested HIV-1 bNAbs (including this one) exhibiting low to high polyreactivity in different immunoassays. A previously unappreciated polyreactive binding for PGT121, PGT128, NIH45-46W, m2, and m7 was reported. Binding affinity, thermodynamic, and molecular dynamics analyses revealed that the co-emergence of enhanced neutralizing capacities and polyreactivity was due to an intrinsic conformational flexibility of the antigen-binding sites of bNAbs, allowing a better accommodation of divergent HIV-1 Env variants.
Prigent2018
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A panel of bnAbs were studied to assess ongoing adaptation of the HIV-1 species to the humoral immunity of the human population. Resistance to neutralization is increasing over time, but concerns only the external glycoprotein gp120, not the MPER, suggesting a high selective pressure on gp120. Almost all the identified major neutralization epitopes of gp120 are affected by this antigenic drift, suggesting that gp120 as a whole has progressively evolved in less than 3 decades.
Bouvin-Pley2014
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Assays of poly- and autoreactivity demonstrated that broadly neutralizing NAbs are significantly more poly- and autoreactive than non-neutralizing NAbs. 2F5 is autoreactive, but not polyreactive.
Liu2015a
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: A panel of 14 pseudoviruses of subtype CRF01_AE was developed to assess the neutralization of several neutralizing antibodies (b12, PG9, PG16, 4E10, 10E8, 2F5, PGT121, PGT126, 2G12). Neutralization was assessed in both TZM-bl and A3R5 cell-based assays. Most viruses were more susceptible to mAb-neutralization in A3R5 than in the TZM-bl cell-based assay. The increased neutralization sensitivity observed in the A3R5 assay was not linked to the year of virus transmission or to the stages of infection, but chronic viruses from the years 1990-92 were more sensitive to neutralization than the more current viruses, in both assays.
Chenine2018
(assay or method development, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The immunologic effects of mutations in the Env cytoplasmic tail (CT) that included increased surface expression were explored using a vaccinia prime/protein boost protocol in mice. After vaccinia primes, CT- modified Envs induced up to 7-fold higher gp120-specific IgG, and after gp120 protein boosts, they elicited up to 16-fold greater Tier-1 HIV-1 neutralizing antibody titers. Envs with or without the TM1 mutations were expressed in HEK 293T cells and analyzed for the relative expression of Ab epitopes including the membrane-proximal external region (MPER) in gp41 for 2F5.
Hogan2018
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A panel of mAbs (2G12, VRC01, HJ16, 2F5, 4E10, 35O22, PG9, PGT121, PGT126, 10-1074) was tested to compare efficacy in cell-free versus cell-cell transmission environment. Almost all bNAbs (with the exception of anti-CD4 mAb Leu3a) blocked cell-free infection with greater potency than cell-cell infection, and showed greater potency in neutralization of cell-free viruses. The lower effectiveness on neutralization was particularly pronounced for transmitted/founder viruses, and less pronounced for chronic and lab-adapted viruses. The study highlights that the ability of an antibody to inhibit cell-cell transmission may be an important consideration in the development of Abs for prophylaxis.
Li2017
(immunoprophylaxis, neutralization)
-
2F5: The next generation of a computational neutralization fingerprinting (NFP) being used as a way to predict polyclonal Ab responses to HIV infection is presented. A new panel of 20 pseudoviruses, termed f61, was developed to aid in the assessment of experimental neutralization. This panel was used to assess 22 well-characterized bNAbs and mixtures thereof (HJ16, VRC01, 8ANC195, IGg1b12, PGT121, PGT128, PGT135, PG9, PGT151, 35O22, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10, VRC27, VRC-CH31, VRC-PG20, PG04, VRC23, 12A12, 3BNC117, PGT145, CH01). The new algorithms accurately predicted VRC01-like and PG9-like antibody specificities.
Doria-Rose2017
(neutralization, computational prediction)
-
2F5: This review discusses host controls of bNAb responses and why highly antigenic vaccine Envs do not induce bNAbs when used as vaccine immunogens. 2F5 is polyreactive for human host lipids and proteins. It binds to the ELDKWA epitope present in both dp41 and an enzyme of tryptophan metabolism, kynureninase (Kynu). Kl mice expressing VDJ rearrangements of 2F5 exhibit severe defects in B-cell development with 95% of immature bone marrow B cells lost at the first tolerance checkpoint and peripheral B cells anergic similar result is seen for 2F5 unmutated common ancestor (UCA). Mice and macaques vaccination with 2F5 UCA resulted in B cells activated with minimal affinity maturation.
Kelsoe2017
(review, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: This review focuses on the potential role of HIV-1-specific NAbs in preventing HIV-1 infection. Several NAbs have provided protection from infection in SHIV challenge studies in primates: b12, VRC01, VRC07-523LS, 3BNC117, PG9, PGT121, PGT126, 10-1074, 2G12, 4E10, 2F5, 10E8.
Pegu2017
(immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
2F5: The ability of neutralizing and nonneutralizing mAbs to block infection in models of mucosal transmission was tested. Neutralization potency did not fully predict activity in mucosal tissue. CD4bs-specific bNAbs, in particular VRC01, blocked HIV-1 infection across all cellular and tissue models. MPER (2F5) and outer domain glycan (2G12) bNAbs were also efficient in preventing infection of mucosal tissues, while bNAbs targeting V1-V2 glycans (PG9 and PG16) were more variable. Non-nAbs alone and in combinations, were poorly protective against mucosal infection. The protection provided by specific bNAbs demonstrates their potential over that of nonneutralizing antibodies for preventing mucosal entry. 2F5 and 4E10 were selected as representative mAbs of the MPER class.
Cheeseman2017
(genital and mucosal immunity, immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: To understand HIV neutralization mediated by the MPER, antibodies and viruses were studied from CAP206, a patient known to produce MPER-targeted neutralizing mAbs. 41 human mAbs were isolated from CAP206 at various timepoints after infection, and 4 macaque mAbs were isolated from animals immunized with CAP206 Env proteins. Two rare, naturally-occuring single-residue changes in Env were identified in transmitted/founder viruses (W680G in CAP206 T/F and Y681D in CH505 T/F) that made the viruses less resistant to neutralization. The results point to the role of the MPER in mediating the closed trimer state, and hence the neutralization resistance of HIV. CH58 was one of several mAbs tested for neutralization of transmitted founder viruses isolated from clade C infected individuals CAP206 and CH505, compared to T/F viruses containing MPER mutations that confer enhanced neutralization sensitivity.
Bradley2016a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This study investigated the ability of native, membrane-expressed JR-FL Env trimers to elicit NAbs. Rabbits were immunized with virus-like particles (VLPs) expressing trimers (trimer VLP sera) and DNA expressing native Env trimer, followed by a protein boost (DNA trimer sera). N197 glycan- and residue 230- removal conferred sensitivity to Trimer VLP sera and DNA trimer sera respectively, showing for the first time that strain-specific holes in the "glycan fence" can allow the development of tier 2 NAbs to native spikes. All 3 sera neutralized via quaternary epitopes and exploited natural gaps in the glycan defenses of the second conserved region of JR-FL gp120. 2F5 used as a reference Ab.
Crooks2015
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
2F5: This study assessed the ADCC activity of antibodies of varied binding types, including CD4bs (b6, b12, VRC01, PGV04, 3BNC117), V2 (PG9, PG16), V3 (PGT126, PGT121, 10-1074), oligomannose (2G12), MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8), CD4i (17b, X5), C1/C5 (A32, C11), cluster I (240D, F240), and cluster II (98-6, 126-7). ADCC activity was correlated with binding to Env on the surfaces of virus-infected cells. ADCC was correlated with neutralization, but not always for lab-adapted viruses such as HIV-1 NLA-3.
vonBredow2016
(effector function)
-
2F5: This review summarizes representative anti-HIV MAbs of the first generation (2G12, b12, 2F5, 4E10) and second generation (PG9, PG16, PGT145, VRC26.09, PGDM1400, PGT121, PGT124, PGT128, PGT135, 10-1074, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH103, PGT151, 35O22, 8ANC195, 10E8). Structures, epitopes, VDJ usage, CDR usage, and degree of somatic hypermutation are compared among these antibodies. The use of SOSIP trimers as immunogens to elicit B-cell responses is discussed.
Burton2016
(review, structure)
-
2F5: Two stable homogenous gp140 Env trimer spikes, Clade A 92UG037.8 Env and Clade C C97ZA012 Env, were identified. 293T cells stably transfected with either presented fully functional surface timers, 50% of which were uncleaved. A panel of neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs were tested for binding to the trimers. MPER Ab 2F5 did not bind cell surface whether gp160 was missing C-terminal or not, but did neutralize 92UG037.8 HIV-1 isolate weakly.
Chen2015
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Factors that independently affect bNAb induction and evolution were identified as viral load, length of untreated infection, and viral diversity. Black subjects induced bNAbs more than white subjects, but this did not correlate with type of Ab response. Fingerprint analyses of induced bNAbs showed strong subtype dependency, with subtype B inducing significantly higher levels of CD4bs Abs and non-subtype B inducing V2-glycan specific Abs. Of the 239 bNAb antibody inducers found from 4,484 HIV-1 infected subjects, the top 105 inducers' neutralization fingerprint and epitope specificity was determined by comparison to the following antibodies - PG9, PG16, PGDM1400, PGT145 (V2 glycan); PGT121, PGT128, PGT130 (V3 glycan); VRC01, PGV04 (CD4bs) and PGT151 (interface) and 2F5, 4E10, 10E8 (MPER).
Rusert2016
(neutralization, subtype comparisons, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: This review discusses the application of bNAbs for HIV treatment and eradication, focusing on bNAbs that target key epitopes, specifically those of: 2G12, 2F5, 4E10, VRC01, 3BNC117, PGT121, VRC26.08, VRC26.09, PGDM1400, and 10-1074. Antibodies 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 were among the first bNAbs available for clinical testing, and a cocktail of these 3 Abs was assessed in human trials.
Stephenson2016
(immunotherapy, review)
-
2F5: This review discusses the breakthroughs in understanding of the biology of the transmitted virus, the structure and nature of its envelope trimer, vaccine-induced CD8 T cell control in primates, and host control of bnAb elicitation.
Haynes2016
(review)
-
2F5: A mathematical model was developed to predict the Ab concentration at which antibody escape variants outcompete their ancestors, and this concentration was termed the mutant selection window (MSW). The MSW was determined experimentally for 12 pairings of diverse HIV strains against 7 bnAbs (b12, 2G12, PG9, PG16, PGT121, PGT128, 2F5). The neutralization of 2F5 was assayed against JRFL-D664N (resistant strain) and JRFL (sensitive strain).
Magnus2016
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: Neutralization breadth in 157 antiretroviral-naive individuals infected for less than 1 year post-infection was studied and compared to a cohort of 170 untreated chronic patients. A range of neutralizing activities was observed with a panel of six recombinant viruses from five different subtypes. Some sera were broadly reactive, predominantly targeting envelope epitopes within the V2 glycan-dependent region. The Env neutralization breadth was positively associated with time post infection. 2F5 has been used as a control in testing CD4 binding site neutralizing specificity of the sera.
Sanchez-Merino2016
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: Ten mAbs were isolated from a vertically-infected infant BF520 at 15 months of age. Ab BF520.1 neutralized pseudoviruses from clades A, B and C with a breadth of 58%, putting it in the same range as second-generation bNAbs derived from adults, but its potency was lower. BF520.1 was shown to target the base of the V3 loop at the N332 supersite. MPER-binding, first-generation mAb, 2F5 when compared had a geometric mean of IC50=6.86 µg/ml for the 6/12 viruses it neutralized at a potency of 50%. The infant-derived antibodies had a lower rate of somatic hypermutation (SHM) and no indels compared to adult-derived anti-V3 mAbs. This study shows that bnAbs can develop without SHM or prolonged affinity maturation.
Simonich2016
(antibody binding site, neutralization, responses in children, structure)
-
2F5: This study examined the neutralization of group N, O, and P primary isolates of HIV-1 by diverse antibodies. Cross-group neutralization was observed only with the bNAbs targeting the N160 glycan-V1/V2 site. Four group O isolates, 1 group N isolate, and the group P isolates were neutralized by PG9 and/or PG16 or PGT145 at low concentrations. None of the non-M primary isolates were neutralized by bNAbs targeting other regions, except 10E8, which weakly neutralized 2 group N isolates, and 35O22 which neutralized 1 group O isolate. Bispecific bNAbs (PG9-iMab and PG16-iMab) very efficiently neutralized all non-M isolates with IC50 below 1 ug/mL, except for 2 group O strains. Anti-MPER bNAb 2F5 was unable to neutralize any of the 16 tested non-M primary isolates at an IC50< 10µg/ml.
Morgand2015
(neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The neutralization of 14 bnAbs was assayed against a global panel of 12 or 17 Env pseudoviruses. From IC50, IC80, IC90, and IC99 values, the slope of the dose-response curve was calculated. Each class of Ab had a fairly consistent slope. Neutralization breadth was strongly correlated with slope. An IIP (Instantaneous Inhibitory Potential) value was calculated, based on both the slope and IC50, and this value may be predictive of clinical efficacy. 2F5, a gp41 MPER bnAb belonged to a group with slopes <1 (like others 10E8 and 4E10), but 10E8 had a significantly lower IC50.
Webb2015
(neutralization)
-
2F5: A gp41 immunogen, gp41-HR1-54Q, was developed, consisting of shortened heptad repeat regions 1 and 2 and the MPER. It was efficiently recognized by 3 MPER-binding Abs (2F5, Z13e1 and 4E10). In rabbits, the antigen was highly immunogenic but failed to develop neutralization ability.
Habte2015
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: HIV gp41 bNAbs have characteristics that predispose them to be controlled by immunological tolerance. The study explored whether the germline unmutated ancestors (UA) of MPER bNAbs are also controlled by tolerance, and, if so, whether any remaining B cells can be activated to clonally expand. Germline knock-in mice expressing precursors of bNAb 2F5 showed B cell deletion in the bone marrow prevaccination, and the anergic bnAb precursors that survived in the periphery could be partially rescued, become activated, and clonally expand by immunization with MPER peptide-liposomes. Immunized macaques made B cell clonal lineages targeted to the 2F5 bnAb epitope, but 2F5-like antibodies were either deleted or did not attain sufficient affinity for gp41-lipid complexes to achieve the neutralization potency of 2F5. Structural analysis of members of a vaccine-induced antibody lineage DH570 revealed that heavy chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) hydrophobicity was important for neutralization. 2F5 light chain interacts with the gp41 MPER nominal epitope-containing peptide, gp41660-670.
Zhang2016
(antibody lineage)
-
2F5: A large cross-sectional study of sera from 205 ART-naive patients infected with different HIV clades was tested against a panel of 219 cross-clade Env-pseudotyped viruses. Their neutralization was compared to the neutralization of 10 human bNAbs (10E8, 4E10, VRC01, PG9, PGT145, PGT128, 2F5, CH01, b12, 2G12) tested with a panel of 119 Env-pseudotyped viruses. Results from b12 and 2G12 suggested that these bnAbs may not be as broadly neutralizing as previously thought. 2F5 neutralized 58% of the 199 viruses tested.
Hraber2014
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This study aim to develop a replicating vector system for the delivery of HIV-1 antigens on the basis of an apathogenic foamy virus. This consists of the MPER and the fusion peptide proximal region (FPPR). By stepwise shortening of distinct linker residues between both the domains lead to enhanced recognition by 2F5. This indicates that a specific positioning of FPPR and MPER domains is critical for improved Ab binding.
Muhle2013
-
2F5: The effect of PNGS on viral infectivity and antibody neutralization (2F5, 4E10, b12, VRC01, VRC03, PG9, PG16, 3869) was evaluated through systemic mutations of each PNGS on CRF07_BC strain. Mutations at N197 (C2), N301 (V3), N442 (C4), and N625 (gp41) rendered the virus more susceptible to neutralization by MAbs that recognize the CD4 binding site or gp41. Generally, mutations on V4/V5 loops, C2/C3/C4 regions, and gp41 reduced the neutralization sensitivity to PG16. However, mutation of N289 (C2) made the virus more sensitive to both PG9 and PG16. Mutations at N142 (V1), N355 (C3) and N463 (V5) conferred resistance to neutralization by anti-gp41 MAbs. Available structural information of HIV Env and homology modeling was used to provide a structural basis for the observed biological effects of these mutations.
Wang2013
(neutralization, structure)
-
2F5: Incomplete neutralization may decrease the ability of bnAbs to protect against HIV exposure. In order to determine the extent of non-sigmoidal slopes that plateau at <100% neutralization, a panel of 24 bnMAbs targeting different regions on Env was tested in a quantitative pseudovirus neutralization assay on a panel of 278 viral clones. All bNAbs had some viruses that they neutralized with a plateau <100%, but those targeting the V2 apex and MPER did so more often. All bnMAbs assayed had some viruses for which they had incomplete neutralization and non-sigmoidal neutralization curves. bNAbs were grouped into 3 groups based on their neutralization curves: group 1 antibodies neutralized more than 90% of susceptible viruses to >95% (PGT121-123, PGT125-128, PGT136, PGV04); group 2 was less effective, resulting in neutralization of 60-84% of susceptible viruses to >95% (b12, PGT130-131, PGT135, PGT137, PGT141-143, PGT145, 2G12, PG9); group 3 neutralized only 36-60% of susceptible viruses to >95% (PG16, PGT144, 2F5, 4E10).
McCoy2015
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Autoreactivity and polyspecificity of 2F5 using a synthetic human peptidome has been reported and compared with 4E10. 2F5 was shown to be polyreactive, binding peptides from various proteins, but only in a limited manner. Analysis of B cell development in 2F5 heavy-chain knock-in mice confirmed that 2F5 does recognize self-antigens.
Finton2013
(structure, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: This paper showed that FcγRI occasionally potentiates neutralization by Abs against the V3 loop of gp120 and cluster I of gp41. FcγRI providing a kinetic advantage for neutralizing Abs against partially cryptic epitopes independent of phagocytosis has been reported. The antibiotic bafilomycin A1 and the weak base chloroquine were used as lysosomotropic agents to block phagocytosis in TZM-bl and TZM-bl/FcγRI cells. These treated cells and 2 HIV-1 subtype B Env-pseudotyped viruses (6535.3 and QH0692.42) were assayed with 2F5. Expression of FcγRI dramatically improved the neutralizing activity of 2F5 against both viruses in the absence of lysosomotropic agents. Moreover, neither lysosomotropic agent showed any evidence of reversing the FcγRI-mediated effect on 2F5.
Perez2013
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Galactosyl ceramide (Galcer), a glycosphingolipid, is a receptor for the HIV-1 Env glycoprotein. This study has mimicked this interaction by using an artificial membrane containing synthetic Galcer and recombinant HIV-1 Env proteins to identify antibodies that would block the HIV-1 Env-Galcer interaction. HIV-1 ALVAC/AIDSVAX vaccinee-derived MAbs specific for the gp120 C1 region blocked Galcer binding of a transmitted/founder HIV-1 Env gp140. The antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity-mediating CH38 IgG and its natural IgA isotype were the most potent blocking antibodies. 2F5 did not block Env-Galcer binding.
Dennison2014
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, effector function, glycosylation)
-
2F5: Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the tridecapeptide corresponding to residues 659–671 of gp41 (covering 2F5 epitope ELDKWA) are reported. X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and circular dichroism experiments have yielded conflicting conformational information. AMBER force fields technique was used to describe the complex conformational landscape of gp41659–671. In contrast to previous MD simulations, these results are consistent with the bulk of the experimental findings. The amount of helical population is important in aqueous solution, but this structure forms part of a flexible conformational ensemble.
Zhang2014a
(computational prediction, structure)
-
2F5: This review surveyed the Vectored Immuno Prophylaxis (VIP) strategy, which involves passive immunization by viral vector-mediated delivery of genes encoding bnAbs for in vivo expression. Recently published studies in humanized mice and macaques were discussed as well as the pros and cons of VIP towards clinical applications to control HIV endemics. A single injection of AAV8 vector achieved peak 2F5 (˜25 μg/mL) production in serum at week 6 and offered moderate protection.
Yang2014
(immunoprophylaxis, review, antibody gene transfer)
-
2F5: The ability of bNAbs to inhibit the HIV cell entry was tested for b12, VRC01,VRC03, PG9, PG16, PGT121, 2F5, 10E8, 2G12. Among them, PGT121, VRC01, and VRC03 potently inhibited HIV entry into CD4+ T cells of infected individuals whose viremia was suppressed by ART.
Chun2014
(immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Pairwise combinations of 6 NAbs (4E10, 2F5, 2G12, b12, PG9, PG16) were tested for neutralization of pseudoviruses and transmitted/founder viruses. Each of the NAbs tested targets a different region of gp120 or gp41. Some pairwise combinations enhanced neutralization synergistically, suggesting that combinations of NAbs may enhance clinical effectiveness.
Miglietta2014
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The study used computational design to develop a protein that interacted with the CDR H3 loop of 2F5. The protein bound to 2F5 with 10-fold greater affinity than either the full-length epitope peptide on HIV gp41 and any previously-designed epitope-scaffold.
Azoitei2014
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Cross-group neutralization of HIV-1 isolates from groups M, N, O, and P was tested with diverse patient sera and bNAbs PG9, PG16, 4E10, b12, 2F5, 2G12, VRC01, VRC03, and HJ16. The primary isolates displayed a wide spectrum of sensitivity to neutralization by the human sera, with some cross-group neutralization clearly observed. Among the bNAbs, only PG9 and PG16 showed any cross-group neutralization. The group N prototype strain YBF30 was highly sensitive to neutralization by PG9, and the interaction between their key residues was confirmed by molecular modeling. The conservation of the PG9/PG16 epitope within groups M and N suggests its relevance as a vaccine immunogen.
Braibant2013
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Tolerance deletion due to mAb autoreactivity limits 2F5 bNAb induction. Autoantigen recognized by 2F5 is kynureninase (KYNU), so that most 2F5-bearing B cells are deleted in the bone marrow and a minor population survives as anergic B cells.
Haynes2013
(review)
-
2F5: This study analyzes the structure and immunogenic properties of MPERp, a peptide vaccine(656NEQELLELDKWASLWN671), that includes the following: (i) the complete sequence protected from proteolysis by the 2F5 paratope; (ii) downstream residues postulated to establish weak contacts with the CDR-H3 loop of 2F5, which are crucial for neutralization; and (iii) an aromatic rich anchor to the membrane interface. MPERp structures confirmed folding of the complete 2F5 epitope within continuous kinked helices. MPER-based peptides in combination with liposomes serves as stand-alone immunogens and suggest new approaches for structure-aided MPER vaccine development.
Serrano2014
(therapeutic vaccine, structure)
-
2F5: 2F5 was one of 10 MAbs used to study chronic vs. consensus vs. transmitted/founder (T/F) gp41 Envs for immunogenicity. Consensus Envs were the most potent eliciters of response but could only neutralize tier 1 and some tier 2 viruses. T/F Envs elicited the greatest breadth of NAb response; and chronic Envs elicited the lowest level and narrowest response. This MPER binding Nab bound well at <10 nM to 3/5 chronic Envs, 5/6 Consensus Envs and 4/7 T/F Envs.
Liao2013c
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Avid reaction of 2F5 with a conserved mammalian self-Ag, kynureninase is reported. B cell tetramer reagents were used to track the frequencies of B cells recognizing the HIV-1 2F5 epitope (SP62) in C57BL/6 mice. Reconstitution of Rag1null mice with matured congenic B cells restores the capacity to mount significant serum Ab and germinal center responses to 2F5/SP62. The recovery of humoral responses to the 2F5/SP62 by reconstitution with autoreactive clones of B cells, provides direct evidence towards latent generation of humoral responses in C57BL/6 mice.
Holl2014
-
2F5:This study identified human kynureninase (KYNU) and splicing factor 3b subunit 3 (SF3B3) as the primary conserved, vertebrate self-antigens recognized by the 2F5 and 4E10 antibodies, respectively. 2F5 binds the H4 domain of KYNU which contains the complete 2F5 linear epitope (ELDKWA). 4E10 recognizes an epitope of SF3B3 that is strongly dependent on hydrophobic interactions. Opossums carry a rare KYNU H4 domain that abolishes 2F5 binding, but they retain the SF3B3 4E10 epitope. Immunization of opossums with HIV-1 gp140 induced extraordinary titers of serum antibody to the 2F5 ELDKWA epitope but little or nothing to the 4E10 determinant. Identification of structural motifs shared by vertebrates and HIV-1 provides direct evidence that immunological tolerance can impair humoral responses to HIV-1.
Yang2013
-
2F5: A model that predicts the concentrations at which MAbs 2F5 and 4E10 effectively neutralize HIV-1 is presented. The model predicts that for these antibodies to be effective at neutralization, the time to disable an epitope must be shorter than the time the antibody remains bound in this conformation, about five minutes or less for 4E10 and 2F5. 2F5 IgG, but not 4E10, is much more effective at neutralization than its Fab fragment.
Hu2014
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The effect of low pH and HIV-1 Abs which increased the transcytosis of the virus by 20 fold, has been reported. This enhanced transcytosis was due to the Fc neonatal receptor (FcRn), which facilitates HIV-1's own transmission by usurping Ab responses directed against itself. Both infectious and noninfectious viruses were transcytosed by 2F5. Knocking down FcRn in HEC-1A cells didn't affect transcytosis by 2F5.
Gupta2013
-
2F5: Several anti-HIV-1 broadly neutralizing Abs have unusually long and often protruding CDRH3 loops. This study examined 2F5 mutants with variations in CDRH3. Some variants had improved binding to the MPER region of Env. The CDRH3 tolerated elongations and reductions up to four residues, displaying a range of binding affinities and retaining some neutralizing capacity. The data suggest a mechanism of action in which the 2F5 CDRH3 contacts and destabilizes the MPER helix downstream of its core epitope to allow induction of the extended-loop conformation.
Guenaga2012
(neutralization, structure)
-
2F5: This study examined how the conserved gp120-gp41 association site adapts to glycan changes that are linked to neutralization sensitivity. A DSR mutant virus (K601D) with defective gp120-association, which was sequentially passaged in peripheral blood mononuclear cells to select suppressor mutations was used. Neutralization by 2F5, which targets MPER of gp41, was not affected by V1 mutation as shown against T138N and ΔN.
Drummer2013
(antibody interactions, glycosylation)
-
2F5: Clade A Env sequence, BG505, was identified to bind to bNAbs representative of most of the known NAb classes. This sequence is the best natural sequence match (73%) to the MRCA sequence from 19 Env sequences derived from PG9 and PG16 MAbs' donor. A point mutation at position L111A of BG505 enabled more efficient production of a stable gp120 monomer, preserving the major neutralization epitopes. The antisera produced by this adjuvanted formulation of gp120 competed with bnAbs from 3 classes of non-overlapping epitopes. 2F5 showed high neutralization titer against BG505 pseudovirusin a competitive binding assay as shown in Table 1.
Hoffenberg2013
(antibody interactions, neutralization)
-
2F5: The neutralization profile of 1F7, a human CD4bs mAb, is reported and compared to other bnNAbs. 1F7 exhibited extreme potency against primary HIV-1, but limited breadth across clades. 2F5 neutralized 62% of a cross-clade panel of 157 HIV-1 isolates (Fig. S1) while 1F7 neutralized only 20% of the isolates.
Gach2013
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This study reported Ab binding titers and neutralization of 51 patients with chronic HIV-1 infection on supressive ART for 3 yrs. A high titer of Ab against gp120, gp41, and MPER was found. Patient sera, 2F5 and a serum control were evaluated for binding recombinant gp120JR-FL mutants lacking either the V1/V2 loop or the V3 loop. Significantly higher end point binding titers and HIV1JR-FL neutralization were noticed in patients with >10 compared to <10 yrs of detectable HIV RNA.
Gach2014
(neutralization, HAART, ART)
-
2F5: MHC Class II-restricted TH activation was shown to be a key determinant controlling nonneutralizing MPER Ab responses. The TH H2d epitope KWASLWNWF, that partially overlaps the 2F5 MPER epitope, was required for MPER Ab induction.
Zhang2014
-
2F5: This study reports the development of a new cell-line (A3R5)-based highly sensitive Ab detection assay. This T-lymphoblastoid cell-line stably expreses CCR5 and recognizes CCR5-tropic circulating strains of HIV-1. A3R5 cells showed greater neutralization potency compared to the current cell-line of choice TZM-bl. 2F5 was used as a reference Ab in neutralization assay comparing A3R5 and TZM-bl.
McLinden2013
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: This is a review of identified bNAbs, including the ontogeny of B cells that give rise to these antibodies. Breadth and magnitude of neutralization, unique features and similar bNAbs are listed. 2F5 is an MPER Ab, with breadth 48%, IC50 9.42 μg per ml, and its unique feature listed is ELDKWAS recognition. A similar MAb is m66.
Kwong2013
(review)
-
2F5: Biosynthesis and structure determination by NMR analysis of a micelle-bound MPER trimer, designated gp41-M-MAT, showed that MPER peptides adopt symmetric α helical conformations exposing binding sites. In the 2F5 co-crystal structure, the MPER fragment exhibits a β hairpin at the core 2F5 epitope, but in case of gp41-M-MAT the 2F5 epitope has an α helical conformation. Contact residues F49, W56 and K59 played major roles in conferring binding affinity in the nanomolar range.
Reardon2014
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Crystal structure of m66 bound to its gp41 epitope and unbound structures of m66 and m66.6 are reported. m66, m66.6 and 2F5 utilize similar mechanistic elements to recognize a common gp41-MPER epitope and neutralize HIV-1.
Ofek2014
(structure)
-
2F5: 2 HIV-1 infectious molecular clones (IMCs) derived from subtypes C and CRF01_AE HIV-1 primary isolates expressing LucR (IMC.LucR) were engineered to express heterologous gp160 Envs. The IMCs were generally resistant to neutralization by 2F5.
Chenine2013
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Knockin (KI) mice models expressing H chains from MAbs 4E10 and 48d were generated, in addition to previously used KI mice expressing 2F5. Only KI mice expressing MPER+ BnAb HCs triggered a profound early BM developmental blockade, consistent with the self-reactivity of both the 2F5 and 4E10 BnAb HCs being sufficient to trigger clonal B cell deletion.
Chen2013
-
2F5: Env pseudo-typed viruses generated from 7 transmitting and 4 non-transmitting mothers and their children were studied to identify phenotypes that associate with the risk of mother to child transmission. There were no differences in neutralization with 2F5, 2G12, 4E10 and b12, but transmitting mothers had higher autologous NAb responses against gp120/gp41, suggesting that strong autologous neutralization activity can associate with risk of transmission.
Baan2013
(neutralization, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: A statistical model selection method was used to identify a global panel of 12 reference Env clones among 219 Env-pseudotyped viruses that represent the spectrum of neutralizing activity seen with sera from 205 chronically HIV-1-infected individuals. The small final panel was also highly sensitive for detection of many of the known bNAbs, including 2F5. The panel of 12 Env clones should facilitate assessments of vacine-elicited NAbs.
Decamp2014
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: A computational method to predict Ab epitopes at the residue level, based on structure and neutralization panels of diverse viral strains has been described. This method was evaluated using 19 Env-Ab including 2F5, against 181 diverse HIV-1 strains with available Ab-Ag complex structures.
Chuang2013
(computational prediction)
-
2F5: A panel of NAbs and non-neutralizing Abs (NoNAbs) displaying the highest Fc γR-mediated inhibitory activity and significant ADCC were selected and formulated in a microbicidal gel and tested for antiviral activity against SHIVSF162P3 vaginal challenge in non-human primates. Combination of 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10 fully prevented vaginal transmission. Two NoNAbs, 246-D and 4B3, had no impact on viral acquisition, but reduced plasma viral load.
Moog2014
(effector function, SIV)
-
2F5: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 2F5 is discussed as the MPER region-targeting, potent and broadly neutralizing anti-gp41 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity that has a linear epitope. It is hypothesized that 2F5 blockable neutralizing Ab responses are delayed due to immune dysregulation.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
2F5: "Neutralization fingerprints" for 30 neutralizing antibodies were determined using a panel of 34 diverse HIV-1 strains. 10 antibody clusters were defined: VRC01-like, PG9-like, PGT128-like, 2F5-like, 10E8-like and separate clusters for b12, CD4, 2G12, HJ16, 8ANC195.
Georgiev2013
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This paper reported the nature of junk Env glycan that undermine the development of Ab responses against gp120/gp41 trimers and evaluated enzyme digestion as a way to remove aberrant Env to produce "trimer VLPs". 2F5 was used in the anti-gp41 Ab cocktail in SDS-PAGE and western blot experiments to prove that enzymes removed junk Env from VLPs and inactivated virus.
Crooks2011
(glycosylation)
-
2F5: Generation of a series of chemically modified MPER immunogens through derivatization of amino acid side chains and evaluation of the binding affinity to their cognate mAbs are described. The modification of peptides has little effect on binding to the antibodies. A selected immunogen containing both 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes and a threonine at T676 elicited the highest anti-peptide IgG titer but not high neutralization. 2F5 has been used as a bnAb directed to MPER.
Venditto2013
(antibody interactions, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The sera of 20 HIV-1 patients were screened for ADCC in a novel assay measuring granzyme B (GrB) and T cell elimination and reported that complex sera mediated greater levels of ADCC than anti-HIV mAbs. The data suggested that total amount of IgG bound is an important determinant of robust ADCC which improves the vaccine potency. 2F5 was used as an anti-gp41 Ab to study effects of Ab specificity and affinity on ADCC against HIV-1 infected targets.
Smalls-Mantey2012
(assay or method development, effector function)
-
2F5: Immunogenicity of gp120 immunogens from two pairs of clade B and two pairs of clade C mother-to-child transmitted HIV-1 variants was studied in rabbits. While high level Env-specific antibody responses were elicited by all immunogens, their abilities to NAb responses differed and neutralization-resistant variants elicited broader NAb. All 4 C-lade immunogens had K to S substitution in the critical recognition determinant DKW, which is associated with resistance to 2F5 neutralization.
Wang2012
(mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: This study shows that maize-derived HIV-neutralizing mAb 2F5 is assembled correctly in plants and binds to its antigen with the same affinity as 2F5 produced in mammalian cells. However, although 2F5 has been produced at high levels in non-plant platforms, the yield in maize seeds is lower than previously achieved with 2G12. This suggests that the intrinsic properties of the antibody (e.g. sensitivity to specific proteases) and the environment provided by the production host (e.g. the relative abundance of different proteases, potential transgene silencing) may limit the accumulation of some antibodies.
Sabalza2012
-
2F5: This work provides a proof-of-principle for the retention of an immunogenic MPER/conserved amino-terminalfusion peptide (FP) complex at the surface of lipid vesicles. These MPER:FP peptide-vesicle formulations could be specifically bound by the 2F5 antibody and could trigger cross-reactive anti-MPER antibodies in rabbits, suggesting that contacts with N-terminal regions of gp41 may stabilize the 2F5 epitope as a membrane-surface antigen.
Huarte2012
(structure)
-
2F5: A computational tool (Antibody Database) identifying Env residues affecting antibody activity was developed. As input, the tool incorporates antibody neutralization data from large published pseudovirus panels, corresponding viral sequence data and available structural information. The model consists of a set of rules that provide an estimated IC,50 based on Env sequence data. Important residues are found by minimizing the difference between logarithms of actual and estimated IC50. The program was validated by analysis of MAb 8ANC195, which had unknown specificity. Predicted critical N-glycosylation for 8ANC195 was confirmed in vitro and in humanized mice. The key associated residues for each MAb are summarized in the Table 1 of the paper and also in the Neutralizing Antibody Contexts & Features tool at Los Alamos Immunology Database.
West2013
(glycosylation, computational prediction)
-
2F5: Identification of broadly neutralizing antibodies, their epitopes on the HIV-1 spike, the molecular basis for their remarkable breadth, and the B cell ontogenies of their generation and maturation are reviewed. Ontogeny and structure-based classification is presented, based on MAb binding site, type (structural mode of recognition), class (related ontogenies in separate donors) and family (clonal lineage). This MAb's classification: gp41 MPER, ELDKWAS loop, 2F5 class, 2F5 family.
Kwong2012
(review, structure, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: This review discusses the new research developments in bnAbs for HIV-1, Influenza, HCV. Models of the HIV-1 Env spike and of Influenza visrus spike with select bnAbs bound are shown.
Burton2012
(review)
-
2F5: Different adjuvants, including Freund's adjuvant (FCA/FIA), MF59, Carbopol-971P and 974P were compared on their ability to elicit antibody responses in rabbits. Combination of Carbopol-971P and MF59 induced potent adjuvant activity with significantly higher titer nAbs than FCA/FIA. There was no difference in binding of this MAb to gp140 SF162 with FIA adjuvant, but there was 3-fold decrease of antigenicity with MF59, C971, C974, C971+MF59 C971+MF59 as compared to the unadjuvanted sample.
Lai2012
(adjuvant comparison)
-
2F5: Somatic hypermutations are preferably found in CDR loops, which alter the Ab combining sites, but not the overall structure of the variable domain. FWR of CDR are usually resistant to and less tolerant of mutations. This study reports that most bnAbs require somatic mutations in the FWRs which provide flexibility, increasing Ab breadth and potency. To determine the consequence of FWR mutations the framework residues were reverted to the Ab's germline counterpart (FWR-GL) and binding and neutralizing properties were then evaluated. 2F5, an MPER Ab, was among the 17 bnAbs which were used in studying the mutations in FWR. Fig S4C described the comparison of Ab framework amino acid replacement vs. interactive surface area on 2F5.
Klein2013
(neutralization, structure, antibody lineage)
-
2F5: Antigenic properties of 2 biochemically stable and homogeneous gp140 trimers (A clade 92UG037 and C clade CZA97012) were compared with the corresponding gp120 monomers derived from the same percursor sequences. The trimers had nearly all the antigenic properties expected for native viral spikes and were markedly different from monomeric gp120. 2F5 has been referred as NAb against MPER.
Kovacs2012
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Crystal structure and mechanistic analysis of 2F5-gp41 complex is reported. The structures revealed an extended gp41 conformation that made contacts with 5 CDR of 2F5. Studies with protoliposome confirms the importance of lipid membrane and hydrophobic context in the binding of 2F5 to gp41.
Ofek2004
(antibody interactions, structure)
-
2F5: Intrinsic reactivity of HIV-1, a new property regulating the level of both entry and sensitivity to Abs has been reported. This activity dictates the level of responsiveness of Env protein to co-receptor, CD4 engagement and Abs. 2F5 was discussed in relation to H66N and S375W gp120 changes that didn't affect 2F5 binding.
Haim2011
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: The goal of this study was to improve the humoral response to HIV-1 by targeting trimeric Env gp140 to B cells. The gp140 was fused to a proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL), B cell activation factor (BAFF) and CD40 ligand (CD40L). These fusion proteins increased the expression of activation-induced-cytidine deaminase (AID) responsible for somatic hypermutation, Ab affinity maturation, and Ab class switching. The Env-APRIL induced high anti-Env responses against tier1 viruses.2F5 was used in BN-PAGE trimer shift assay and immunoprecipitation assay.
Melchers2012
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This paper describes immune-correlates analysis of an HIV-1 vaccine efficiency trial. In the RV144 trial the estimated efficacy was 31.2%. In this study a case-control analysis to identify Ab and cellular immune correlates of infection risk. Out of 17 Abs 6 were chosen for primary analysis to determine the roles of T cell, IgG Ab, IgA Ab responses. Assays were performed on 41 infected vaccinees and 205 uninfected vaccinees. 2F5 was used as a control in the HIV1 binding antibody multiplex assay.
Haynes2012a
(therapeutic vaccine, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
2F5: Existing structural and sequence data was analyzed. A set of signature features for potent VRC01-like (PVL) and almost PVL abs was proposed and verified by mutagenesis. 2F5 has been referred in discussing the breadth and potency of antiCD4 abs.
West2012a
(antibody lineage)
-
2F5: Synthesis of an engineered soluble heterotrimeric gp140 is described. These gp140 protomers were designed against clade A and clade B viruses. The heterotrimer gp140s exhibited broader anti-tier1 isolate neutralizing antibody responses than homotrimer gp140. 2F5 and 4E10 bound similarly to the homotrimeric clade A and B Q168/SF162L, Q259/SF162NL and Q461/SF1621 heretotrimers and the corresponding homotrimers.
Sellhorn2012
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: This paper showed that nAb 2G12, which binds to gp120 N glycans with α (1,2)-linked mannose termini and inhibits replication after passive transfer to patients, neutralizes by slowing entry of adsorbed virus. It is suggested that 2G12 competitively inhibits interactions between gp120 V3 loop and the tyrosine sulfate containing amino terminus, thus reducing assembly of complexes that catalyze entry. 2F5 was used as a control.
Platt2012
(antibody interactions, glycosylation)
-
2F5: This study shows that epitope mapping of plasma antibodies followed by the rational design of MPER peptide tetramer can successfully isolate antigen-reactive single B cells for Ig rescue. CAP206 was isolated from a South African individual infected with HIV-1 subtype C. Comparison of IC50 suggested that CAP206-CH12 is more cross-reactive than 2F5, which generally fails to neutralize subtype c viruses.
Morris2011
-
2F5: The use of computationally derived B cell clonal lineages as templates for HIV-1 immunogen design is discussed. 2F5 has been discussed in terms of immunogenic and functional characteristics of representative HIV-1 BnAbs and their reactions to antigens.
Haynes2012
(antibody interactions, memory cells, vaccine antigen design, review, antibody polyreactivity, broad neutralizer)
-
2F5: Role of CH1 heavy chain of 2F5 in Ag binding was reported. 2F5IgA2 containing CH1 was constructed and compared for binding affinity and functional activities. 2F5 IgA2 and IgG1 acted synergistically to fully block HIV-1 transfer to CD4+ cells and IgA2 more efficiently bound to gp41 MPER and blocked HIV-1 transcytosis than IgG1. The authors concluded that CH1 region of 2F5 contributed to shape its epitope specificity, binding and functional activities.
Tudor2012
(neutralization, binding affinity, antibody sequence)
-
2F5: Polyclonal B cell responses to conserved neutralization epitopes are reported. Cross-reactive plasma samples were identified and evaluated from 308 subjects tested. 2F5 was used as a control mAb in the comprehensive set of assays performed.
Tomaras2011
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: Role of envelope deglycosylation in enhancing antigenicity of HIV-1 gp41 epitopes is reported. The mechanism of induction of broad neutralizing Abs is discussed. The hypothesis of presence of "holes" in the naive B cell repertoires for unmutated B cell receptor against HIV-1 Env was tested. Native deglycosylated clade B JFRL gp140 and group M consensus gp140 Env CON-S increased 2F5 reactivity, whereas fully glycosylated gp140 env didn't bind. Enhanced immunogenicity of 2F5 MPER epitope on deglycosylated JFRL in rhesus macaques was reported. The authors inferred that glycan interferences control the binding of unmutated ancestor Abs of broad neutralizing mAb to Env gp41.
Ma2011
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
2F5:The rational design of vaccines to elicit broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV-1 is discussed in relation to understanding of vaccine recognition sites, the structural basis of interaction with HIV-1 env and vaccine developmental pathways. 2F5 has been discussed regarding the sites of HIV-1 vulnerability to neutralizing antibodies and particularly recognition of highly conserved MPER region of Env.
Kwong2011
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: Several antibodies including 10-1074 were isolated from B-cell clone encoding PGT121, from a clade A-infected African donor using YU-2 gp140 trimers as bait. These antibodies were segregated into PGT121-like (PGT121-123 and 9 members) and 10-1074-like (20 members) groups distinguished by sequence, binding affinity, carbohydrate recognition, neutralizing activity, the V3 loop binding and the role of glycans in epitope formation. 2F5 was used as a control in virus neutralization assay. Detail information on the binding and neutralization assays are described in the figures S2-S11.
Mouquet2012a
(glycosylation, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A panel of glycan deletion mutants was created by point mutation into HIV gp160, showing that glycans are important targets on HIV-1 glycoproteins for broad neutralizing responses in vivo. Enrichment of high mannose N-linked glycan(HM-glycan) of HIV-1 glycoprotein enhanced neutralizing activity of sera from 8/9 patients. 2F5 was used as a control to compare the neutralizing activity of patients' sera.
Lavine2012
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Ab-driven escape and Ab role in infection control and prevention are reviewed. Main focus is on NAbs, but Ab acting through effector mechanisms are also discussed. 2F5 (amino-terminal MPER) is discussed in the context of developing broadly cross-neutralizing antibodies.
Overbaugh2012
(escape, review)
-
2F5: Neutralization activity was compared against MAb 10E8 and other broad and potent neutralizers in a 181-isolate Env-pseudovirus panel. 2F5 neutralized 57% of viruses at IC50<50 μg/ml and 16% of viruses at IC50<1 μg/ml, compared with 98% and 72% of MAb 10E8, respectively.
Huang2012a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Antigenic properties of undigested VLPs and endo H-digested WT trimer VLPs were compared. Among all the MAb tested, 2F5 is an exception to exhibit weak binding to digested uncleaved VLPs and even to bald VLPs, perhaps due to lipid cross-reactivity. Binding to E168K+ N189A WT VLPs was merely a trend of better antibody binding compared to the parent WT VLPs. There was no significant correlation between E168K+N189A WT VLP binding and 2F5 neutralization.
Tong2012
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Prior to this study, no one has been able to elicit potent and broad neutralizing antibodies, like 2F5 or 4E10, targeting the gp41 MPER region. To address this problem, a recombinant immunogen, designated NCM, consisting of the N- and C-terminal heptad repeats that can form a six-helix bundle (6HB) and the MPER region of gp41 was constructed and expressed. Two mutations (T569A and I675V) previously reported to expose the neutralization epitopes were introduced. NCM and its mutants could react with MAbs NC-1, 2F5, 4E10 specific for 6HB and MPER of gp41, suggesting that these antigens are in the form of a trimer of heterodimer (i.e., 6HB) with three exposed MPER tails. Antigen with double mutations elicited strong antibody response in rabbits and these antibodies exhibited broad and potent neutralizing activity.
Wang2011a
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: The ability of several broadly neutralizing antibodies that bind gp10 or gp41 to inhibit cell-cell fusion between Clone69TRevEnv cells induced to express the viral envelope proteins, gp120/gp41 and highly CD4-positive SupT1 cells was investigated. Little or no inhibitory effect on cell-cell fusion was observed. MAbs b12, m14 IgG and 2G12 had moderate inhibitory activity; MAbs 4E10 and 2F5 had no inhibitory activity.
Yee2011
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: To determine how B cells expressing the original 2F5 MAb are limited by tolerance mechanisms in vivo and if they can be rescued from such controls while retaining neutralization potential, a novel mouse strain for which B cells have the potential to express the original 2F5 VH/VL pair was generated: the 2F5 complete knock in (KI) mouse. While essentially no arrest in B cell development was observed in the 2F5 VL KI strain, the BM B cell developmental arrest observed in the 2F5 VH KI strain was dramatically accentuated in 2F5 complete KI mice. It was shown also that surface Ig BM B cells bearing 2F5 VH/VL pairs can be rescued from tolerance control in vitro, with the majority being developmentally arrested at the immature B cell stage, and express nonneutralizing Igs due to loss of MPER specificity via replacement of their 2F5 LCs.
Verkoczy2011
-
2F5: The role of V1V2 in the resistance of HIV-1 to neutralizing Abs was studied using a panel of neutralization-sensitive and -resistant HIV-1 variants and through exchanging regions of Env between neutralization-sensitive and -resistant viruses. An increase in the length of the V1V2 loop and/or the number of potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNGS) in that same region of Env was directly involved in the neutralization resistance. The virus that was sensitive to neutralization by autologous serum was also sensitive to neutralization by MAbs b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10, while the virus that was resistant to neutralization by autologous serum was also resistant to neutralization by all of these antibodies except MAb 2G12.
vanGils2011
(glycosylation, neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: To improve the immunogenicity of HIV-1 Env vaccines, a chimeric gp140 trimer in which V1V2 region was replaced by the GM-CSF cytokine was constructed. We selected GM-CSF was selected because of its defined adjuvant activity. Chimeric EnvGM-CSF protein enhanced Env-specific Ab and T cell responses in mice compared with wild-type Env. Probing with neutralizing antibodies showed that both the Env and GM-CSF components of the chimeric protein were folded correctly. 3 proteins were studied: Env-wild-type, Env-ΔV1V2, Env-hGM-CSF. MAb 2F5, directed to the gp41 epitope located far from the GM-CSF insertion, bound identically to the three proteins.
vanMontfort2011
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) potential of 2F5 was studied in vitro. 2F5 triggered ADCC of HIV-1 envelope subunit coated cells. 2F5 at ng/ml concentration elicited ADCC of both X4-tropic HIV-1 envelope-expressing cells, and R5-HIV-infected cells. ADCC relied on binding to the FcγRI on effector cell and was abolished by preincubation of 2F5 with its cognate epitope ELDKWA.
Tudor2011
(effector function)
-
2F5: A standardized proficiency testing program for measurements of HIV-1-specific NAbs in the TZM-bl assay was developed. Three rounds of optimization involving 21 different test laboratories were required to design the final proficiency testing kit. MAbs b12, 2G12, 2F5, 4E10 and TriMab (b12+2G12+2F5) were used for testing.
Todd2012
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: The inhibitory activity of HIV-1-specific Abs against HIV-1 replication in langerhans cells (LCs) and interstitial dendritic cells (IDCs) was analyzed. Five well-known NAbs 447-52D, 4E10, b12, 2G12, 2F5 strongly inhibited HIV-1BaL and HIV-1TV1 replication in LCs and IDCs, and their inhibitory activities were stronger than those measured on PBMCs. Inhibition was more efficient by IgGs than corresponding IgAs, due to an Fc receptor-dependent mechanism, where HIV-1 inhibition occurs by binding of the Fc portion of IgGs to Fc receptors.
Peressin2011
(genital and mucosal immunity, dendritic cells)
-
2F5: The reactivity profiles of MAbs 4E10, 2F5 and 2G12 to those of four pathogenic autoAbs derived from patients with antiphospholipid-syndrome (APS), and to serum from a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) were compared using an autoantigen microarray comprising 106 connective tissue disease-related autoantigens. The reactivity profiles of bNt anti-HIV-1 MAbs were distinct from those of pathogenic autoAbs. Anti-HIV-1 MAb reactivity was limited mainly to HIV-1-related antigens. The APS autoAbs reacted strongly with cardiolipin (CL), yet only 4E10 bound CL at high concentrations; both 2F5 and 4E10 bound their HIV-1 epitopes with a 2-3-log higher apparent affinity than CL.
Singh2011
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: Small sized CD4 mimetics (miniCD4s) were engineered. These miniCD4s by themselves are poorly immunogenic and do not induce anti-CD4 antibodies. Stable covalent complexes between miniCD4s and gp120 and gp140 were generated through a site-directed coupling reaction. These complexes were recognized by CD4i antibodies as well as by the HIV co-receptor CCR5 and elicited CD4i antibody responses in rabbits. A panel of MAbs of defined epitope specificities, was used to analyze the antigenic integrity of the covalent complexes using capture ELISA. There was a slight increase in binding for the 2F5 MAb on the complex compared to gp140 alone.
Martin2011
(mimics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Sensitivity to neutralization was studied in 107 full-length Env molecular clones from multiple risk groups in various locations in China. Neutralization sensitivity to plasma pools and bNAbs was not correlated. MAbs 2F5 and G12 failed to neutralize almost all viruses in the C/07/08/B'C subtype group. 2F5 was potent in neutralizing viruses in subtype B′ and CRF01_AE, while 2G12, could only neutralize a 6/9 of subtype B′ viruses and none of the CRF01_AE viruses. All 2F5-resistant viruses had K665S substitution.
Shang2011
(glycosylation, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The long-term effect of broadly bNAbs on cell-free HIV particles and their capacity to irreversibly inactivate virus was studied. MPER-specific MAbs potently induced gp120 shedding upon prolonged contact with the virus, rendering neutralization irreversible. The kinetic and thermodynamic requirements of the shedding process were virtually identical to those of neutralization, identifying gp120 shedding as a key process associated with HIV neutralization by MPER bNAbs. Neutralizing and shedding capacity of 7 MPER-, CD4bs- and V3 loop-directed MAbs were assessed against 14 divergent strains. 2F5 induced potent shedding in 11/14 probed viruses.
Ruprecht2011
(neutralization, kinetics)
-
2F5: Unusually wide antigenic specificity of MAb 2F5 was explored. It was shown that when MAb 2F5 screens a pIII-type phage display 7-mer constrained peptide library for its epitope mimics, it demands an epitope sequence longer than DKW and does not tolerate substitutions in the epitope amino acid sequence. The 2F5 paratope flexibility was restricted and even inhibited when the epitope was presented to the paratope in the context of a 7-mer constrained peptide at either the amino-terminal (N-CDKWAxxxC-C) or carboxy-terminal (N-CxxLDKWAC-C) ends. Despite ample presence in the 7-mer constrained library of epitope amino acid substitution versions and peptides with a DKW and DRW core, these peptides were discarded by the antibody.
Palacios-Rodriguez2011
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Anti-MPER MAbs 4E10, 2F5 and Z13e1 were probed for binding to HIV-1 and SIV virions with protein A-conjugated gold (PAG) nanoparticles using negative-stain electron microscopy. The MAbs moderately associated with virions, including those devoid of MPER epitopes, and this interaction was strong enough to resist washout. MPER epitope-bearing virions liganded with CD4 showed a much higher association of anti-MPER antibodies compared to the unliganded virions. The results are consistent with a two-stage binding model where these anti-MPER MAbs bind first to the viral lipid bilayer and then to the MPER epitopes following spontaneous or induced exposure.
Rathinakumar2012
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: MPER antigenicity was analyzed in the context of the plasma membrane and a role for the gp41 transmembrane domain (TM) in exposing the epitopes of three bNt MAbs (2F5, 4E10, and Z13e1) was identified. Critical binding residues for the three Nt MAbs were identified using a panel of 24 MPER-TM1 mutants bearing single amino acid substitutions in the MPER; many were previously shown to affect MAb-mediated viral neutralization. Non-Nt mutants of MAbs 2F5 and 4E10 exhibited a reduction in binding to MPER-TM1 and yet maintained binding to synthetic MPER peptides, indicating that MPER-TM1 better approximates the MPER neutralization-competent structure (NCS) than peptides. Replacement of the gp41 TM and CT of MPER-TM1 with the platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) TM reduced binding by MAb 4E10, but not 2F5, indicating that the gp41 TM plays a pivotal role in orienting the 4E10 epitope, and more globally, in affecting MPER exposure.
Montero2012
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: A novel function for lentiviral Nef is reported: it renders the HIV-1 virion refractory to the broadly-neutralizing antibodies 2F5 and 4E10. Nef conferred 50-fold resistance to 2F5 and 4E10, but had no effect on HIV-1 neutralization by MPER-specific NAb Z13e1, by the peptide inhibitor T20, nor by a panel of nAbs and other reagents targeting gp120. Given the membrane-dependence of MPER-recognition by 2F5 and 4E10, in contrast to the membrane-independence of Z13e1, it is suggested that Nef alters MPER recognition in the context of the virion membrane.
Lai2011
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Anti-idiotypic Ab Ab2/3H6, directed against 2F5, was studied as a candidate for an HIV-1 vaccine, based on the induction of 2F5-like Abs.
Kunert2011
(anti-idiotype, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A screening platform was developed that chemically mimics viral and host membrane lipids and replicated NAb membrane interactions. The assay is based on a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy and monitors antibody binding to thiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). By simply mimicking lipid chemistry, these thiol SAMs allowed to isolate and distinguish chemical groups that could potentially contribute to specific antibody–lipid interactions. Only 2F5 and 4E10 bound strongly to hydrophobic thiols, correlated with findings that suggest that 2F5 and 4E10 embed into the hydrophobic membrane core. This translates to vaccine design by suggesting that immunogens designed to elicit 2F5/4E10-like antibodies may require an accessible hydrophobic component available for B-cell receptor recognition.
Hardy2012
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: Epitope scaffolds (ES) prime:boosting was assessed by measuring epitope specific serum antibody titers by ELISA and B cell responses by ELISpot analysis using both free 2F5 peptide and an unrelated ES protein as probes. The heterologous ES prime:boosting immunization regimen elicited cross-reactive humoral responses to the structurally constrained 2F5 epitope target (EQELLELDKWASLW). Incorporating a promiscuous T cell helper epitope in the immunogens resulted in higher antibody titers against the 2F5 graft, but did not result in virus neutralization. Two epitope scaffolds (ES1 and ES2), which did not elicit a detectable 2F5 epitope-specific response on their own, boosted such responses when primed with the ES5.
Guenaga2011
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: 2F5 and 4E10 molecular interactions with epitope cores in MPER and lipid bilayers were studied using combined atomic force and confocal microscopies. Both mAbs form lipid-segregated aggregates on supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) and do not induce other significant membrane perturbations. Furthermore, the affinity of MPER toward membranes is differently affected by both mAbs and correlates with the mAbs-epitope core lipid interactions. 2F5 is able to dock the MPER peptide on the membrane, whereas 4E10 extracts the MPER from the lipid bilayer.
Franquelim2011
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Study demonstrated that polyreactivity is common among human gp41 cluster II (98-6, 167-D and 126-6)but not cluster I (240D, 246D, 50-69D) antibodies. However, unlike 2F5, cluster II MAbs bind strongly to oligomeric forms of Env gp140 but not to gp41 peptide complexes, suggesting that polyreactivity is necessary but not sufficient for neutralization.
Dennison2011a
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: The study reports membrane bound forms of gp41 MPER peptides that can present epitopes in a conformation that induce serum antibodies that not only target the core 664DKW epitope of the neutralizing antibody 2F5, but also recognize a fusion intermediate construct of HIV-1 gp41 MPER as well as the 2F5 bound MPER conformation.
Dennison2011
(antibody binding site, polyclonal antibodies)
-
2F5: The sensitivity to PG9 and PG16 of pseudotyped viruses was analysed carrying envelope glycoproteins from the viral quasispecies of three HIV-1 clade CRF01_AE-infected patients. It was confirmed that an acidic residue or a basic residue at position 168 in the V2 loop is a key element determining the sensitivity to PG9 and PG16. In addition, evidence is provided of the involvement of a conserved residue at position 215 of the C2 region in the PG9/PG16 epitopes. Both wild-type and mutated clones of each subtype were found to be highly sensitive to 2F5. A trend towards a higher resistance of mutated clones compared to wild-type clones was nevertheless observed for 0377-I1, 0978-M1 and 1021-I1 CRF01-AE clones. However, the opposite was observed for 5008CL2, 11005CL3 and 11005CL7 clade B clones with a trend towards a higher sensitivity of the mutated counterparts. Collectively, comparing 2F5/4E10 IC50 toward wild-type or mutated clones did not reveal any significant difference.
Thenin2012a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Given the potential importance of cell-associated virus during mucosal HIV-1 transmission, sensitivity of bNAbs targeting HIV-1 envelope surface unit gp120 (VRCO1, PG16, b12, and 2G12) and transmembrane domain gp41 (4E10 and 2F5) was examined for both cell-free and mDC-mediated infections of TZM-bl and CD4+ T cells. It was reported that higher gp120-bNAb concentrations, but not gp41-directed bNAb concentrations, are required to inhibit mDC-mediated virus spread, compared with cell-free transmission. Blocking the FcRs expressed on mDCs prior to antibody exposure had negligible impact on the ability of 2F5 to inhibit mDC-mediated trans-infection 4E10 and 2F5 bound a significantly greater percentage of mDCs, compared with b12. All abs bound a significantly greater percentage of mDCs, compared with the secondary antibody alone.
Sagar2012
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A way to produce conformationally intact, deglycosylated soluble, cleaved recombinant Env trimers by inhibition of the synthesis of complex N-glycans during Env production, followed by treatment with glycosidases under conditions that preserve Env trimer integrity is described to facilitate crystallography and immunogenicity studies. Deglycosylation had no apparent difference in the binding of the gp41-MPER directed MAb 2F5.
Depetris2012
(glycosylation, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Sensitivity to bNAbs of primary R5 HIV-1 isolates sequentially obtained before and after AIDS onset was studied. End-stage disease HIV R5 isolates were more sensitive to neutralization by TriMab, an equimolar mix of the IgGb12, 2F5 and 2G12 antibodies, than R5 isolates from the chronic phase. The increased sensitivity correlated with low CD4+ T cell count at time of virus isolation and augmented viral infectivity. Envs from end-stage R5 variants had increased positive surface charge and reduced numbers of potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNGS).
Borggren2011
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
2F5: 2 human MAbs m66 and m66.6 were identified from 2F5-like serum of HIV-1-infected patient. These new MAbs mimic 2F5 in terms of their MPER binding profiles and neutralize a subset of the viruses neutralized by 2F5, while being significantly less divergent than 2F5 from their germ line-encoded counterparts (8 amino acid changes for VH and 11 for VL genes respectively, compared to 25 amino acid changes for 2F5). m66.6 had higher neutralizing activity than m66, but weaker than 2F5 in a TZM-bl cell assay.
Zhu2011
(antibody lineage)
-
2F5: To test whether HIV-1 particle maturation alters the conformation of the Env proteins, a sensitive and quantitative imaging-based Ab-binding assay was used to probe the conformations of full-length and cytoplasmic tail (CT) truncated Env proteins on mature and immature HIV-1 particles. Slightly greater binding of MPER-specific MAb 2F5 to immature than mature particles was apparent, but the observed difference was not statistically significant.
Joyner2011
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: Humoral responses to specific, linear gp41 epitopes were that were already known to be the target of broadly neutralizing antibodies were compared in a cohort of sub-Saharan mother-child pairs. TriMab positive-control Abs (2F5, 2G12, and b12) neutralized all viruses tested: the subtype B laboratory strains SF162 (R5-B) and IIIB (X4-B), and the low-sensitivity subtype C strains, primary isolates DU172 and DU156 (both R5-C). The TriMab control inhibited strain DU156 when all neutralization assays were performed on the DU156 HIV isolate (C-R5) with cord blood specimens from EUN babies.
Diomede2012
(neutralization, mother-to-infant transmission, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: 162 full-length envelope (env) clones were generated from plasma RNA obtained from 5 HIV-1 Clade B infected mother-infant pairs and their V1-V5 genotypes and phylogeny were extensively characterized. No infant or maternal clone was resistant to 2F5.
Kishko2011
(neutralization, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: Two HCDR2 allelic variants of the VH2-5 inferred unmutated ancestor germ line of the 2F5 bNAb (2F5 UAs) are described and it is showed that both variant putative germ line Abs bound to gp41 peptide and protein antigens and are thus capable of recognizing either linear or conformational gp41 epitopes. However, their binding affinities for the gp41-inter protein are an order of magnitude weaker than those of the mature 2F5 Ab. Neither of the two 2F5 UAs showed neutralization activity against pseudotyped viruses though both UAs show broader specificity than does the mature 2F5 Ab. The two 2F5 UA variants also bound to anionic phospholipid-containing liposomes equally well and gave binding responses higher than those of 2F5 MAb binding.
Alam2011
(neutralization, binding affinity, antibody lineage)
-
2F5: A series of immunogens that contain CTB (cholera toxin B subunit, a potent mucosal adjuvant) and tandem copies of ELDKWA were prepared using epitope vaccine strategy. ELDKWA epitope of neutralizing antibody 2F5 plays a crucial role in transcytosis. These immunogens are represented as CTB-nE (n is the number of ELDKWA epitopes fused to CTB). Binding of 2F5 to CTB-2, 4, 6E revealed that ELDKWA epitopes in these immunogens were exposed and retained their antigenicity. The increasing reactivity with MAb 2F5 in western-blot analysis reflected the increasing epitope numbers or epitope density in a single fusion protein. MF-2F5 (Mouse Fecal 2F5-like Abs) could significantly inhibit transcytosis of cell-free CNE3 with similar inhibition potency in both cell lines, but the inhibition potency of MAb 2F5 MAb 2F5 exhibited greater blocking potency in HT29 monolayer than in HEC-1 monolayer.
Wang2011
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Epitope accessibility of the gp41 neutralizing antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10, is explored either on the functional spike or during receptor-mediated entry and it is determined if these antibodies bind to the static spike on the surface of the HIV-1 or require target cell/receptor engagement to gain access to their MPER binding sites. The neutralization activity of 2F5 against lab-adapted viruses and sensitive and moderately resistant viruses was largely unaffected by relatively rapid antibody-virus washing, suggesting direct interaction with the “static” spike. However, for more neutralization-resistant viruses, the 2F5 could neutralize only under the “no antibody-virus wash” conditions, implying that the MPER epitopes were not accessible prior to receptor engagement.
Chakrabarti2011
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: HIV-1 adaptation to neutralization by MAbs VRC01, PG9, PG16 was studied using HIV-1 variants from historic (1985-1989) and contemporary (2003-2006) seroconverters. 2F5 was included for comparison. 2F5 neutralized 10% of contemporary viruses at IC50 < 1 μ g/ml and 70% at IC50 < 5 μ g/ml. TriMab construct, consisting of MAbs b12, 2F5 and 2G12 in equal concentrations, showed the highest neutralization correlation with 2F5.
Euler2011
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The neutralization potency of PG9, PG16, VRC01 and PGV04 was approximately 10-fold greater than that of MAbs b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10.
Falkowska2012
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The characteristics of HIV-1-specific NAbs were evaluated in 100 breast-fed infants of HIV-1-positive mothers who were HIV-1 negative at birth and they were monitored until age 2. A panel of eight viruses that included variants representative of those in the study region as well as more diverse strains was used to determine the breadth of the infant NAbs. 2F5 had very low neutralization potency for 1 (Q842d16) out of 8 pseudoviruses in the panel, no neutralization potency for 3 (BF535.A1, THRO4156.18 and Du156.12) and high for the rest of them. For maternal variants, 2F5 had low neutralization potency for 5 (MF535.E2, MG505.A2, MJ613.A2, MJ613.C7 and ML274.A1) out of 12 variants and high for the rest of them.
Lynch2011
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: HIV-1 subtype C env genes from 19 mother-infant pairs: 10 transmitting in utero (IU) and 9 transmitting intrapartum (IP) were analyzed. A severe genetic bottleneck during transmission was confirmed in all pairs. Compared to the maternal viral population, viruses transmitted IP tended to have shorter variable loops and fewer putative N-linked glycosylation sites than viruses transmitted IU. The pseudotyped viruses displayed some sensitivity to 4E10 and soluble CD4 but were resistant to 2G12, 2F5, and IgG1b12.
Russell2011
(glycosylation, neutralization, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: The impact of specific changes at distal sites on antibody binding and neutralization was examined on Q461 variants. The changes at position 675 in conjunction with Thr to Ala at position 569 increased the 2F5 neutralization sensitivity by 6-fold compared to viruses with only mutation at position 675. There was detectable but modest neutralization by 2F5 with only T569A change. Weak binding is observed for 2F5 but the change at position 675 results in a modest increase in 2F5 binding.
Lovelace2011
(antibody binding site, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The structure of a short fragment of the human HIV-1 membrane glycoprotein gp41 was examined to resolve conflicting reports on the solution state conformational bias in this membrane proximal domain spanning the epitope for 2F5. Study concluded that gp41 659-671 exhibits conformational plasticity in which competing folding propensities are present and can be influenced by loval microenvironment.
Tulip2010
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
2F5: A monostratified epithelium using HT-29 cells transduced to express CCR5 was constructed to model the transcytosis of HIV-1 across columnar epithelial cells because CCR5-tropic viruses are the dominant viruses transmitted in vivo and are preferentially transcytosed across intestinal epithelial cells in vitro. 2F5 IgG1 was the most potent inhibitor of transcytosis of NL4-3.Balecto among the mAbs tested. IgG1 and dIgA, but not pIgM, 2F5 Abs inhibited HIV-1 transcytosis through the epithelium in a dose-dependent manner. The efficiency with which a panel of viruses transcytose across HT-29 monolayers in the presence of 2F5 Abs was measured to determine whether 2F5 inhibition of HIV-1 transcytosis depended on the HIV-1 strain. Both IgG1 and dIgA 2F5 Abs potently inhibited SF162 and NL4-3.Balecto, R5 viruses. pIgM 2F5 had no inhibitory effect on epithelial cell transcytosis of these viruses. The ability of dIgA and mIgA 2F5 Abs to inhibit cell-free HIV-1 transcytosis was compared. Over a wide range of Ab concentrations, the mIgA 2F5 Abs inhibited NL4-3.Balecto transcytosis significantly more than dIgA 2F5 Abs. Also, compared with dIgA 2F5 anti-HIV-1 Abs, mIgA 2F5 Abs more potently reduced HIV-1 transcytosis across model epithelium. 2F5 isotype Abs, especially mIgA, inhibited HIV-1 transcytosis across rectal epithelium and thus entry into the subepithelial lamina propria.
Shen2010a
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: The development and characterization of a tier 1 R5 SHIV, termed SHIV-1157ipEL is reported. SHIV-1157ipEL is a chimera of the "early", neutralization-sensitive SHIV-1157ip envelope and the "late", neutralization-resistant engineered backbone of SHIV-1157ipd3N4. Molecular modeling revealed a possible mechanism for the increased neutralization resistance of SHIV-1157ipd3N4 Env: V2 loops hindering access to the CD4 binding site, shown experimentally with NAb b12. 2F5 only neutralized SHIV-SF162P4 (clade B) out of the 4 clade C and 2 clade B SHIV strains.
Siddappa2010
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: A high resolution gp41 structure, termed HR1-54Q was presented consisting of the N-terminal helical heptad repeat (HR1), the C-terminal helical heptad repeat (HR2), and the (membrane-proximal external region) MPER. HR1-54Q bound to 3 broadly neutralizing Abs that target gp41: 2F5, 4E10, Z13e1, as well as 98-6 MAb that recognizes the six-helix bundle. The MPER in HR1-54Q encompasses the complete 2F5 binding epitope and binds tightly to 2F5. HR1-54Q possesses several structural characteristics required for induction of 2F5 including the correct conformation and exposure to solvent that both triggers the immune system and generates Abs that appropriately recognize gp41.
Shi2010
(structure)
-
2F5: This review discusses current understanding of Env neutralization by antibodies in relation to epitope exposure and how this insight might benefit vaccine design strategies. This MAb is in the list of current MAbs with notable cross-neutralizing activity.
Pantophlet2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
2F5: The two distinct and conflicting models of C-terminal tail (CTT) topology for HIV-1 gp41 were tested by characterizing the accessibility of KE (Kennedy epitope) sequences of gp41 to Ab binding on the surface of Env-expressing cells and intact mature virions. 2F5 binds effectively to KE in the context of intact virions.
Steckbeck2010
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: This review outlines the general structure of the gp160 viral envelope, the dynamics of viral entry, the evolution of humoral response, the mechanisms of viral escape and the characterization of broadly neutralizing Abs. It is noted that this MAb neutralizes a variety of strains from different subtypes but it displays low neutralizing activity for clade C viruses.
Gonzalez2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, escape, review)
-
2F5: This review discusses recent rational structure-based approaches in HIV vaccine design that helped in understanding the link between Env antigenicity and immunogenicity. This MAb was mentioned in the context of immunogens based on the epitopes recognized by bNAbs.
Walker2010a
(neutralization, review)
-
2F5: This review discusses the types of B-cell responses desired by HIV-1 vaccines and various methods used for eliciting HIV-1 inhibitory antibodies that include induction and characterization of vaccine-induces B-cell responses. 2F5 was mentioned when discussing virus-like particles and liposomes, as 2F5 requires lipid binding in addition to gp41 MPER recognition for neutralization breadth.
Tomaras2010
(neutralization, review)
-
2F5: 37 Indian clade C HIV-1 Env clones obtained at different time points from five patients with recent infection, were studied in neutralization assays for sensitivities to their autologous plasma antibodies and mAbs. None of the 37 Env clones were neutralized by 2F5 even when the minimum DKW motif was present in IVC3-3-9F1, IVC3-5-25F2, and all the Env clones obtained from IVC-11.
Ringe2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This review discusses strategies for design of neutralizing antibody-based vaccines against HIV-1 and recent major advances in the field regarding isolation of potent broadly neutralizing Abs.
Sattentau2010
(review)
-
2F5: 34 Env-pseudotyped viruses from HIV-1 CRF01_AE - infected plasma samples collected in China were susceptible to neutralization by 2F5 to varying extents. The neutralization susceptibility of these viruses to 2F5 could not be determined by the conservation of the core epitope nor the existence of PNLG site within core epitope regions.
Nie2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The effect of absence and presence of sCD4 on accessibility and binding of HIV-1 gp41 MPER-binding epitopes on CCR5-tropic pseudoviruses from five different clades to the mAbs was studied. 2F5 showed moderate to high binding affinity to pseudoviruses from clade A (epitope mutants:tWFDIs, NWFDIs) clade B (NWFDIT) and clade D (NWFsIT), poor binding to clade CRF01_AE (NWFDIT) and no binding to clade B (sWFsIT), clade C (sWFsIT) and clade CRF01_AE (NWFDIs). Pseudoviruses from clade A (tWFDIs, NWFDIs), clade B (NWFDIT, sWFsIT), clade D (NWFsIT) and clade CRF01_AE (NWFDIT) were neutralized by 2F5. The presence of sCD4 significantly increased the binding affinity of 2F5 to clade A and clade CRF01_AE. There was a trend towards significant increase in binding affinity of 2F5 to clade C (sWFsIT) with sCD4 present, although no significant increase in binding affinity was observed for the other pseudoviruses.
Peachman2010a
(antibody binding site, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The binding affinity and neutralization potency of three murine IgM mAbs and human MAb 2F5 (IgG and IgM isotypes) to pseudoviruses from HIV-1 clades A, B, C, D and CRF01_AE was studied in the virus capture assay. 2F5 IgG isotype bound to viruses 93RW and KNH (clade A), BAL-PV (clade B), 57128 and A07412 (clade D), and CM235 (clade AE) with much higher affinity than 2F5 IgM isotype. All viruses that bound to 2F5 IgG isotype along with the virus US-1PV were neutralized by 2F5 IgG. 2F5 IgM isotype only neutralized viruses 93RW and KNH (clade A), and A07412 (clade D).
Peachman2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: This review discusses the studies done on poly-reactive antibodies (binding to two different epitopes), and the importance of polyreactivity. Low polyreactivity has been reported for 2F5.
Pluckthun2010
(review, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: This paper shows that a highly neutralization-resistant virus is converted to a neutralization sensitive virus with a rare single mutation D179N in the C-terminal portion of the V2 domain. A panel of mutants were tested to determine whether they can improve the neutralization sensitivity of an extremely neutralization-resistant clinical isolate. 2F5 neutralized wild-type sensitive clone and 12/17 mutants tested (D179N, N179D, D179E, D179Q, D179H, D179S, D179A, D179N-P182S, V1/V2_006, V1_006, V2_006 and V1_005).
ORourke2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: 2F5 was used in this study to detect the quantity of gp41 incorporated into virions from six mother and infant pairs (MIPs). Different levels of gp41 were incorporated into chimeric viral particles from the MIPs, where in some instances poor Env incorporation correlated with low virion infectivity and replication deficits and in other instances no such correlation was observed.
Zhang2010a
(mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: MAb m9 showed superior neutralization potency compared to 2F5 in a TZM-bl assay, where it neutralized all 15 isolates compared to 2F5 that neutralized only 60% of the isolates tested and did not neutralize any clade C isolates. When compared in an additional panel of isolates including subtypes A, B, C, D, AE and AG, 2F5 neutralized 37% of the isolates while m9 neutralized 89%. 2F5 also showed lower inhibition potency of cell-to-cell transmission of HIV-1 compared to m9.
Zhang2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: This review focuses on recent vaccine design efforts and investigation of broadly neutralizing Abs and their epitopes to aid in the improvement of immunogen design. NAb epitopes, NAbs response to HIV-1, isolation of novel mAbs, and vaccine-elicited NAb responses in human clinical trials are discussed in this review.
Mascola2010
(review)
-
2F5: Naturally occurring human and experimentally induced murine and rabbit GBV-C E2 Abs were studied for their ability to neutralize diverse HIV-isolates and showed that broadly neutralizing HIV Abs were elicited on immunization with GBV-C E2. MAb 2F5 neutralized a dual-tropic R5-X4 HIV-1 isolate in primary human PBMCs. The TriMAb control including 2F5 did not neutralize the HIV-1 R5 isolate in TZM-bl cells but did in PBMCs. Ag interaction with Anti-GBV-C E2 Abs is similar to that of with 2F5, that reacts with HIV-1 gp41 peptides and permeabilized cells.
Mohr2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Four anti-idiotypic Ab2/3H6 variants against 2F5 were created using three different humanization approaches to be able to elicit 2F5 Ab response and were then compared to the chimeric Ab2/3H6. The binding affinity and neutralization potency for 2F5 Ab by the resurfaced Ab2/3H6 and conservative CDR-grafted Ab2/3H6 was similar to that of chimeric Ab2/3H6, while there was lower affinity for aggressive CDR-grafted Ab2/3H6 and no affinity for superhumazied Ab2/3H6.
Mader2010
(anti-idiotype, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A mathematical framework is designed to determine the number of Abs required to neutralize a single trimer called the stoichiometry of trimer neutralization (N). 15 different virus antibody combinations divided into five groups based on antibody binding sites were used in the designed model. 2F5 was classified in a group by itself as it binds a linear gp41 epitope. The number of 2F5 Abs needed to neutralize a single trimer was determined to equal 1 but N=2 could not be excluded at a significance level of 0.05.
Magnus2010
-
2F5: Cross-reactive NAb responses were characterized in 39 acute and chronically HIV-1 infected individuals. Abs targeting the 4E10 epitope were found in three of the patients, and one of those also had Abs targeting the 2F5 epitope.
Sather2010
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Four human anti-phospholipid mAbs were reported to inhibit HIV-1 infection of human PBMC's by binding to monocytes and releasing soluble chemokines. The ability of different anti-phospholid mAbs to inhibit pseudovirus infection was studied. Unlike the anti-phospholipid Abs, MAb 2F5 was able to inhibit fusion induced by Aldrithiol-2 inactivated HIV-1 in Sup-T1 T cells. Four out of nine anti-phospholid mAbs inhibited HIV-1 infectivity in PBMC-based virus infection inhibition assay where a mixture of mAbs 2F5, IgG1b12, and 2G12 (TriMab) was used as a positive control. Lipid binding of 2F5 was not dependent on the presence of β2GP1.
Moody2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Targeted neutralizing epitopes have been identified based on the change in sensitivity to neutralization due to variations in known immunoepitopes studied in 17 subjects. There was no neutralizing activity that targeted the 2F5 epitope in any of the patient sera when the K665N/W672 mutant was used for screening of neutralizing activity.
Nandi2010
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: The antigenic structure of Gag-Env pseudovirions was characterized and it was shown that these particles can recapitulate native HIV virion epitope structures. 2F5 bound to the BaL Gag-Env pseudovirions, indicating presence of native trimers. The Gag-Env pseudovirions were further used to identify a subset of antigen-specific B cells in chronically infected HIV subjects.
Hicar2010
(binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: 2F5 was shown to capture virion particles completely devoid of HIV-1 Env. Virus capture assay was modified with added incubation of virions and MAbs in solution followed by removal of unbound MAbs, which nearly eliminated the Env-independent binding by this Ab. This modification also allowed for relative affinity of 2F5 for virions to be quantified. There was an overall reduction in the efficiency of capture of molecular clones (MC) relative to pseudotyped virions by 2F5. In addition, nontrimeric Envs from JR-CSF MC virus were more efficiently captured by 2F5 than trimeric JR-FL. It is suggested that the capture of virions by 2F5 is mostly mediated by nonfunctional Env.
Leaman2010
(assay or method development, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A combinatorial library of HRV:HIV chimeric viruses displaying the ELDKWA epitope was designed and the antigenic properties of virus chimera were analyzed both in vitro and in silico. A number of virus chimera able to bind to 2F5 with greater affinity than chimeric viruses produced to date. Binding affinities of chimeric viruses were estimated computationally and experimentally and agreed well. Molecular modeling identified energetic and structural factors affecting the ability of the inserted 2F5 epitope to assume conformations capable of binding to 2F5.
Lapelosa2010
(antibody binding site, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The role of HIV-1 envelope spike density on the virion and the effect it has on MAb avidity, and neutralization potencies of MAbs presented as different isotypes, are reviewed. Engineering approaches and design of immunogens able to elicit intra-spike cross-linking Abs are discussed.
Klein2010
(review)
-
2F5: 18 unique Env clones of subtype C HIV-1 derived from six African countries and Scotland were tested for their neutralization susceptibility by MAbs. Five of the gp160 chimeras tested for their neutralization by 2F5 were resistant to neutralization by this Ab as they lacked the core DKW motif in the MPER.
Koh2010a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Peptide ligands for CD4i epitopes on native dualtropic Envs were selected by phage display. MAb 2F5 bound to Fly-synGFP producer cells both in the presence or absence of sCD4.
Dervillez2010
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: The effect of presence and absence of V1 loop was assessed using two approaches: remove V1 loop from the soluble trimeric gp140 construct (ΔV1SF162gp140) and second, substitute the V1 loop on SF162gp140 construct with four different V1 loops from 89.6, YU2, JRFL, and HxB2 (heterologous HIV-1 viruses). Deletion or substitution of V1 loop did not affect neutralization by 2F5 and there was only a small change in binding affinity to 2F5. gp41 immunogenicity was increased by V1 loop deletion, although gp41 antibodies did not bind to the 2F5 epitope. D368R modification to SF162gp120 did not affect the binding and neutralization by 2F5.
Ching2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The effect of HIV-1 complement opsonization on 2F5 activity was evaluated in three instances: HIV-1 transcytosis through epithelial cells, HIV-1 attachment on immature monocyte derived dendritic cells (iMDDC), and infectivity of iMDDC. 2F5 was not able to inhibit HIV-1 transcytosis. 2F5 inhibited the attachment of both opsonized and of non-opsonized HIV to iMDDC. 2F5 was able to inhibit production of both opsonized and non-opsonized HIV-1 in iMDDCs.
Jenabian2010
(complement)
-
2F5: Clustering analysis was performed to find patterns of neutralization reactivity for the dataset of 103 patients sera against 20 viruses. The clustering by five MAbs (including 2F5) against the 20 isolates was less statistically robust than that with serum titers, resulting in three clusters for both cases. The membership in an isolate cluster defined by serum titers was compared with its sensitivity to every MAb to understand the relationship of serum and MAb reactivity. Membership in all the three clusters did not correlate with sensitivity to 2F5.
Doria-Rose2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The review describes several different methods that have been used to isolate and characterize HIV MAbs within the human Ab repertoire. Relative advantages and limitations of methods such as EBV transformation, human hybridoma, non-immortalized B cell culture, combinatorial libraries from B cells and clonal sorting are discussed.
Hammond2010
(review)
-
2F5: Addition of bacterial endotoxin (LPS) had no effect on the potency of 2F5 neutralization in TZM-bl assay but addition of LPS in PBMC assay increased neutralization potency of 2F5. Endotoxin contamination was shown to mediate release of antiviral chemokines in PBMCs and is thus suggested to be able to cause false-positive results in PBMC-based neutralization assays.
Geonnotti2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: In order to overcome problems of the PBMC-based neutralization assay a novel approach was developed utilizing a platform based on Renilla luciferase (LucR) expressing HIV-1 proviral backbone. Env-IMC-LucR reporter viruses expressing HIV-1 envs from different virus strains were incubated with NAbs, such as 2F5, and used to infect donor PBMCs. The inhibition was assessed by measuring virus-encoded LucR activity in the cell lysates. Significant variation in sensitivity to 2F5 was observed among different donor PBMCs, and this high variability was suggested to be a real biological effect attributable to use of different donor PBMCs, rather than assay-to-assay variability.
Edmonds2010
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Crystal structure of the extracellular domain of gp41 has been solved including fusion peptide proximal region (FPPR) heptad repeat 1 and MPER to examine their influence on gp41 post fusion conformation. Their presence increased the melting temperature of gp41 complex greatly compared to the core structure of gp41. Comparison of the solved crystal structure with the MPER conformation in complex with 2F5 suggests that 2F5 blocks the refolding process of gp41 at early steps.
Buzon2010
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
2F5: 21c binding, autoreactivity, polyreactivity and protective benefits are discussed and compared to other autoreactive MAbs, such as 2F5 and 4E10. Regulation of CD4i MAbs, such as 21c and 17b, by tolerance mechanisms is discussed.
Haynes2010
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: Subtype B HIV-1 variants from historical seroconverters (individuals that seroconverted between 1985 and 1989) were equally sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 as variants isolated from contemporary seroconverters (ndividuals that seroconverted between 2003 and 2006).
Bunnik2010a
(neutralization, dynamics)
-
2F5: 17b was linked with sCD4 and the construct was tested for its neutralization breadth and potency. sCD4-17b showed significantly greater neutralization breadth and potency compared to 2F5, neutralizing 100% of HIV-1 primary isolates of subtypes A, B, C, D, F, CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG, while 2F5 neutralized some isolates of subtypes A, B, C and D, and all isolates of the CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG. Unlike sCD4-17b, 2F5 was not equivalently active against virus particles generated from different producer cell types.
Lagenaur2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: A set of Env variants with deletions in V1/V2 was constructed. Replication competent Env variants with V1/V2 deletions were obtained using virus evolution of V1/V2 deleted variants. Sensitivity of the evolved ΔV1V2 viruses was evaluated to study accessibility of their neutralization epitopes. 2F5 neutralized ΔV1V2 variants more potently than the full-length virus. 2F5 bound more efficiently to all uncleaved ΔV1V2 variant trimers compared to the full-length trimer, although the differences were minor.
Bontjer2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Optimized peptide mimetics of gp41 prehairpin intermediates were constructed to induce neutralizing responses in vaccinated guinea pigs and rabbits. Neutralization potency of sera from animals immunized with covalent trimeric immunogens was greater than the potency of sera from animals immunized with noncovalent trimers. Sera from animals immunized with longer constructs was more neutralizing than antisera from shorter constructs. Sera from immunized guinea pigs, but not from rabbits, neutralized half of the Tier 1 viruses tested. For the analyses, a mutant virus (HXB2-V570A) was used, which is hypersensitive to Abs binding to the pre-hairpin intermediate but not to mAbs that bind elsewhere. 2F5 neutralized HXB2-V570A slightly more than HXB2 wild type, probably because it targets a g41 region near the prehairpin intermediate.
Bianchi2010
(mimics, neutralization)
-
2F5: Review discusses the recent research done to improve the production, quality, and cross-reactivity of binding Abs, neutralizing Abs, monoclonal Abs with broad neutralizing activity, ADCC, and ADCVI Abs, and catalytic Abs. Studies focusing on several aspects of BNAb roles in vaccine development, and studies done to better understand the broad binding capacity and the exposure of epitopes of BNAbs are reviewed.
Baum2010
(effector function, neutralization, binding affinity, review)
-
2F5: Neutralizing activities of 2F5 were similar against parent and GnTI (complex glycans of the neutralizing face are replaced by fully trimmed oligomannose stumps) viruses, and the N301Q mutant virus (glycan at position 301 is removed). This suggests that the antennae of the complex glycans of gp120 and the upper part pf gp41 have little or no influence on 2F5 access to MPER.
Binley2010
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
2F5: Confocal microscopy of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) was used to visualize 2F5 interactions with lipid bilayers mimicking the conditions existing at the plasma membrane. 2F5 was only found in contact with GUVs bearing surface-bound 2F5-MPER peptide and was unable to directly react with GUV phospholipids. Enhancement of 2F5 binding to membrane-inserted epitope in vesicles displaying fluid phase co-existence was observed, consistent with the increase in surface concentration of the MPER peptide.
Apellaniz2010
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Insertion of an artificial 2F5 epitope into the V4 region of gp120 resulted in bivalent binding of 2F5 to both V4 and MPER regions of Env at the same time. Binding bivalency resulted in higher binding avidity compared to 2F5 MPER or 2F5 V4 alone, and in greatly enhanced neutralization efficiency. 2F5 was shown to be able to bind bivalently only in trans configuration, i.e. bridging the V4 region and the MPER in two gp120/gp41 subunits within one Env trimer. 2F5 bivalency was not achieved for 2F5 binding to V3 and MPER within a single gp120/gp41 subunit (cis-transfiguration).
Wang2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: L669S substitution in gp41 dramatically increased (>250-fold) neutralization sensitivity of mutant virus to 2F5. Binding affinity of 2F5 to linear peptide with the L669S mutation did not differ from its binding affinity to the wild type peptide. In contrast, 2F5 binding affinity was increased for L669S mutation in peptide-lipid complex compared to the wild type. The lifetime of 2F5 neutralization was shown to be ∼3 fold longer for the L669S virus compared to wild type, indicating that the L669S mutation altered the MPER structure such that 2F5 epitope was exposed for a longer time.
Shen2010
(antibody binding site, neutralization, kinetics)
-
2F5: Neutralization potency of 2F5 was compared to that of HK20 scFv in TZM-based assay using 45 Tier 1 and Tier 2 HIV isolates. 2F5 neutralized 22/45 isolates. In addition, 2F5 was used in TriMab, together with 2G12 and b12, to examine neutralization of 9 clade A, B, C, D and E isolates in PBMC assay. Here, TriMab neutralized 7 isolates with 2 not determined.
Sabin2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Crystal structure of the non-neutralizing 13H11 MAb in complex with a 20-mer gp41 MPER peptide was obtained and compared to that of neutralizing 2F5 MAb. The primary structural difference between the two MAbs was shown to be a large groove on the 13H11 idiotope between CDRs L1 and L2, and H1 and H2. Unlike 2F5, 13H11 did not bind to trimeric gp41-inter construct. 2F5 neutralization was not blocked by 13H11.
Nicely2010
(structure)
-
2F5: Two 2F5 mutants, F100B(H)A (phenylalanine at the tip of the CDR H3 loop is replaced with alanine) and delta CDR H3 (TLFGVPI residues are replaced with a Ser-Gly dipeptide linker) showed similar high affinity for linear peptide epitope binding as wild type 2F5, indicating that 2F5 CDR H3 apex residues are not involved in core epitope binding. Neutralization assays showed complete loss of neutralization by delta CDR H3 mutant and reduction of neutralization by F100B(H)A mutant, indicating that these residues are essential for neutralization. Differences in mutant and wild type 2F5 binding affinities were observed only when residues WFNITNWLWYIK were added to the gp41 MPER C terminus, and when this extended peptide was placed in a membrane bilayer. It is suggested that the role of the apex of the CDR H3 loop for neutralization is due to secondary interactions to either C-terminal MPER residues or/and components of membrane lipid bilayer.
Julien2010
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Prefusion (gp140), prehairpin intermediate (gp41-inter) and postfusion (gp41-post) constructs were developed to define conformational states recognized by non-neutralizing cluster II Abs. gp41-inter was re-constructed replacing the six helix bundle with GCN4. 2F5 bound to, and showed the same kinetic profile, for both gp41-inter and GCN4-gp41-inter constructs, suggesting identical MPER conformation of the two constructs.
Frey2010
(binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: Unlike for b12, decreasing neutralization sensitivity during the course of infection was not observed for 2F5 in 15 patients studied.
Bunnik2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: 2F5 epitope was transplanted into 5 select protein scaffolds by computational techniques. The five resultant 2F5-epitope scaffolds (ES1-ES5) showed high affinity for 2F5MAb. Guinea pigs immunized with the 2F5-epitope scaffolds developed polyclonal sera that mimicked binding of 2F5 to the gp41 MPER region. Mice immunized with two of the 2F5-epitope scaffolds, ES2 or ES5, developed monoclonal Abs that bound to the 2F5 epitope with high affinity, induced a conformation similar to that induced by 2F5, and showed similar angles of epitope approach. In addition, the study showed that the flexibility of the engrafted epitope positively correlated with its immunogenicity.
Ofek2010a
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: 2F5 was used in competition assays with gp41 Abs cloned from B cells from patients with broadly neutralizing sera. None of the Abs from these patients competed for binding with 2F5. 2F5 competed for binding with MAbs 4E10, D17 and D50.
Pietzsch2010
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Chimeric human/mouse 2F5 Abs were generated in knock-in mice where the Ig heavy chain (HC) VhDJh from human 2F5 was targeted into mouse Igh locus. In vivo, the 2F5 VhDJh knock-in mouse line demonstrated that the great majority of B-lineage cells expressing the 2F5 VhDJh rearrangement were halted in their development at the transition from small pre-B to immature B cells. Homozygous knock-in mice showed reduced numbers of residual splenic B cells with low surface IgM density and severely diminished serum IgM levels. However, serum IgG levels were normal and did not react with autoantigens. The results suggest that 2F5 Vh is sufficiently autoreactive to invoke tolerance control of 2F5 Vh expression.
Verkoczy2010
(autoantibody or autoimmunity)
-
2F5: A dimerization domain is described in the C-terminal domain of gp41 (C54), where two C54 monomers form an asymmetric, antiparallel coiled coil. 2F5 and 4E10 bind to C54 with higher affinity compared to linear MPER peptides, and the interaction is biphasic described by a two-step conformational change model. 2F5 formed a more stable complex with C54 than 4E10. A conformational change accompanied the interaction of 2F5 and 4E10 with C54. It is suggested that the conformation of C54 dimer is a potential intermediate, capable of interacting with 2F5 and 4E10.
Liu2010
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The specificities of 2F5 binding to MPER peptides and phospholipids on the viral membrane are reviewed. Implications of 2F5 anti-host cell activity are discussed. This review also summarizes data on the evolution of HIV neutralizing Abs, principles of Env immunogen design to elicit broadly neutralizing Abs, and future critical areas of research for development of an Ab-based HIV vaccine.
Hoxie2010
(vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: 6 male Indian rhesus macaques were given a dose of 2F5 one day prior and one day after challenge with SHIVBa-L, which was chosen because it was reasonably neutralization sensitive to both 2F5 and 4E10. All animals but one showed the absence of viral replication. Sera of all animals showed no gp120-specific responses, and no cellular immune responses were observed in any animals. The one animal in which presence of viral replication could not be excluded showed low-level viremia at day 35. A re-challenge of this animal conducted at month 6 after the initial challenge failed to induce productive infection, while the other 5 animals became infected at this time point. A second re-challenge 12 months later led to a regular infection course. 2F5 serum half-life was estimated as 4.6 days. 2F5 displayed significant antibody-dependent cell-mediated virus inhibition (ADCVI) activity, but only at high concentrations.
Hessell2010
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: 58 mAbs, including 3 broadly neutralizing mAbs, were isolated from memory B cells of HIV-1 infected donors using an improved EBV immortalization method combined with a broad screening strategy. 2F5 neutralization activity was compared to the three new broadly neutralizing mAbs. 2F5 did not compete for binding to gp41 with any of the new mAbs. 2F5 neutralized 67% of Tier 1 and 36% of Tier 2 viruses, the neutralization of Tier 2 viruses being comparable to that of the new MAb HJ16. 2F5 rarely neutralized clade C isolates.
Corti2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: 433 Abs were cloned from HIV envelope-binding memory B cells from 6 patients with broadly neutralizing sera. The Abs had neutralizing activity directed against several epitopes on gp120 and the majority neutralized Tier 1 viruses. Tier-2 neutralization was observed only with mixtures of MAbs, but only at high concentrations. 2F5 was used as a control and it neutralized 3/5 Tier 1 and 3/5 Tier 2 viruses.
Scheid2009
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Exogenous epitope tags were introduced in different parts of three variable regions, V1, V2 and V4, of two HIV isolates, SF162 and SF33. In the majority of the cases, tags did not have any effect on the susceptibility of the isolates to neutralization by 2F5. Only two viruses with tags in their V1 and V2 regions were more sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 compared to wild type.
Wallace2009
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: This review discusses obstacles to elicitation of protective NAbs, recent data on viral epitopes vulnerable to broadly NAbs, qualitative and quantitative implications of NAb response for vaccine development, and possible future areas of investigation to improve understanding of Env structure and stimulation of appropriate B cell responses.
Stamatatos2009
(review)
-
2F5: The structure and dynamic of the virion spike and the MPERe are discussed. Data revealing MPER steric barriers to Ab access, and recent results on the model for the structure and accessibility of the MPER on the native spike and the mechanisms of action for 2F5 are reviewed. Implications of the data for immunogen design is discussed.
Schief2009
(antibody binding site, review)
-
2F5: TZM-bl and PBMC systems were compared to investigate the influence of target cell environment on HIV entry inhibition. The sensitivity of TZM-bl system was confirmed by inhibitory capacity of 2G12, 2F5 and b12. 2F5 was shown to be significantly less active on TZM-bl cells, where it failed to inhibit 4 viruses with mutations in the 2F5 epitope, while 3/4 viruses were sensitive in the PBMC assay. HIV isolates were less sensitive to inhibition by 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10, with up to 100-fold lower sensitivity in the TZM-bl assay.
Rusert2009
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: This review summarizes targets of autologous neutralizing Abs (AnAbs) in early and chronic infections. V1V2 is a frequent target of AnAbs, while V4 and V5 have marginal role and anti-V3 Abs do not contribute to autologous neutralization. In addition to variable regions, C3 is a neutralization target in subtype C viruses, and is thought to interact with V4. gp41 is thought to have marginal effect as a target of AnAbs, with only one study showing 4E10-resistant variants suggesting escape from AnAbs targeting this region. AnAb specificities and sequential development, and their role in preventing superinfection is also reviewed. The relatively high Ab titer required for prevention of superinfection and control of viremia, and the low inhibitory potential of b12, 2F5, 4E10 and 2G12 compared to antiretroviral drugs is discussed.
Moore2009
(autologous responses, review)
-
2F5: This review describes obstacles that have been encountered in the development of an HIV-1 vaccine that induces broadly neutralizing Abs, and unusual features of existing broadly neutralizing Abs, such as 2F5. Importance of identification and characterization of new epitopes, and of B-cell stimulation, is discussed.
Montefiori2009
(review)
-
2F5: IgG form of 2F5 neutralized SF162 Env very strongly while the IgM form neutralized the virus at much lower levels, barely reaching 50% neutralization. 2F5 IgM neutralization potency was compared and was lower than that of WR320 IgM murine MAb.
Matyas2009a
(isotype switch, neutralization)
-
2F5: An overview of the different expression strategies to over produce HIV neutralizing Abs, including 2F5, in plants. The attention is specially focused on expression strategies of Nef protein.
Marusic2009
(review)
-
2F5: Env clones of 2 out of 12 viruses were shown to be highly sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 in PBMC assay but were not inhibited by 2F5 in TZM-bl assay. Both envelopes carried a mutation in the core epitope of 2F5. The study suggests that TZM-bl assay can fail to detect neutralizing activity of in vivo relevance but may be more prone to detect epitope mismatches. Causes of the observed differences between the PBMC and TZM-bl assays were due to virus producer cells and target cells, that could influence virus entry inhibition.
Mann2009
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Ab specificities of a panel of HIV sera were systematically analyzed by selective adsorption with native gp120 and specific mutant variants. To test sera for presence of 2F5-like Abs, MPER peptides overlapping the core epitopes of 2F5 and 4E10 were used. Neutralization of HXB2 and SF162 by sera was not inhibited by the 2F5 peptide, indicating lack of 2F5-like Abs. Sera with limited neutralizing activity were mapped to V3. In some of the broadly neutralizing sera, the gp120-directed neutralization was mapped to CD4bs. Some sera were positive for NAbs against coreceptor binding region.
Li2009c
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: 2F5 membrane-binding mode of epitope recognition is reviewed in detail. The review also summarizes on how different modes of Ab binding and recognition are used to overcome viral evasion tactics and how this knowledge may be used to re-elicit responses in vivo.
Kwong2009a
(antibody binding site, review)
-
2F5: The review discusses the implications of HIV-1 diversity on vaccine design and induction of neutralizing Abs, and possible novel approaches for rational vaccine design that can enhance coverage of HIV diversity. Patterns of within-clade and between-clade diversity in core epitopes of known potent neutralizing Abs, including 2F5, is displayed.
Korber2009
(review)
-
2F5: HA-gp41, an antigen representing the trimeric fusion-intermediate conformation of gp41, was constructed and shown to bind to 2F5 with high nanomolar affinity. Rabbits immunized with HA-gp41 produced gp41-specific Abs that recognized epitopes overlapping with 2F5. Sera from immunized animals lacked neutralizing activity.
Hinz2009
(vaccine-induced immune responses, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: 2F5 alone or in combination with other Abs was not able to trigger complement-mediated lysis (CML) of 93BR020 and 92UG037 HIV strains.
Hildgartner2009
(complement)
-
2F5: FcγR-mediated inhibition and neutralization of HIV by 2F5 and other MAbs is reviewed. The review also summarizes the role of ADCC and ADCVI Abs on HIV infection inhibition and neutralization.
Forthal2009
(review)
-
2F5: Stimulation of platelets with gp41 peptides led to a significant reduction of RANTES release which could be restored if platelet cultures with gp41 peptides were performed in the presence of 2F5.
Cognasse2009
-
2F5: This review summarizes novel approaches to mapping broad neutralizing activities in sera and novel technologies for targeted MAb retrieval.
Binley2009
(assay or method development, review)
-
2F5: A significant fraction of splenic B cells from BALB/c mice was shown to bind a MPER peptide that included the 2F5 epitope. The binding was concentrated in IgM subsets. However, IgM interactions with MPER peptide included residues distinct from those involved in 2F5 binding, indicating that low avidity, non-paratopic interactions between MPER and B cells may interfere with or divert 2F5 bNAb responses.
Verkoczy2009
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: 2F5 reacted poorly with trimeric and dimeric forms of cross-linked sgp140(-) Env glycoprotein and precipitated only a trace amount of monomeric forms. This suggested that 2F5 epitope is occluded or disrupted in soluble oligomeric forms of Env.
Yuan2009
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: The crystal structure for VRC01 in complex with an HIV-1 gp120 core from a clade A/E recombinant strain was analyzed to understand the structural basis for its neutralization breadth and potency. The number of mutations from the germline and the number of mutated contact residues for 2F5 were smaller than those for VRC01.
Zhou2010
(neutralization, structure)
-
2F5: Resurfaced stabilized core 3 (RSC3) protein was designed to preserve the antigenic structure of the gp120 CD4bs neutralizing surface but eliminate other antigenic regions of HIV-1. RSC3 did not show binding to 2F5.
Wu2010
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: Unlike PG9 and PG16, 2F5 neutralized kifunensine-treated pseudoviruses with similar potency as wild type pseudoviruses.
Walker2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Ab gene divergence analyses found that 2F5 Ab was significantly more divergent from the closest germline Abs than were hmAbs against other viruses. Germline-like 2F5 was constructed in a scFv format. It was shown that germline-like 2F5 did not bind to recombinant gp140 although the corresponding mature 2F5 showed binding.
Xiao2009
(binding affinity, antibody sequence)
-
2F5: EPR and NMR were used to define 2F5-induced MPER conformational changes. Large conformational changes of the MPER were observed upon binding of 2F5, where residues L669 and W670 were lifted out and exposed. It is suggested that 2F5 initially reacts with surface-exposed residues E662 and D664, followed by extraction of buried residues into its binding pocket, resulting in lifting up of the entire MPER N helix.
Song2009
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Patient sera from 13 HIV controllers and 75 chronic viremic patients were tested for the ability to block binding of 2F5 to Env JRFL gp140 oligomers. There was no difference observed between the controllers and chronic viremic patients. HIV controllers had the same levels of direct binding Abs to 2F5 peptide epitopes as viremic HIV-1 infected individuals. There was a higher level of binding to the 2F5 peptide than the 4E10 peptide. The NAb response was significantly lower in controllers, while ADCC was detected in all controllers but in only 40% of viremic patients.
Lambotte2009
(elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, neutralization)
-
2F5: One functional Env clone from each of 10 HIV-1 infected seroconverting individuals from India were analyzed for their sensitivity to MAbs and plasma pools of subtypes B, C and D. Only one of ten Indian Envs was sensitive to 2F5, and was the only Env that contained a DKW motif required for 2F5 recognition. HIVIG neutralized all 10 Envs, and the Envs were most sensitive to neutralization by subtype C pool, followed by subtype D and B pools, respectively. Amino acid signature patterns that associated with neutralization clusters were found. One signature position (667) was located within the 2F5 epitope.
Kulkarni2009
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: This MAb was shown to bind to the E2 (656-670) peptide, containing the MAb epitope, but not to E1 (532-546) peptide derived from the FPPR of gp41. However, peptide E1 (AASMTLTVQARQLLS) enhanced binding of 2F5 to the ELDKWA epitope and enhanced the effect of peptide E2 (NEQELLELDKWASLW) in a neutralization assay. E1 and E2 together inhibited binding of 2F5 to gp41 more efficiently than E2 alone, leading to a 25% greater reduction of neutralization. Core epitope of 2F5 was shown to be DKWAS.
Fiebig2009
(neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A review about the in vivo efficacy of 2F5 and other MAbs against HIV-1, and about inhibition of HIV-1 infection by Ab fragments Fab, scFv and engineered human Ab variable domains or "domain antibodies" (dAbs).
Chen2009b
(neutralization, immunotherapy, review)
-
2F5: 2F5 neutralization breadth and potency was compared to that of two broadly neutralizing Abs PG9 and PG16 in a panel of 162 multi-clade viruses. 2F5 exhibited lower neutralization potency than PG9 and PG16.
Walker2009a
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: 2F5 recognition of model cell or viral membranes with or without the presence of the peptide containing the MAb epitope was examined. 2F5 bound to both membranes with low affinity, suggesting that involvement of the antigen-binding site is absent. Binding of 2F5 increased significantly and exhibited almost irreversible binding in the presence of the membrane bound peptide epitope complex. It is suggested that 2F5 does not bind specifically to the membrane but that membrane involvement is important to the secondary structure of the 2F5 epitope.
Veiga2009
(antibody binding site, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Four IgA MAb were isolated from Cambodian exposed but uninfected women through a construction of phage libraries and selection by gp41-ΔMPR and P1. These MAbs were correlated to protection from HIV-1 infection in HEPS. 2F5 could not compete with IgA Fab 43 for binding to P1. Three IgA Fabs showed a neutralizing activity similar to that of 2F5, while IgA 177 was much more potent than 2F5. When converted to IgG, Fab 177 displayed neutralization activity similar to that of 2F5.
Tudor2009
(neutralization)
-
2F5: An analytical selection algorithm and a reduced virus screening panel were created for assessment of serum neutralizing activity. It is suggested that selection of pseudoviruses for neutralization assays should focus on the overall resistance profile of the pseudovirus and against MAbs b12, 4E10, 2F5 and 2G12. Neutralization profiles of all viruses used for screenings were determined for 2F5.
Simek2009
(neutralization)
-
2F5: In one out of 311 HIV-1 infected patients, neutralizing Abs reacting with an epitope overlapping with that of 2F5 were found. These 2F5-like Abs were responsible for the neutralization breadth of the patient serum. The Abs arose in the patient 12-27 months after infection, coinciding with the development of autoantibodies against dsDNA and Jo-1. Patient sera were also positive for anti-cardiolipin autoantibodies. There was no evidence of development of 2F5 escape mutants.
Shen2009
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, neutralization)
-
2F5: Substantial increase in neutralization potency (∼5000-fold) of 2F5 was observed in cells expressing FcγRI, and a moderate increase in cells expressing FcγRIIb. Both receptors affected IgG1 and IgG3 versions of 2F5 equally. Cells expressing FcγRIIa and FcγRIIIa did not have any effect on the neutralization potency of this Ab. The effect of the FcγRs was observed only for MPER-specific Abs. FcγRI and FcγRIIb facilitated antibody-mediated neutralization of HIV-1 that was dependent on the Fc region, IgG subclass, and Ab epitope specificity.
Perez2009
(isotype switch, neutralization)
-
2F5: Mutations that decreased hydrophobicity of the CDR H3 loop of 2F5 had little effect on the affinity of the Ab to gp41 but strongly decreased and even completely disrupted 2F5 neutralization of HIV-1 isolates. On the other hand, mutations that increased hydrophobicity, such as tryptophan substitutions, were able to increase 2F5 neutralization potency. The effect of CDR H3 hydrophobicity on neutralization was independent of isolate sensitivity to 2F5.
Ofek2010
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Swarm analysis of viruses from one patient resulted in isolation of several different clones with different neutralization sensitivities against four HIV-1 positive sera. Comparison of sequences from two clones, one neutralization resistant and the other one not, revealed seven amino acid differences of which only Q655R showed increase in neutralization sensitivity to 2F5. This mutation disrupted a ring of hydrogen bonds in gp41 trimer and favored prehairpin intermediate structure. When 655R was introduced into two other neutralization resistant, unrelated viruses it also significantly increased sensitivity to neutralization by 2F5.
ORourke2009
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: Binding of 2F5 to lipid antigens was studied. 2F5 bound to a variety of phospholipids, a sulfated glycolipid, sulfogalactosyl ceramide, and to two neutral glycolipids. 2F5 also bound to squalene. Unlike 4E10, 2F5 did not bind to cardiolipin, cholesterol, and lipid A derived from Gram-negative bacteria.
Matyas2009
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: Unlike b12, 2F5 was not able to inhibit formation of virological synapses, it did not block the transfer of HIV particles from infected to target cells, and it did not block the trogocytic transfer of CD4 molecules from target to infected cells. Analysis of late events of HIV transmission showed, however, that 2F5 was able to block infection of target cells, indicating that HIV infection is transmitted by a neutralization-sensitive mechanism.
Massanella2009
-
2F5: There was an association between 2F5 Abs and anticardiolipin in serum samples from slow progressors.
Martinez2009
(autoantibody or autoimmunity)
-
2F5: By manipulation of the glycosylation machinery of S. cerevisiae a heavily glycosylated yeast protein, Pst1, was identified, that bound 2G12 with high affinity and was able to inhibit 2G12 neutralization of HxB and SF162 Env. Pst1 did not inhibit 2F5 neutralization of HxB viruses.
Luallen2009
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Crystal structure of a MPER subdomain was determined. The structure suggests that the four hydrophobic residues critical for the neutralization activity of 2F5 are buried within the MPER trimer interface. In experiments, 2F5 was able to bind to monomeric MPER but failed to bind to trimeric MPER.
Liu2009
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: A highly efficient strategy for rapid expression of Ig genes was designed by combining isolation of Ig Vh and Vl genes from single cells, with novel linear Ig gene expression cassettes. The method was used to produce 2F5 from synthetic Vh and Vl genes. The recombinant 2F5 neutralized HIV-1 isolates with similar potency as MAb 2F5.
Liao2009
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: REMD analyses of the 2F5 epitope peptide in solution indicated that the 7-mere structure interconverts between α-helical and type I β-turn conformations. Insertion of the peptide into the VP2 puff of the HRV14 virus indicated a structure likely to be recognized by 2F5. A REMD solution simulation of a 21-amino acid MPER peptide including both 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes showed increased epitope exposure upon reduction of hydrophobic character of the peptide. The 21-aa peptide adopted a favorable conformation for Ab binding in solution, but when inserted into the VP2 puff of the HRV14 it adopted a less favorable conformation.
Lapelosa2009
(computational prediction)
-
2F5: 2F5 was active against subtype A KNH1144 virus and against KNH1144 SOS in both post CD4 and post-CD4/CCR5 assays.
Kang2009
-
2F5: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:2-5*10, IGHD:nd, D-RF:nd, IGHJ:6. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
2F5: Three plasmas with broadly cross-neutralizing activities and high titers of MPER Abs were identified among 156 chronically infected patients. JR-FL virus was better neutralized by these MPER plasmas than by 2F5, 4E10 and Z13e1.
Gray2009a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Ten new non-neutralizing, cross-reactive mAbs were found in immunized mice. 2F5 only reacted with a subset of different Env subtypes tested due to amino acid substitutions in the epitopes. Binding of 2F5 to B_JRFL oligomer was not blocked by any of the newly detected mAbs.
Gao2009
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: An international collaboration (NeutNet) was organized to compare the performance of a wide variety of HIV-1 neutralization assays performed in different laboratories. Four neutralizing agents were evaluated: 4E10, 447-52D, sCD4 and TriMab (equal mixture of 2F5, 2G12 and b12). For TriMab, the mean IC50 values were always lower in the pseudovirus assays than in virus infectivity assays. In general, there were clear differences in assay sensitivities that were dependent on both the neutralizing agent and the virus. No single assay was capable of detecting the entire spectrum of neutralizing activities.
Fenyo2009
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Gene encoding gp140 was fused with three trimerization motifs, T4F, GCN and ATC. gp140, gp140(-)(with mutations in the furin-cleavage site), gp140(-)T4F and gp140(-)GCN bound 2F5 similarly, while gp140(-)ATC bound 2F5 less strongly.
Du2009
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: Four groups of Abs were detected in a patient directed against mimotopes of MPER, V3, C1 and LLP2. The MPER mimotope shared key amino acid residues with the 4E10 epitope. There were two different 2F5 epitope sequences observed in the patient virus over time. One was wildype and the other one displayed the D664N mutation consistent with resistance to 2F5 neutralization. Indeed, the earliest virus from the patient as very sensitive to neutralization by 2F5, while the second time point isolate showed 50-fold decrease in sensitivity, and the late viruses demonstrated complete resistance to 2F5 neutralization..
Dieltjens2009
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: Binding of 2F5 to its nominal epitope, and to a longer biepitope peptide-liposome conjugate was best described by a two step encounter-docking model. More efficient docking of 2F5 to its nominal epitope compared to 4E10 correlated with the more exposed nature of 2F5 nominal epitope on the membrane surface. Both 2F5 and 4E10 showed a more efficient docking to the biepitope peptide-liposome structures than to nominal epitopes, indicating that the conjugate provides a more favorable MPER orientation. 2F5 nominal epitope also had lower helical content than the biepitope conjugate.
Dennison2009
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
2F5: Structural characterization of the 2F5 epitope revealed that the FP (fusion protein) interactions stabilize MPER native-like structures in proximity to membrane surface. The structural constraints of the FP on the 2F5 epitope varied by medium polarity and temperature, where conformations accessible to 2F5 consisting of α helices and β turns were favored below 20 degrees C, and that β turns accumulated above this temperature and arose from the existing 310-helix structures. Presence of helices resulted in a more efficient Fab'-peptide interaction. The correct FP sequence caused the creation of a carboxy-terminal α helix following β turn in the native gp41 structure that is recognized by 2F5. Thus, recreating FP-induced interactions and structures is important for vaccine design.
delaArada2009
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
2F5: Two chimeras were constructed from a new HIV-2KR.X7 proviral scaffold where the V3 region was substituted with the V3 from HIV-1 YU2 and Ccon, generating subtype B and C HIV-2 V3 chimera. Both chimera, and the wildtype HIV-2KR and its derivatives HIV-2KR.X4 and HIV-2KR.X7 were resistant to neutralization by 2F5.
Davis2009
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Neutralization profiles of cloned Envs derived from recent heterosexual infections by subtypes A, C, D, and A/D from Kenya were determined. 2F5 was the most broadly neutralizing MAb among these transmitted env variants, neutralizing 15/31 viruses from 8/14 subjects. Some 2F5 resistant variants had mutations within the 2F5 epitope while other resistant viruses did not.
Blish2009
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: Conserved 2F5 epitope was displayed in various ways on the immunogenic human rhinovirus. 2F5 was used to capture chimeric viruses form a combinatorial library that presented the 2F5 epitope in antigenically relevant ways. Guinea pigs were immunized with chimeric viruses and immune responses were elicited with Abs capable of modestly neutralizing HIV-1 pseudoviruses of clades A, B, A/E, D and even C. The neutralizing responses correlated with the presence of ELDKWA-directed Abs. Viruses that were capable of eliciting broadly neutralizing Abs were benefited by the nonrandom occurrence of linker residues that promoted the formation of β-turns.
Arnold2009
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
2F5: Three 2F5 mutants, with Ala substitutions in their CDR H3 loops, bound to gp41 with somewhat reduced affinity compared to wildtype, indicating that CD3 loop does not make major contribution to contact with gp41. However, the three 2F5 mutants did not bind, or bound weakly, to lipid bilayers, indicating that the hydrophobic residues of CDR H3 loop are necessary for 2F5 interaction with viral membrane. The three 2F5 mutants also failed to neutralize BG1168 and SF162 strains, both which are neutralized by wildtype Ab. These results indicate a two-step mechanism of 2F5 binding and neutralization: 1) 2F5 attaches to the viral membrane through CDR H3 loops. 2) 2F5 binds to the MPER after gp41 has undergone conformational changes and assumes its prehairpin intermediate conformation. The results also indicate the importance of the HIV-1 membrane in binding and neutralization by 2F5 and that a lipid component may be required for an immunogen to induce 2F5-like Ab responses.
Alam2009
(antibody binding site, neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: HIV-1 variants derived from 5 patients at different timepoints during chronic infection were analysed for their sensitivity to neutralization by b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10. In four of the patients, the earliest virus variants were highly sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 and the majority remained so during the course of infection. Sensitivity to 2F5 correlated with the absence of mutations in the 2F5 epitope, although in one of the patients, the variants did have mutations in the 2F5 epitope but not in the core DKW sequence. There were a small amount of variants found that were resistant to 2F5 neutralization although no mutations in the 2F5 epitope were observed, indicating that the epitope may not be equally exposed in all viruses. Virus variants from the fifth patient from the early infection all had a mutation in the core of the 2F5 epitope (DQW), and were all resistant to 2F5 neutralization. Later on, this mutation reverted to wildtype which coincided with increased sensitivity to 2F5.
Bunnik2009
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: 35 7-mer peptides corresponding to the primary 2F5 epitope with most commonly occurring substitutions in this MPER region were tested for crystal complex formation with 2F5 Fab'. The structural analyses revealed the importance of the correct positioning of residues 664 and 666 in the DKW core of the 2F5 epitope, from which 2F5 gets most of its neutralization potency and breadth. Also, positions 665 and 667 were identified as determinants of 2F5 neutralization potency and of neutralization escape. A buried surface area analysis of gp41 revealed that core epitope residues of 2F5 and 4E10 MAbs are more conserved than those of Z13, explaining the greater neutralization breadth of 2F5 and 4E10. It is suggested that evolving 2F5 to rely on the conserved residues of MPER might be a better way to increase its neutralization breadth and potency.
Bryson2009
(escape, structure)
-
2F5: 2F5 neutralized infection of PBLs with various HIV-1 strains with high potency. However, 2F5 did not inhibit transcytosis of cell-free or cell-associated virus across a monolayer of epithelial cells. A mixture of 13 MAbs directed to well-defined epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope, including 2F5, did not inhibit HIV-1 transcytosis, indicating that envelope epitopes involved in neutralization are not involved in mediating HIV-1 transcytosis. When the mixture of 13 MAbs and HIV-1 was incubated with polyclonal anti-human γ chain, the transcytosis was partially inhibited, indicating that agglutination of viral particles at the apical surface of cells may be critical for HIV transcytosis inhibition by HIV-specific Abs.
Chomont2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: The lipid binding properties of 2F5, and the similarity to binding properties of anti-lipid mAbs, are discussed. Potential role of liposomes containing lipid A for induction of NAbs to lipids of HIV-1 is reviewed.
Alving2008
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, review)
-
2F5: A reference panel of recently transmitted Tier 2 HIV-1 subtype B envelope viruses was developed representing a broad spectrum of genetic diversity and neutralization sensitivity. The panel includes viruses derived from male-to-male, female-to-male, and male-to-female sexual transmissions, and CCR5 as well as CXCR4 using viruses. The envelopes displayed varying degrees of neutralization sensitivity to 2F5, with 14 of 19 envelopes sensitive to neutralization by this Ab.
Schweighardt2007
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: This review summarizes data on possible vaccine targets for elicitation of neutralizing Abs and discusses whether it is more practical to design a clade-specific than a clade-generic HIV-1 vaccine. Development of a neutralizing Ab response in HIV-1 infected individuals is reviewed, including data that show no apparent division of different HIV-1 subtypes into clade-related neutralization groups. Also, a summary of the neutralizing activity of MAb 2F5 in different HIV-1 clades is provided.
McKnight2007
(variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
2F5: This review provides information on the HIV-1 glycoprotein properties that make it challenging to target with neutralizing Abs. 2F5 structure and binding to HIV-1 envelope and current strategies to develop versions of the Env spike with functional trimer properties for elicitation of broadly neutralizing Abs, such as 2F5, are discussed. In addition, approaches to target cellular molecules, such as CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, and MHC molecules, with therapeutic Abs are reviewed.
Phogat2007
(review)
-
2F5: This review summarizes current knowledge on the various functional properties of antibodies in HIV-1 infection, including 2F5 MAb, in vivo and in vitro activity of neutralizing Abs, the importance and downfalls of non-neutralizing Abs and antibodies that mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and the complement system, and summarizes data on areas that need future investigation on Ab-mediated immune control.
Huber2007
(review)
-
2F5: A new high throughput method was developed for neutralization analyses of HIV-1 env genes by adding cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate enhancer/promoter to the 5' end of the HIV-1 rev/env gene PCR products. The PCR method eliminates cloning, transformation, and plasmid DNA preparation steps in the generation of HIV-1 pseudovirions and allows for sufficient amounts of pseudovirions to be obtained for a large number of neutralization assays. Pseudovirions generated with the PCR method showed similar sensitivity to 2F5 Ab, indicating that the neutralization properties are not altered by the new method.
Kirchherr2007
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: 2F5 structure, binding, neutralization, and strategies that can be used for vaccine antigen design to elicit anti-gp41 Abs, are reviewed in detail. The effect of the autoreactivity of 2F5 on vaccine antigen design is discussed.
Lin2007
(vaccine antigen design, review, structure)
-
2F5: This review summarizes 2F5 Ab epitope, properties and neutralization activity. 2F5 use in passive immunization studies in primates and possible mechanisms explaining protection against infection are discussed. Also, 2F5 autoreactivity and its implications for active immunizations are discussed.
Kramer2007
(immunotherapy, review)
-
2F5: The various effects that neutralizing and non-neutralizing anti-envelope Abs have on HIV infection are reviewed, such as Ab-mediated complement activation and Fc-receptor mediated activities, that both can, through various mechanisms, increase and decrease the infectivity of the virus. The importance of these mechanisms in vaccine design is discussed. The unusual features of the 2F5 MAb, and its neutralizing activities, are described.
Willey2008
(neutralization, review)
-
2F5: Current insights into CTLs and NAbs, and their possible protective mechanisms against establishment of persistent HIV/SIV infection are discussed. Pre- and post-infection sterile and non-sterile protection of NAbs against viral challenge, and potential role of NAbs in antibody-mediated antigen presentation in modification of cellular immunity, are reviewed. Use of 2F5 in immunization experiments and its in vivo anti-viral activity in suppression of viral rebound in HIV-1 infected humans undergoing structured treatment interruptions are described.
Yamamoto2008
(immunotherapy, supervised treatment interruptions (STI), review)
-
2F5: A mathematical model was developed and used to derive transmitted or founder Env sequences from individuals with acute HIV-1 subtype B infection. All of the transmitted or early founder Envs were sensitive to neutralization by 2F5, but there was a modest heightened resistance of acute Envs compared to chronic Envs to neutralization by 2F5.
Keele2008
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: Similarity level of the 2F5 binding site pentapeptide LDKWA to the host proteome was low, with the low-similarity 5-mer occurring in the host proteome 1 time, indicating that this peptide can be used to elicit Abs for active/passive immunotherapy with low risk of cross-reaction with the host proteome.
Kanduc2008
-
2F5: This review summarizes the obstacles that stand in the way of making a successful preventive HIV-1 vaccine, such as masked or transiently expressed Ab epitopes, polyclonal B-cell class switching, and inefficient, late, and not sufficiently robust mucosal IgA and IgG responses. Possible reasons why HIV-1 envelope constructs expressing 2F5 epitope fail to induce broadly neutralizing Abs are discussed.
Haynes2008
(vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: Transmission of HIV-1 by immature and mature DCs to CD4+ T lymphocytes was significantly higher for CXCR4- than for CCR5-tropic strains. In addition, 2F5 inhibited transmission of CCR5-tropic viruses while transmission of 2F5-neutralized X4 variants increased, indicating that X4 HIV-1 has an advantage over R5 in transmission when neutralized with 2F5. The increase in transmission of X4 viruses is probably mediated by increase in capture, as X4 HIV-1 capture increased twofold upon 2F5 neutralization, while neutralization by 2F5 had no effect on capture of R5 viruses. Capture analysis of different HIV-1 molecular clones showed that neutralization by 2F5 increased transmission of only X4 and late R5X4 variants with a higher V3 charge.
vanMontfort2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
2F5: The newly detected MAb m44 was shown to neutralize a subtype C SHIV strain more potently than 2F5. In binding assays, 2F5 did not bind to 5Hb region. 2F5 did not compete with m44 for binding. A fusion protein of gp41 constructed for alanine-scanning mutagenesis bound to 2F5, indicating that its antigenic structure was intact. Five alanine mutations in the C-HR region (M94, W96, M97, R101, and I103) affected binding of 2F5 to gp41. 2F5 bound to self antigens in lipid binding assays.
Zhang2008
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The MPER region was shown to have an L-shaped structure, with the conserved C-terminal residues immersed in the membrane and the variable N-terminal residues exposed to the aqueous phase. The specific binding of 2F5 to the MPER was comparable to that of 4E10, with little or no binding to the membrane alone. It is suggested that 2F5, like 4E10, extracts its epitope from the viral membrane, and that the key requirement for neutralization is induction of structural rearrangement of the MPER hinge by the Ab. It is also suggested that exposure of the membrane-embedded residues of the MPER region to the immune system in their native L-shaped form may elicit neutralizing Abs.
Sun2008
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Trimeric envelope glycoproteins with a partial deletion of the V2 loop derived from subtype B SF162 and subtype C TV1 were compared. 2F5 recognized both B and C trimers, indicating that the 2F5 epitope was exposed and preserved in the subtype C trimers. Subtype C trimer had many biophysical, biochemical, and immunological characteristics similar to subtype B trimer, except for a difference in the three binding sites for CD4, which showed cooperativity of CD4 binding in subtype C but not in subtype B.
Srivastava2008
(binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Quaternary structure of gp41 helical domains N-HR and C-HR was mimicked by 3α N-HR and 3α C-HR mimetic proteins consisting of covalently linked trimeric coiled-coil bundle, which is a truncated version of the gp41 prehairpin. The 3α mimetics were immunogenic and elicited Abs in guinea pigs specific for gp41. The sera from immunized animals neutralized viral R5 and X4-tropic viruses at 31.5 degrees C, but not under standard assay conditions, in which 2F5 blocked HIV-1 infection.
Sadler2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: In order to assess whether small molecule CCR5 inhibitor resistant viruses were more sensitive to neutralization by NAbs, two escape mutant viruses, CC101.19 and D1/85.16, were tested for their sensitivity to 2F5, compared to the sensitivity of CC1/85 parental isolate and the CCcon.19 control isolate. The CC101.19 escape mutant has 4 sequence changes in V3 while the D1/85.16 has no sequence changes in V3 and relies on other sequence changes for its resistance. D1/85.16 isolate was moderately (6-fold) more sensitive to 2F5 neutralization than the parental isolate, while CC101.19 was not. As D1/85.16 escape mutant had a polymorphism in the first position of the 2F5 epitope (Aldkwas), this sequence change might be responsible for its modest increase in the 2F5 neutralization sensitivity. Overall, the study suggests that CCR5 inhibitor-resistant viruses are likely to be somewhat more sensitive to neutralization than their parental viruses.
Pugach2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: This minireview summarizes data on differences in neutralizing activities of MAbs and pooled human sera using a traditional primary cell neutralization assay and the more standardized TZM-bl reporter cell line assay. Also, suggestions are made on how to improve and standardize neutralization assays for comparable use in different laboratories. 2F5 neutralization was tested against a panel of 60 HIV-1 primary isolates (10 each from clades A-D, CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG) in the two assays. 13 viruses from the PBMC assay and 9 viruses from the TZM-assay were not neutralized by this Ab (including subtype C in both assays). In total, the assay discordances were shown to be bi-directional and not attributable to assay sensitivity.
Polonis2008
(assay or method development, neutralization, review, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The sensitivity of R5 envelopes derived from several patients and several tissue sites, including brain tissue, lymph nodes, blood, and semen, was tested to a range of inhibitors and Abs targeting CD4, CCR5, and various sites on the HIV envelope. All but one envelope from brain tissue were macrophage-tropic while none of the envelopes from the lymph nodes were macrophage-tropic. Macrophage-tropic envelopes were also less frequent in blood and semen. There was no clear correlation between macrophage-tropism and neutralization sensitivity to 2F5, indicating that variation in macrophage tropism is not caused by variation in the membrane proximal region of Env.
Peters2008a
(brain/CSF, neutralization)
-
2F5: For assessment of gp41 immunogenic properties, five soluble GST-fusion proteins encompassing C-terminal 30, 64, 100, 142, or 172 (full-length) amino acids of gp41 ectodomain were generated from M group consensus Env sequence. All five protein fragments were equally recognized by 2F5 indicating that the 2F5 epitope is conformationally similar and equally exposed. Patients considered as slow progressors generally exhibited greater Ab reactivity against the 30aa fragment, indicating that these Abs target MPER region and exhibit 2F5- and 4E10-like properties. Plasma from these patients also exhibited broader and more potent neutralizing activity against several HIV-1 isolates. Plasma from 8 of 44 patients reacted with peptides that bind 2F5, indicating that these patients mounted 2F5-like Ab response.
Penn-Nicholson2008
(rate of progression)
-
2F5: To examine sequence and conformational differences between subtypes B and C, several experiments were performed with 11 MAbs regarding binding and neutralization. Both binding and neutralization studies revealed that the 11 MAbs could be divided in three different groups, and that the most differences between the subtypes were located in the stem and turn regions of V3. 2F5 was used as control in neutralization assays, and was able to neutralize JR-FL isolate, and with lower potency, SF162. A chimeric SF162 variant with a JR-FL-like V3 sequence was hypersensitive to neutralization by this Ab.
Patel2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Contemporaneous biological clones of HIV-1 were isolated from plasma of chronically infected patients and tested for their functional properties. The clones showed striking functional diversity both within and among patients, including differences in infectivity and sensitivity to inhibition by 2F5. There was no correlation between clonal virus infectivity and sensitivity to 2F5 inhibition, indicating that these properties are dissociable. The sensitivity to 2F5 inhibition was, however, a property shared by viruses from a given patient, suggesting that the genetic determinants that define this sensitivity may lie in regions that are not necessarily subject to extensive diversity.
Nora2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: 2F5 was shown to bind to Envs used in typical epitope binding assays, unlike the neutralizing Abs 8K8, DN9, and D5 used in this study.
Nelson2008
-
4E10: The study compared the in-membrane recognition and blocking activity of the 2F5 and 4E10 MAbs, using solution-diffusing, unstressed phospholipid vesicles with sizes that approximate to that of the HIV virion, and an MPER-derived sequences that combines the full length 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes. 2F5 MAb had lower affinity for membrane-bound species than 4E10 MAb, as defined by inhibition data together with direct electron microscopy and flow cytometry determination of the vesicle-antibody association.
Huarte2008a
-
2F5: 2F5 reacted with maltose-binding proteins MBP30 and MBP32, containing both HR1 and HR2 domains of gp41, and with MBP37 and MBP44, containing only the HR2 domain, but not with MBP-HR1, containing only the HR1 domain.
Vincent2008
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Neutralization susceptibility of CRF01_AE Env-recombinant viruses, derived from blood samples of Thai HIV-1 infected patients in 2006, was tested to 2F5. Approximately 40% of viruses tested showed high susceptibility to 2F5, including viruses with and without conserved 2F5 epitopes, suggesting that the susceptibility of CRF01_AE to 2F5 is not determined by the conservation of the core epitope sequence. Several X4R5 viruses were less susceptible to 2F5 compared with X4 or R5 viruses. There was no correlation observed between virus neutralization susceptibility to 2F5 and viral infectivity, the length of the gp120 variable regions, or the number of PNLG sites.
Utachee2009
(co-receptor, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: CTB-MPR649-684 (cholera toxin subunit B and residues 649-684 of gp41 MPER region) peptide was developed for vaccine studies in rabbits. 2F5 affinity to the CTB-MPR peptide was equivalent to 2F5 affinity toward an MPR peptide, indicating that the fusion peptide presented antigenically competent MPR. Sera from immunized rabbits displayed no neutralizing activity, but could inhibit epithelial transcytosis of virus, indicating elicitation of non-neutralizing Abs capable of stopping mucosal transmission and infection of target cells.
Matoba2008
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: A MPER peptide, AISpreTM, overlapping 2F5 and 4E10 epitope sequences, was capable of breaching the permeability barrier of lipid vesicles. 2F5 blocked the peptide bilayer-destabilizing activity, whether the lipid composition contained cholesterol or sphingomyelin raft-lipids, indicating that the lipid composition of the membrane has a less pronounced effect on the 2F5 inhibitory activity. The 2F5 epitope appears to remain anchored to the water-membrane interface and is more accessible for Ab binding under different membrane lipid conditions.
Huarte2008
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Synergy of 2F5 with MAbs 2G12, D5, and peptide C34 was examined. 2F5 exhibited synergy in inhibition of HIV-1 89.6 with MAb 2G12, D5 and peptide C34. In combination with a matured D5 variant (2-75), the synergistic effect was increased. D5 and 2F5 contributed equally to the observed synergy. It is suggested that 2F5 and D5 have complementary roles, binding to distinct but adjacent Env trimers on the same virion, thereby synergistically preventing formation of fusion pores.
Hrin2008
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Neutralization of HIV-1 BAL by 2F5 Ab was compared to neutralization capabilities of immunoprecipitated IgG and IgA Abs from the colostrum of two goats immunized with HIV-1 MPR 649-684 peptide. Immunoprecipitated IgG and IgA showed varying and low level neutralization of free virus, while the highest percent neutralization achieved by 2F5 was 24.9%.
Dorosko2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Three constructs of the outer domain (OD) of gp120 of subtype C, fused with Fc, were generated for immunization of mice: OD(DL3)-Fc (has 29 residues from the center of the V3 loop removed), OD(2F5)-Fc (has the same deletion reconstructed to contain the sequence of 2F5 epitope), and the parental OD-Fc molecule. Only OD(2F5)-Fc construct reacted with 2F5. Sera from mice immunized with OD(2F5)-Fc showed low Ab titers, and no significant neutralization activity.
Chen2008a
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: The goal of the study was to measure NAb responses in patients infected with HIV-1 prevalent subtypes in China. g160 genes from plasma samples were used to establish a pseudovirus-based neutralization assay. 2F5 neutralized 67% of subtype B clones and all subtype AE clones, but not subtype BC clones.
Chong2008
(neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The study examined whether elastin-like peptide (ELP) fusion technology is compatible with the production of MAb 2F5, which is a complex heteromultimeric pharmaceutical protein. ELP fusion to the light chain, heavy chain of both chains of a plant-derived antibody had no adverse effects on protein quality, but had a positive impact on the yield.
Floss2008
-
2F5: To investigate B-cell responses immediately following HIV-1 transmission, env-specific Ab responses to autologous and consensus Envs in plasma donors were determined. Broadly neutralizing Abs with specificity similar to 2F5 did not appear during the first 40 days after plasma virus detection.
Tomaras2008
(acute/early infection)
-
2F5: The neutralization profile of early R5, intermediate R5X4, and late X4 viruses from a rhesus macaque infected with SHIV-SF162P3N was assessed. 2F5 neutralized the late X4 virus, and to some extent the parental R5 virus, but did not neutralize the R5X4 intermediate. A K to N mutation within the 2F5 epitope in the R5X4 intermediate accounted for its neutralization resistance.
Tasca2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, escape)
-
C2F5: Neutralization of HIV-1 IIIB LAV isolate by 2F5 was within the same range as the neutralization of the virus by natural antibodies from human sera against the gal(α1,3)gal disaccaride linked to CD4 gp120-binding peptides, indicating that the activity of natural antibodies can be re-directed to neutralize HIV-1.
Perdomo2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Two HIV-1 isolates, NL4-3 and KB9, were adapted to replicate in cells using the common marmoset receptors CD4 and CXCR4. The adaptation resulted in a small number of changes of env sequences in both isolates. The adapted NL4-3 variants were equally sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 as the adapted KB9 variants. Some of the NL4-3 and KB9 variants exhibited increased sensitivity to neutralization by 2F5 compared to the wildtype isolates.
Pacheco2008
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Eight 2F5 Fab' crystal structures, free and in complex with various gp41 peptide epitopes, revealed several key features of Ab-antigen interaction. The extended complementarity-determining region (CDR) H3 loop is mobile, both in ligand-free and epitope-bound forms. The interaction between 2F5 and the ELDKWA epitope core is critical, and there are also close and specific contacts with residues located N-terminal to the core, while the residues located at the C-terminus of the core do not interact as tightly with the Ab. In the presence of a larger peptide, these C-terminus residues adopt a conformation consistent with the start of an α helix. At the base of the CDR H3, a sulfate ion is present near residue Arg100H, that might be mimicking the negatively charged phosphate of a lipid headgroup representing a possible site of interaction between 2F5 and the phospholipid bilayer.
Julien2008
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
2F5: The IC50 for 2F5 in a standard neutralization assay is 3.8nM but is increased 20-fold in the postattachment neutralization assay to 72nM. The neutralization half-life for 2F5 is 15 minutes but is increased 3-fold to 44 minutes in the presence of N36Mut(e,g), peptide, which is a class 3 inhibitor that prolongates temporal window of neutralization by disrupting trimerization of the N-heptad repeat (N-HR) in the prehairpin intermediate by sequestering the N-HR into N-HR/N36Mut(e,g) heterodimers. HXB2 was neutralized synergistically by 2F5 and N36Mut(e,g), where the formation of N-HR/N36Mut(e,g) heterodimers enhances the probability of 2F5 binding and the binding of 2F5 enhances the probability of N-HR/N36Mut(e,g) heterodimer formation, greatly diminishing the probability of 6-helix bundle formation.
Gustchina2008
(antibody binding site, neutralization, kinetics)
-
2F5: NMR structure of P1, a minimal MPER region that permits interaction with the mucosal galactosyl ceramide HIV-receptor, was analyzed in interaction with 2F5 at different pH. The best fit between NMR P1 and crystal structures of the Ab was at pH 6 and 5. The binding of 2F5 to P1 inserted into the liposomes of different compositions mimicking various biological membranes revealed 5- to 10-fold higher affinity of 2F5 to P1 in the lipid environment compared to aqueous environment, suggesting that specific lipid environment stabilizes the appropriate structure of the HIV-1 peptide.
Coutant2008
(kinetics, binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: Crystal structure of the heterodimeric complex of Ab2/3H6 Fab, an anti-idiotypic Ab, and 2F5 Fab, showed that the contacts between the Abs are predominantly made between the heavy chains of the two molecules. Mainly CDR-H3 of Ab2/3H6 forms contacts to 2F5 although residues from all three heavy-chain loops contribute to binding, interacting with a single linear ten amino acid sequence on the surface of 2F5. There is only a limited overlap between the parts of 2F5 recognized by Ab2/3H6 and those interacting with peptides derived from the linear gp41 epitope, but this overlap is sufficient to lead to steric competition between Ab2/3H6 and gp41. The results indicate that Ab2/3H6 is an anti-idiotypic Ab of the Ab2γ class, an Ab that does not carry the internal image of the linear primary gp41 2F5 epitope.
Bryson2008
(anti-idiotype, structure)
-
2F5: 24 broadly neutralizing plasmas from HIV-1 subtype B and C infected individuals were investigated using a series of mapping methods to identify viral epitopes targeted by NAbs. Three different assays were used to analyze gp41-directed neutralizing activity. MAb 2F5 was shown to neutralize equivalently in the standard and post-CD4/CCR5 assay. Weak post-CD4/CCR5 neutralization was detected in five subtype B and two subtype C plasmas. 2F5 was shown to neutralize two of the MPER-engrafted mutant viruses, but the subtype B plasmas did not exactly recapitulate this activity. Neutralization of four subtype B plasmas was not inhibited by a 2F5 peptide. These results indicated that the anti-gp41 activity of the plasmas was probably not due to the presence of 2F5-like Abs.
Binley2008
(neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: An anti-idiotypic mouse Ab (Ab2/3H6) against MAb 2F5 was partially humanized, expressed and characterized for its interactions with 2F5. The recombinantly expressed variants of Ab2/3H6 were able to bind to the paratope of 2F5 and also significantly inhibit binding of 2F5 to its epitope. All recombinant Ab2/3H6 were also able to inhibit the neutralization of HIV-1 isolate RF by 2F5.
Gach2007a
(anti-idiotype, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: HIV-1 env clones resistant to cyanovirin (CV-N), a carbohydrate binding agent, showed amino acid changes that resulted in deglycosylation of high-mannose type residues in the C2-C4 region of gp120. Compared to their parental virus HIV-1 IIIB, these resistant viruses maintained similar sensitivity to 2F5.
Hu2007
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: The ability of 2F5 to neutralize recently transmitted viruses was examined in four homosexual and two parenteral transmission pairs. The vast majority of recently transmitted viruses from 3/4 homosexual recipients were sensitive to neutralization by 2F5, although viruses isolated later in the course of infection showed increased sensitivity to 2F5 in the patient with early viruses resistant to 2F5 neutralization. In the parenteral transmission, one of the recipients had early viruses resistant to 2F5 neutralization, and one had viruses sensitive to 2F5 neutralization. The neutralization sensitivity patterns of recipient viruses to 2F5 did not correlate to the neutralization sensitivity patterns of their donors in the homosexual couples, while the HIV-1 variants from the parenteral pairs were similarly resistant/sensitive to neutralization by 2F5. Despite variations in 2F5 sensitivity, none of the viruses had mutations in the crucial DKW residues of the 2F5 epitope.
Quakkelaar2007a
(neutralization, acute/early infection, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: Three MAbs, 2G12, 4E10 and 2F5, were administered to ten HIV-1 infected individuals treated with ART during acute and early infection, in order to prevent viral rebound after interruption of ART. MAb infusions were well tolerated with essentially no toxicity. Viral rebound was not prevented, but was significantly delayed in 8/10 patients. 2G12 activity was dominant among the MAbs used. Antiviral activity of 2F5 was not clearly demonstrated. Development of resistance to 2F5 was not observed despite ongoing viral replication. Plasma HIV-1 RNA levels did not increase following cessation of Ab infusion. Plasma viremia was essentially identical between patients not receiving MAb therapy and patients receiving 4E10 and 2F5 in the face of 2G12 resistance. 2F5 also failed to accumulate with repeated infusions in patient plasma. Long-term suppression of viremia was achieved in 3/10 patients.
Mehandru2007
(escape, immunotherapy, supervised treatment interruptions (STI))
-
2F5: The study compared Ab neutralization against the JR-FL primary isolate and trimer binding affinities judged by native PAGE. There was direct quantitative relationship between monovalent Fab-trimer binding and neutralization, implying that neutralization begins as each trimer is occupied by one Ab. In BN-PAGE, neutralizing Fabs, 2F5 in particular, and sCD4 were able to shift JR-FL trimers, In contrast, most non-neutralizing Fabs bound to monomer, but their epitopes were conformationally occluded on trimers, confirming the exclusive relationship of trimer binding and neutralization.
Crooks2008
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Five amino acids in the gp41 N-terminal region that promote gp140 trimerization (I535, Q543, S553, K567 and R588) were considered. Their influence on the function and antigenic properties of JR-FL Env expressed on the surfaces of pseudoviruses and Env-transfected cells was studied. Various non-neutralizing antibodies bind less strongly to the Env mutant, but neutralizing antibody binding is unaffected. There was no difference in 2F5 binding to wild type and mutant JR-FL, and 2F5 inhibited infection of the two pseudoviruses with comparable potencies.
Dey2008
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: This study explored features of Env that would enhance exposure of conserved HIV-1 epitopes. The changes in neutralization susceptibility, mediated by two mutations, T569A (in the HR1) and I675V (in the MPER), were unparalleled in their magnitude and breadth on diverse HIV-1 Env proteins. The variant with both TA and IV mutations was 2.8-fold more susceptible to b12, >180-fold more susceptible to 4E10, >780-fold more susceptible to sCD4 and resulted in 18-fold enhanced susceptibility to autologous plasma and >35-fold enhanced susceptibility to the plasma pool. It was also >360-fold more susceptible to 2F5. Mutant with only one IV mutation was >27-fold more susceptible to 2F5.
Blish2008
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: Molecular mechanism of neutralization by MPER antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10, was studied. Preparations of trimeric HIV-1 Env protein in the prefusion, the prehairpin intermediate and postfusion conformations were used. The epitopes for 2F5 and 4E10 were found to be exposed only on a form designed to mimic an prehairpin intermediate state during viral entry, which helps to explain the rarity of 2F5- and 2E10-like antibody responses.
Frey2008
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: This study describes the molecular features of murine anti-idiotypic MAb Ab2/3H6, which mimics the antigen recognition site of 2F5. Mice immunization with AB2/3H6 Fab variants elicited a specific 2F5-like humoral immune response.
Gach2008a
(anti-idiotype, mimics, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
2F5: This study describes an expression, purification and in vivo administration in guinea pigs of an anti-idiotypic HIV-1 vaccine based on murine anti-idiotypic MAb Ab2/3H6, which mimics the antigen recognition site of 2F5.
Gach2008
(anti-idiotype, mimics, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: 2F5 binding to gp41 was partially blocked by murine MAbs 5A9 and 13H11. 13H11 and the three cluster II human MAbs 98-6, 126-6 and 167-D blocked 2F5 binding to gp41 epitopes to variable degrees; the combination of 98-6 and 13H11 completely blocked 2F5 binding. MAb 2F5 showed strong binding to HIV-1-positive infected cells.
Alam2008
(antibody interactions, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: The potency of 2F5 was 25-fold higher than the potency of new neutralizing Fab 3674 in neutralization of laboratory and primary strains of HIV-1 subtypes A, B and C.
Gustchina2007
(neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: A D386N change in the V4 region, which results in restoration of N-glycosylation at this site, did not have any impact on the neutralization of a mutant virus by 2F5 compared to wildtype. Also, there was no association between increased sensitivity to 2F5 neutralization and enhanced macrophage tropism.
Dunfee2007
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This review summarizes data on the development of HIV-1 centralized genes (consensus and ancestral) for induction of neutralizing antibody responses. Functionality and conformation of native epitopes in proteins based on the centralized genes was tested and confirmed by binding to 2F5 and other MAbs. Antibodies induced by immunization with these centralized proteins did not, however, have the breadth and potency compared to that of 2F5 and other broadly neutralizing MAbs. 2F5 physical characteristics of autoantibodies as a possible reason for lack of 2F5 broad production is also discussed.
Gao2007
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: 2F5 bound with slower on-rates and faster off-rates to the SF162gp140 and ΔV2gp140 proteins than the anti-gp41MAbs P4A3 and P4C2, but in contrast to the anti-gp41 MAbs, it neutralized the SF162 virus. Thus, differences in neutralization potency could not be explained by differing kinetics.
Derby2007
(neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Competition of free gp120 89.6 with immobilized gp140 89.6 for binding to 2F5 was assessed. The binding of this Ab to coated gp140 was not affected by an increase in the gp120 concentration.
Zhang2006a
(binding affinity)
-
2F5: The epitope recognition sequence for this Ab was introduced into the corresponding region of SIVmac239 but the replication of this viral variant (SIVmac239/2F5) was delayed in comparison to the parental virus. SIVmac239/2F5 was specifically neutralized by MAb 2F5.
Yuste2006
(neutralization, SIV)
-
2F5: Significant levels of 2F5 were shown to bind to HA/gp41 expressed on cell surfaces and this Ab did stain cells expressing HA/gp41 in a fluorescence assay. However, a much smaller percentage of the HIV 89.6 Env expressing cells were stained with this Ab than with 2G12, indicating that this Ab recognition site on gp41 is masked by the gp120 subunit in the HIV Env protein and that it is more easily accessible on the HA/gp41 chimeric protein.
Ye2006
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Viruses with wild-type HIV-1JR-FL Envs and HIV-1 hXBc2 Envs were neutralized by this Ab at much lower concentrations than HIV-1 YU2 Env viruses. Viruses bearing inserted artificial epitopes of FLAG in the V4 region were as sensitive to neutralization by this Ab as the parental viruses. A clear relationship between neutralization potency and the affinity of the anti-FLAG antibody for its cognate epitope was observed.
Yang2006
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: SHIV SF162p4 virus used as challenge in ISCOM vaccinated macaques was shown to be highly sensitive to neutralization by this Ab.
Pahar2006
(neutralization)
-
2F5: 2 of 18 subtype C env-pseudotyped clones derived from individuals in acute/early stage of HIV-1 infection were neutralized by this Ab, both of them had a DKW motif reported to be a requirement for 2F5recognition. The sensitivity of clones to a mix of Abs IgG1b12, 2G12 and 2F5 was tracked to IgG1b12.
Li2006a
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, acute/early infection, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: This Ab was used as a positive control in the neutralization assay. At the highest Ab concentrations, 2F5 was able to neutralize several primary isolates but not all, with a neutralization pattern similar to that of rabbit sera immunized with monovalent and polyvalent DNA-prime/protein-boost Env from different HIV-1 subtypes. At a reduced concentrations, 2F5 showed much weaker neutralizing activities.
Wang2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Interaction of this Ab with membrane model systems revealed that 2F5 does not significantly interact with model viral or target cell membranes indicating that it does not use membrane interaction prior to gp41 docking.
Veiga2006
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: The capacity of different soluble lysoderivatives to inhibit 2F5 binding to immobilized HIV-1 peptide epitope were compared and it was shown that only dilysocardiolipin resulted in effective blocking. Dilysocardiolipin was also shown to compete with native-functional gp41 for 2F5 recognition indicating that specific cardiolipin recognition by 2F5 involves the epitope-binding site.
Sanchez-Martinez2006a
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: This Ab is shown to have the capacity to penetrate into the membrane interfaces and recognize isolated peptide-epitope sequence embedded into the membrane, however, 2F5 recognizes its epitope with lower affinity when immersed into the membrane interface. This lower affinity is suggested to result from a differently oriented epitope residues in the membrane-bound state.
Sanchez-Martinez2006
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: The effect of epitope position on 2F5 neutralization was examined by inserting the 2F5 epitope into MLV proline rich region Env surface protein (SU) or into MLV Env TM comparable to its natural position. 2F5 was shown to block cell fusion and virus infection with the SU-located 2F5 epitope while MLV with HA epitope at the same position was not neutralized by anti-HA. 2F5 was shown to block Env-mediated cell fusion in MLV with TM-located 2F5 epitope. Epitope position was also shown to have effect on neutralization by 2F5, where inhibition of cell fusion was more than 10-fold lower when the 2F5 epitope was in SU than in TM.
Ou2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: This Ab recognized AIS (amphipathic-at-interface sequence)-FP (fusion peptide) hybrid sequence with higher affinity than the linear AIS, indicating that the hybrid sequence better emulates the native gp41 2F5 epitope.
Lorizate2006a
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: PreTM peptide lacks the complete epitope sequence required for efficient recognition of this Ab. Thus, 2F5 was not able to arrest the leakage process and pore-formation at the viral membrane surface indicating that blocking of membrane destabilization depends on specific 4E10 epitope recognition.
Lorizate2006
-
2F5: Novel approaches based on sequential (SAP) and competitive (CAP) antigen panning methodologies, and use of antigens with increased exposure of conserved epitopes, for enhanced identification of broadly cross-reactive neutralizing Abs are reviewed. Previously known broadly neutralizing human mAbs are compared to Abs identified by these methods.
Zhang2007
(review)
-
2F5: Spread of HIV-1 through formation of virological synapses (VS) between infected and uninfected T-cells was shown to require Env-CD4 receptor interactions. Treatment of cells with 2F5 did not block VS-mediated transfer, indicating that VS-mediated transfer is not dependent on activation of viral membrane fusion. 2F5 at the same or lower concentrations blocked cell-free infection.
Chen2007
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Pseudoviruses derived from gp120 env variants that evolved in multiple macaques infected with SHIV 89.6P displayed a range of degrees of virion-associated Env cleavage. Pseudoviruses with higher amount of cleaved Env were more resistant to neutralization by 2F5. The gp41 sequence was the same in all pseudoviruses, indicating that changes in gp120 can mediate sensitivity of gp41 to neutralization.
Blay2007
(neutralization)
-
2F5: To test the immunogenicity of three molecularly engineered gp41 variants on the cell surface their reactivity with 2F5 was assessed. The reactivity of 4cSSL24 variant was comparable to gp160 while the other two variants showed somewhat lower expression levels. When guinea pigs were immunized with the three variants, the level of the specific anti-gp41 Ab responses was low with the anti-gp41 response preferentially directed to the C-helical domain, away from the MPER region.
Kim2007
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
2F5: No differences in neutralization sensitivity between (R5)X4 and R5 viruses obtained early and late after X4 emergence were observed.
Bunnik2007
(co-receptor, neutralization)
-
2F5: HIV-1 neutralized with 2F5 was shown to be more efficiently captured by immature monocyte-derived DCs (iMDDCs) and DC-SIGN-expressing Raji cells than nonneutralized virus. 2F5-neutralized virus captured by these cells was successfully released and transferred to CD4+ T lymphocytes. The released virus could be re-neutralized by 2F5 before infecting CD4+ T cells, indicating that Ab-HIV-1 complex is separated upon capture by DC-SIGN cells. Capture of 2F5-neutralized virus was inhibited by blocking Fc receptors and DC-SIGN on iMDDCs, indicating significant role of DC-SIGN, and a partial role of Fc receptors, in the Ab-enhanced capture of HIV-1.
vanMontfort2007
(enhancing activity, neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
2F5: Infusion of a MAb cocktail (4E10, 2G12 and 2F5) into HIV-1 infected subjects was shown to be associated with increased levels of serum anti-cardiolipin and anti-phosphatidylserine Ab titers, and increased coagulation times. In the absence or in the presence of adult and neonate plasma, 2F5 exhibited low binding to phosphatidylserine, did not bind to cardiolipin, and did not induce significant prolongations of clotting times in human plasma, indicating that infusion of 2F5 was not responsible for autoreactivity and prolonged clotting times.
Vcelar2007
(antibody interactions, autoantibody or autoimmunity, binding affinity, immunotherapy)
-
2F5: The major infectivity and neutralization differences between a PBMC-derived HIV-1 W61D strain and its T-cell line adapted counterpart were conferred by the interactions of three Env amino acid substitutions, E440G, D457G and H564N. Chimeric Env-pseudotyped virus Ch5, containing all three of the mutations, was only marginally more neutralization sensitive to 2F5 than Ch2, which did not contain any of these mutations. Env-pseudotyped viruses containing D457G mutation alone, or in combination with E440G or H564N, were also more sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 than Ch2.
Beddows2005a
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Four primary isolates (PIs), Bx08, Bx17, 11105C and Kon, were tested for binding and neutralization by 2F5. 2F5 was able to neutralize Bx08, Bx17 and 11105C with various efficiencies, but bound inefficiently to all four PIs. There was no direct correlation between binding and neutralization of the four PIs by 2F5. CD4-induced gp120 shedding had no effect on binding of 2F5 to Bx08.
Burrer2005
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A panel of 60 HIV-1 isolates, with complete genome sequences available, was formed for neutralization assay standardization. It comprises of 10 isolates from each of the subtypes A, B, C, D, CRF01_AE and CRF02AG, with majority of the viruses being of R5 phenotype and few of X4 phenotype. Neutralization profile of each isolate was assessed by measuring neutralization by sCD4, a cocktail of MAbs including 2G12, 2F5 and IgG1b12, and a large pool of sera collected from HIV-1 positive patients. The MAb cocktail neutralized with >50% a large portion of the isolates (51/60) including: 10 subtype A isolates, 8 subtype B isolates, 8 subtype C isolates, 9 subtype D isolates, 7 CRF-01_AE isolates, and 9 CRF_02AG isolates.
Brown2005a
(assay or method development, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The structure of the 2F5 MAb, particularly its CDRH3 region's binding mechanisms to the MPER region of gp41, and possibly the cellular membrane as well, are reviewed. Engineering of Abs based on revealed structures of broadly neutralizing MAbs is discussed.
Burton2005
(antibody binding site, review, structure)
-
2F5: Trimeric gp140CF protein synthesized from an artificial group M consensus Env gene (CON6) bound well to 2F5, indicating correct exposure of the 2F5 epitope.
Gao2005a
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: 2F5 neutralized viral isolates HXBc2, SF162, 89.6, BaL, ADA, and YU2. Neutralization was concentration dependent, as higher MAb concentration resulted in higher % of neutralization.
Grundner2005
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Furin co-transfection did not have an effect on the reactivity of Δ140ct HXBc2 and 3.2P pseudoviruses with 2F5, or on their neutralization sensitivity. Presence or absence of sialic acid residues did not affect Env reactivity with 2F5. A cleavage-competent form of 3.2P reacted poorly with 2F5, while its cleavage-defective counterpart showed higher level of MAb reactivity. Both cleavage-competent and cleavage-defective HXBc2 showed higher levels of reactivity to 2F5. DDT-induced dissociation of SOS gp140 and the estimate of cleavage was scored higher when 2F5 was used as detection Ab than when B13 MAb was used.
Herrera2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Why broadly neutralizing Abs, such as 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10, are extremely rare, and their protective abilities and potential role in immunotherapy are discussed.
Julg2005
(neutralization, immunotherapy, review)
-
2F5: Point mutations in the highly conserved structural motif LLP-2 within the intracytoplasmic tail of gp41 resulted in conformational alternations of both gp41 and gp120. The alternations did not affect virus CD4 binding, coreceptor binding site exposure, or infectivity of the virus, but did result in decreased binding of certain MAbs and increased neutralization resistance to MAbs as well as to human polyclonal HIV-Ig and pooled human sera. 2F5 MAb, however, effectively neutralized both the LLP-2 mutant and wildtype viruses, and also exhibited similar levels of binding to both the LLP-2 mutant and the wildtype virus.
Kalia2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A series of genetically modified Env proteins were generated and expressed in both insect and animal cells to be monitored for their antigenic characteristics. For 2F5, most of the modified proteins expressed in insect cells containing the 3G mutation (mutations in 3 glycosylation sites) showed higher levels of binding to the MAb than the wildtype did. Additional presence of a glycosylation mutation 1G, close to the 2F5 epitope, increased binding of 2F5 compared to the binding to Env without the mutation. The highest binding to 2F5 was observed for the dV1V2 mutant. When expressed in animal cells, the 3G mutant was the one that displayed increased binding to 2F5 compared to other mutants.
Kang2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
2F5: A trimeric recombinant gp140 construct was developed for immunization studies. Its structural integrity was assessed by a panel of MAbs. The trimeric recombinant gp140 lacked the membrane proximal ectodomain segment of gp41, but the 2F5 Ab did bind efficiently to the gp140 trimers containing the entire gp41 ectodomain.
Kim2005
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: A trimeric gp41 construct comprising the env transmembrane domain and the extracellular C-terminal region (gp41ctm) was incorporated into liposomes. 2F5 bound to the liposome-incorporated gp41ctm, indicating that its extracellular region is accessible to this Ab. Sera from mice immunized with either gp41ctm alone or with gp41ctm-liposome did not show any significant neutralization activity, indicating that the construct might not properly expose its 2F5 epitope.
Lenz2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: Full-length gp160 clones were derived from acute and early human HIV-1 infections and used as env-pseudotyped viruses in neutralization assays for their characterization as neutralization reference agents. 13 out of 19 pseudoviruses were neutralized by 2F5, but few required higher concentration of the Ab for neutralization. MN, SF162.LS and IIIB strains were highly sensitive for neutralization by 2F5. Resistance to neutralization by 2F5 was associated with mutations in the DKW motif, or elsewhere in the 2F5 epitope. A mixture of IgG1b12, 2F5 and 2G12 (TriMab) exhibited potent neutralizing activity against all Env-pseudotyped viruses except one. 8 out of 12 Env-pseudotyped viruses were more sensitive to neutralization by 2F5 than their uncloned parental PBMC-grown viruses.
Li2005a
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: Pseudoviruses expressing HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins from BL01, BR07 and 89.6 strains were compared in neutralization assays to replication competent clone derived from transfection of 293T cells (IMC-293T) and to the IMC-293T derived from a single passage through PBMC (IMC-PBMC). The neutralization responses of pseudoviruses and corresponding IMC-293T to 2F5 were similar, while a significant decrease in viral neutralization sensitivity to 2F5 was observed for all three IMC-PBMC viruses. The decrease was associated with an increase in average virion envelope glycoprotein content on the PBMC-derived virus.
Louder2005
(assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: A short review of studies on 2F5 interaction with autoantigens, epitope accessibility, structure, and neutralizing capability. The reasons why 2F5 appears infrequently in nature are discussed.
Nabel2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, immunotherapy, review)
-
2F5: Viruses containing substitutions at either L568 or K574 of the gp41 hydrophobic pocket were resistant to D5-IgG1 but were as sensitive to 2F5 as the wildtype virus. 2F5 neutralized more isolates than D5-IgG1 and was shown to be more potent. 2F5 did not, however, neutralize some of the isolates neutralized by D5-IgG1.
Miller2005
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This short review summarizes recent findings of the role of neutralizing Abs in controlling HIV-1 infection. Certain neutralizing MAbs and their potential role in immunotherapy and vaccination, as well as the reasons for their poor immunogenicity, are discussed.
Montefiori2005
(antibody binding site, therapeutic vaccine, escape, immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Escape mutations in HR1 of gp41 that confer resistance to Enfuvirtide reduced infection and fusion efficiency and also delayed fusion kinetics of HIV-1. The mutations also conferred increased neutralization sensitivity of virus to 2F5. Enhanced neutralization correlated with reduced fusion kinetics, indicating that the mutations result in Env proteins remaining in the CD4-triggered state for a longer period of time.
Reeves2005
(antibody binding site, drug resistance, neutralization, escape, HAART, ART)
-
2F5: More that 90% of viruses from both acutely and chronically infected HIV-1 patients were inhibited by this Ab, however, viruses from acute patients were significantly more sensitive to 2F5 than viruses from chronic patients. The epitope of this Ab was highly conserved among all isolates tested suggesting that the higher susceptibility of acute viruses may be due to better epitope accessibility. The sensitivity of viruses to 2F5 was also highly correlated to their sensitivities to 4E10.
Rusert2005
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, autologous responses, neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
2F5: This review summarizes data on the role of NAb in HIV-1 infection and the mechanisms of Ab protection, data on challenges and strategies to design better immunogens that may induce protective Ab responses, and data on structure and importance of MAb epitopes targeted for immune intervention. The importance of standardized assays and standardized virus panels in neutralization and vaccine studies is also discussed.
Srivastava2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, immunotherapy, mother-to-infant transmission, review, structure)
-
2F5: Six acutely and eight chronically infected patients were passively immunized with a mix of 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10 neutralizing Abs during treatment interruption. Two chronically and four acutely infected individuals showed evidence of a delay in viral rebound during Ab treatment suggesting that NAbs can contain viremia in HIV-1 infected individuals. All subjects with virus sensitive to 2G12 developed Ab escape mutants resulting in loss of viremia and failure to treatment while no escape was observed for 4E10 and 2F5. Plasma levels of 2G12 were substantially higher than those of 2F5 and 4E10, and the 2G12 levels exceeded the in vitro required 90% inhibitory doses by two orders of magnitude in subjects that responded to Ab treatment. No such differences were observed for 2F5 or 4E10, suggesting that high levels of NAbs are required for inhibition in vivo, and that the in vivo concentrations of 4E10 and 2F5 might have been too low to control viremia and exert a selective pressure.
Trkola2005
(acute/early infection, escape, immunotherapy, HAART, ART, supervised treatment interruptions (STI))
-
2F5: Ab neutralization of viruses with mixtures of neutralization-sensitive and neutralization-resistant envelope glycoproteins was measured. It was concluded that binding of a single Ab molecule is sufficient to inactivate function of an HIV-1 glycoprotein trimer. The inhibitory effect of the Ab was similar for neutralization-resistant and -sensitive viruses indicating that the major determinant of neutralization potency of an Ab is the efficiency with which it binds to the trimer. It was also indicated that each functional trimer on the virus surface supports HIV-1 entry independently, meaning that every trimer on the viral surface must be bound by an Ab for neutralization of the virus to be achieved.
Yang2005b
(neutralization)
-
2F5: A substantial fraction of soluble envelope glycoprotein trimers contained inter-subunit disulfide bonds. Reduction of these disulfide bonds had little effect on binding of the 2F5 to the glycoprotein, indicating that the inter-S-S bonds had no impact on the exposure of 2F5 epitope.
Yuan2005
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: This Ab recognized the gp41 epitope ALDKWQ from the 92/BR/025.9 strain. HIV-1 infected patients treated with T20 showed decreased reactivity of their sera to a peptide containing the 2F5 epitope. The Ab titer to this peptide recovered after cessation of T20 therapy. It is indicated that 2F5 may interfere with the T20-HR1 interaction.
Vincent2005
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: This review focuses on the importance of neutralizing Abs in protecting against HIV-1 infection, including mechanisms of Ab interference with the viral lifecycle, Ab responses elicited during natural HIV infection, and use of monoclonal and polyclonal Abs in passive immunization. In addition, vaccine design strategies for eliciting of protective broadly neutralizing Abs are discussed. MAbs included in this review are: 2F5, Clone 3 (CL3), 4E10, Z13, IgG1b12, 2G12, m14, 447-52D, 17b, X5, m16, 47e, 412d, E51, CM51, F105, F425, 19b, 2182, DO142-10, 697-D, 448D, 15e and Cβ1.
McCann2005
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity, immunotherapy, review)
-
Two ELDKWA-specific MAbs were obtained from mice immunized with four copies of ELDKWA-epitope with spacers between the epitopes. The two Abs inhibited syncytium formation less efficiently than 2F5 but were as potent as 2F5 in neutralization of primary isolate 92US657. The two murine MAbs were ineffective against the laboratory-adapted HIV-1 IIIB strain while 2F5 neutralized successfully. Neither 2F5 nor the two new MAbs neutralized group O primary isolate BCF02.
Zhang2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: 2F5 was investigated in different neutralization formats, including the standard format that measures activity over the entire infection period and several formats that emphasize various stages of infection. 2F5 showed modest neutralization in the standard format, which was increased with the gp41 tail truncation and/or addition of a disulfide bridge linking gp120 and gp41. 2F5 was also able to neutralize in all the other neutralization formats analyzed, suggesting that it binds Env trimers at various stages of infection. None of the analyzed HIV-1+ human plasmas neutralized in the post-CD4/CCR5 format indicating absence of 2F5 and 4E10 - like Abs.
Crooks2005
(antibody binding site, assay or method development, neutralization)
-
2F5: This review summarizes data on the polyspecific reactivities to host antigens by the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10. It also hypothesizes that some broadly reactive Abs might not be routinely made because they are derived from B cell populations that frequently make polyspecific Abs and are thus subjected to B cell negative selection.
Haynes2005a
(antibody interactions, review, antibody polyreactivity)
-
2F5: This review summarizes data on 447-52D and 2219 crystallographic structures when bound to V3 peptides and their corresponding neutralization capabilities. 2F5, like 447-52D and like other HIV-1 neutralizing Abs, was shown to have long CDR H3 loop, which is suggested to help Abs access recessed binding sites on the virus.
Stanfield2005
(antibody binding site, review, structure)
-
2F5: In addition to gp120-gp41 trimers, HIV-1 particles were shown to bear nonfunctional gp120-gp41 monomers and gp120-depleted gp41 stumps on their surface. 2F5 effectively neutralized wildype virus particles, however, it did not capture virus efficiently. 2F5 was found to bind to both nonfunctional monomers and to gp120-gp41 trimers. Binding of 2F5 to trimers correlated with its neutralization of wildtype virus particles. Monomer binding did not correlate with neutralization, but it did correlate with virus capture. It is hypothesized that the nonfunctional monomers on the HIV-1 surface serve to divert the Ab response, helping the virus to avoid neutralization.
Moore2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Macaques were immunized with SF162gp140, ΔV2gp140, ΔV2ΔV3gp140 and ΔV3gp140 constructs and their antibody responses were compared to the broadly reactive NAb responses in a macaque infected with SHIV SF162P4, and with pooled sera from humans infected with heterologous HIV-1 isolates (HIVIG). 2F5 recognized all four gp140 proteins equally. 2F5 was found to equally neutralize SF162 and Δ2F5.4E10, which is a virus with mutations in the 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes and is resistant to neutralization by 2F5 and 4E10. This indicates that 2F5-like Abs were not present in sera from the gp140-immunized animals nor in the SHIV-infected and in the HIVIG sera.
Derby2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5:A fusion protein (FLSC R/T-IgG1) that targets CCR5 was expressed from a synthetic gene linking a single chain gp120-CD4 complex containing an R5 gp120 sequence with the hinge-Ch2-Ch3 portion of human IgG1. The fusion protein did not activate the co-receptor by binding. In PBMC assays, FLSC R/T-IgG1 neutralized primary R5 HIV-1 isolates more potently than 2F5, while in cell-line based assays they were comparable.
Vu2006
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Sera from rabbits immunized with either monomeric gp120, trimeric cleavage-defective gp140 or disulfide-stabilized soluble trimeric gp140 were tested for neutralization of chimeric SIVmac239 viruses expressing epitope for this Ab. Little or no neutralization was observed indicating that little or no Ab activity in these rabbit sera was directed against the gp41 region.
Beddows2007
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Env-pseudotyped viruses were constructed from the gp160 envelope genes from seven children infected with subtype C HIV-1. 2F5 failed to neutralize any of the seven viruses, correlating with the replacement of the crucial lysine at the position 665 of the 2F5 epitope on these viruses. When this Ab was mixed with IgG1b12 and 2G12, the neutralization was similar as to IgGb12 alone, indicating that the majority of the pool activity was due to IgG1b12. When 4E10 was added to this mix, all isolates were neutralized.
Gray2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, responses in children, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: Pharmacokinetic properties of this Ab were studied in HIV infected patients infused with high doses of 2G12. The Ab did not elicit an endogenous immune response and had distribution and systemic clearance values similar to other Abs. The elimination half-life was measured to 4.3 days.
Joos2006
(kinetics, immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Inhibition of 2F5 binding to gp160 by 2F5-like Abs in sera from long-term non-progressors (LTNP) was determined. 2F5-like Abs were present in almost all sera from LTNPs but at a lower levels than b12. No statistically significant correlation was found for the specificity of this Ab comparing sera able to neutralize all four HIV-1 strains and sera that could not.
Braibant2006
(enhancing activity, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Neutralization rates and rate constants for the neutralization of clade B primary isolates SF33, SF162 and 89.6 by this Ab were determined. Statistically significant neutralization was not observed for isolates SF162 and 89.6. It was shown that neutralization sensitivity is not associated with neutralization of cell-associated or free virus.
Davis2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, kinetics)
-
2F5: The majority of broadly cross-reactive neutralizing (BCN) Envs were neutralized at lower concentrations of 2F5 than the non-BCN Envs. Amino acid variability of the 2F5 epitope was examined. The presence of T at position 662 was associated with increased sensitivity to neutralization by 2F5 while the K665N mutation resulted in resistance to 2F5
Cham2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, escape, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Neutralization of HIV-1 primary isolates of different HIV-1 clades (A, B, C, D, E) by 2F5 was determined in cells expressing high or low surface concentrations of CD4 and CCR5 receptors. CD4 cell surface concentration had no effect on the inhibitory activity of this Ab while the CCR5 surface concentration had a significant effect decreasing the 50% inhibitory concentration of 2F5 in cell lines with low CCR5.
Choudhry2006
(co-receptor, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Genetic variability and co-variation of the MAb 2F5, 4E10 and Z13 epitopes in B and non B clades was investigated. A significant shift in the predominant sequence patterns over time was observed for all three epitopes. Also, significant inter-subtype genetic variability of the three epitopes was detected. However, the 4E10 epitope displayed a more similar variability within B clade and non-B clades, concurring with the cross-clade neutralizing activity of this MAb. Epitope co-variation was also noted, as one third of the recently isolated HIV-1 strains displayed simultaneous epitope variants.
Dong2006
(antibody binding site, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The ability of this Ab to inhibit viral growth was increased when macrophages and immature dendritic cells (iDCs) were used as target cells instead of PHA-stimulated PBMCs. It is suggested that inhibition of HIV replication by this Ab for macrophages and iDCs can occur by two distinct mechanisms, neutralization of infectivity involving only the Fab part of the IgG, and, an IgG-FcγR-dependent interaction leading to endocytosis and degradation of HIV particles.
Holl2006
(dendritic cells)
-
2F5: 2F5 was shown to interact with cells transiently transfected by VSV-gp120 expressing vector and stained with sera from mice immunized intranasally with VSV vector expressing HIV-1 HXB2 gp120, indicating that VSV-HXB2 immunization produced anti-HIV-1 Abs.
Jiang2006
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Viruses with cleavage-competent 2G12-knockout Env and cleavage-defective Env able to bind 2G12 were constructed. 2F5 was shown to bind more to the cleavage-defective Envs than to the cleavage-competent Envs. More 2F5 binding was detected to cells co-expressing wildtype and leavage-defective Env than to a mixture of cells expressing either, suggesting that uncleaved Env proteins have an enhancing effect of the binding of 2F5 to the heterotrimer or that fewer than three Abs can bind per trimer and that 2F5 has a higher affinity for the uncleaved Env. Env pseudotyped virions bearing either Wt3.2P(+)gp140δct Env or a mixture of the wildtype and cleavage-defective Env had similar sensitivities to neutralization by 2F5.
Herrera2006
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Inhibition of R5 HIV replication by monoclonal and polyclonal IgGs and IgAs in iMDDCs was evaluated. The neutralizing activity of 2F5 was observed to be higher in iMDDCs than in PBLs and PHA-stimulated PBMCs. Furthermore, the kinetics of Ab addition showed that this MAb interferred with the first events of HIV-1 entry in iMDDCs. High concentrations of 2F5 triggered a non-HIV-related maturation of target cells. Blockade of FcγRII on iMDDCs decreased the anti-HIV activity of 2F5 while increased expression of FcγRI increased inhibition of HIV by 2F5, suggesting the involvement of these receptors in the HIV-inhibitory activity of this Ab.
Holl2006a
(neutralization, kinetics, dendritic cells)
-
2F5: 2F5 was produced in transgenic tobacco BY2 suspension cell cultures. The plant derived antibody was efficiently assembled and intact. When compared to CHO-derived 2F5, the plant derived 2F5 showed similar kinetic properties and 89% of the binding capacity of the CHO-derived Ab. However, it was only 33% as efficient in HIV-1 RF neutralization assay.
Sack2007
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2F5: This study found that, contrary to expectations, the viruses resistant to b12, 4E10, 2G12 and 2F5 neutralization did not have lower replication kinetics than viruses sensitive to neutralization. Viruses from early infection tended to have relatively low replications rates.
Quakkelaar2007
(viral fitness and/or reversion, acute/early infection, escape)
-
2F5: Z13e1, a high affinity variant of Fab Z13, was identified through targeted mutagenesis and affinity selection against gp41 and an MPER peptide. Z13e1 showed 100-fold improvement in binding affinity for MPER antigens over Z13, but was still less potent than 4E10 at neutralizing several pseudotyped Envs. Neutralization assays of HIV-1 JR2 MPER alanine mutants showed that mutants W666A and W672A were completely resistant to neutralization by 2F5.
Nelson2007
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: High levels of gp120-specific Abs were elicited when mice and rabbits were immunized by DNA priming and protein boosting with G1 and G2 grafts, consisting of 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes, respectively, engrafted into the V1/V2 region of gp120. A consistent NAb response against the homologous JR-FL virus was detected in rabbits but not in mice. 4E10 bound to the engrafted construct, but embedding the MPER epitopes in the immunogenic V1/V2 region did not result in eliciting anti-MPER antibodies in mice or rabbits. 2F5 bound to the Graft1 antigen consisting of 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes engrafted into the immunogenic V1/V2 region of gp120 much more weakly than to gp41 suggesting that the 2F5 epitope might be hidden or folded incorrectly in this construct.
Law2007
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: This review describes the effectiveness of the current HIV-1 immunogens in eliciting neutralizing antibody responses to different clades of HIV-1. It also summarizes different evasion and antibody escape mechanisms, as well as the most potent neutralizing MAbs and their properties. MAbs reviewed in this article are: 2G12, IgG1b12, 2F5, 4E10, A32, 447-52D and, briefly, D50. Novel immunogen design strategies are also discussed.
Haynes2006a
(antibody binding site, neutralization, escape, review, subtype comparisons, structure)
-
2F5: This review summarizes current knowledge of HIV-1 lipid-protein interactions and antibodies to liposomal phospholipids and cholesterol. A potential use of Abs to lipids to neutralize HIV-1 and a potential role of the broadly neutralizing HIV-1 Abs, mainly 2F5 and 4E10, in binding to phospholipids is discussed.
Alving2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization, review)
-
2F5: The gp140δCFI protein of CON-S M group consensus protein and gp140CFI and gp140CF proteins of CON6 and WT viruses from HIV-1 subtypes A, B and C were expressed in recombinant vaccinia viruses and tested as immunogens in guinea pigs. 2F5 was shown to bind specifically to CON6, CON-S and subtype B recombinant proteins but not to subtype A and C recombinant proteins or to the two subtype B gp120 proteins. The specific binding of 2F5 to CON-S indicated that its conformational epitope was intact.
Liao2006
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Viruses from 304 days and at 643 days (time of death) post-infection of a macaque infected with SHIV SF162P4 were resistant to contemporaneous serum that had broadly reactive NAbs. While resistance to anti-V3, b12, and anti-V1 MAbs developed over time, viruses remained sensitive to 2F5 and 2G12.
Kraft2007
(neutralization, escape)
-
2F5: Binding of 2F5 to gp41 was not significantly affected by the small molecule HIV-1 entry inhibitor IC9564. IC9564 induces conformational change of gp120 to allow CD4i antibody 17b to bind, but inhibits CD4-induced gp41 conformational changes.
Huang2007
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Using synchronously infected cell cultures, the binding of b12, 2F5 and 2G12 to the cell-free virus interferes with a step of infection subsequent to cell attachment. HIV escape from b12 occurred 30 and 10 min before escape from 2F5 for IIIB infection of HeLa cells and JRFL infection of Cf2Th-CD4/CCR5 cells, respectively, indicating that neutralization efficiency is determined by the time frames during which Ab can bind to the receptor-activated envelope proteins during the entry phase. 2F5 neutralization was enhanced by a decreasing the rate of coreceptor CXCR4 engagement, presumably by increasing the time the CD4 bound Env was available and slowing viral entry kinetics.
Haim2007
(co-receptor, kinetics)
-
2F5: Kinetics experiments of 2F5 binding to MPER region during viral fusion showed that the 2F5 kinetics resembled those of the six-helix bundle formation and fusion blocker C34, indicating that the function of MPER in the fusion cascade is still in effect at a late stage in the fusion reaction. Binding of 2F5 was shown to decrease upon triggering HIV-1 Env-expressing cells with appropriate target cells and addition of C34 did not counteract this loss, suggesting that changes in exposure of MPER occur independently of the six-helix bundle formation.
Dimitrov2007
(antibody binding site, neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
2F5: Chimeric SIV viruses containing 2F5 and 4E10 epitopes were not neutralized by broadly neutralizing sera from two clade B and one clade A infected asymptomatic individuals, indicating that MPER NAb epitopes did not account for the broad neutralizing activity observed.
Dhillon2007
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2F5: SOSIP Env proteins are modified by the introduction of a disulfide bond between gp120 and gp41 (SOS), and an I559P (IP) substitution in gp41, and form trimers. The KNH1144 subtype A virus formed more stable trimers than did the prototype subtype B SOSIP Env, JRFL. The stability of gp140 trimers was increased for JR-FL and Ba-L SOSIP proteins by substituting the five amino acid residues in the N-terminal region of gp41 with corresponding residues from KNH1144 virus. b12, 2G12, 2F5, 4E10 and CD4-IgG2 all bound similarly to the WT and to the stabilized JRFL SOSIP timers, suggesting that the trimer-stabilizing substitutions do not impair the overall antigenic structure of gp140 trimers.
Dey2007
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: 2F5, 4E10, and m46 neutralization was more potent when tested in a HeLa cell line expressing low CCR5 than in a HeLa cell line expressing high CCR5 levels. PBMC tend to have low CCR5 expression.
Choudhry2007
(assay or method development, co-receptor, neutralization)
-
2F5: 7/15 and 9/15 subtype A HIV-1 envelopes from samples taken early in infection were neutralized by MAbs 4E10 and 2F5, respectively, and the potency was generally modest. Mutational patterns in the MAb binding sites did not readily explain the observed patterns of sensitivity and resistance.
Blish2007
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, acute/early infection, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The autoantibody nature of the two membrane proximal HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10, was evaluated by comparison to human anti-cardiolipin MAbs derived from a primary antiphospholipid syndrome patient. Both 2F5 and 4E10 bound specifically to cardiolipin. CDR3 sequence similarities between 2F5, 4E10 and anti-cardiolipin MAbs were observed. Both 2F5 and 4E10 binding to the peptide-lipid conjugate was best fit by a two-step conformational change model. These results suggest that these MAbs share binding and structural similarities with human autoantibodies and their induction by vaccines or natural infection therefore might be limited by immune tolerance mechanisms.
Alam2007
(antibody sequence)
-
2F5: Four consensus B Env constructs: full length gp160, uncleaved gp160, truncated gp145, and N-linked glycosylation-site deleted (gp160-201N/S) were compared. All were packaged into virions, and all but the fusion defective uncleaved version mediated infection using the CCR5 co-receptor. Primary isolate Envs varied between completely resistant or somewhat sensitive to neutralization by membrane proximal Nabs 4E10 and 2F5. The most sensitive Con B construct was the truncated version of Con B Env with a stop codon immediately following the membrane spanning domain, suggesting that truncation of the gp41 cytoplasmic domain facilitates greater accessibility of the MPER region. The Con B gp160 was quite resistant, and the gp160-201N/S more sensitive, to 4E10 and 2F5.
Kothe2007
(vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Newborn macaques were challenged orally with the highly pathogenic SHIV89.6P and then treated intravenously with a combination of IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10 one and 12 hours post-virus exposure. All control animals became highly viremic and developed AIDS. In the group treated with mAbs 1 hour post-virus exposure, 3/4 animals were protected from persistent systemic infection and one was protected from disease. In the group treated with mAbs 12 hour post-virus exposure, one animal was protected from persistent systemic infection and disease was prevented or delayed in two animals. IgG1b12, 2G12, and 4E10 were also given 24 hours after exposure in a separate study; 4/4 treated animals become viremic, but with delayed and lower peak viremia relative to controls. 3/4 treated animals did not get AIDS during the follow up period, and 1 showed a delayed progression to AIDS, while the 4 untreated animals died of AIDS. Thus the success of passive immunization with NAbs depends on the time window between virus exposure and the start of immunoprophylaxis.
Ferrantelli2007
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: Ab titers to the 2F5 binding peptide ELDKWA were tested by peptide ELISA in sera from Thais infected with CRF01 virus who were asymptomatic versus those who had AIDS, and antibody titers were found to be significantly lower in AIDS patients. The frequency of recognition of this peptide was low overall (15-35%) in CRF01 infections, as well as infections with clades A-G.
Srisurapanon2005
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons, rate of progression)
-
2F5: A peptide FLAG tag was inserted into the V4 loop of YU-2, a neutralization resistant variant with a short V4 loop. IgG1b12 and 2F5 could neutralize both the WT YU-2 and the modified variant. The high diversity of V4 suggests it does not play a direct role in receptor binding or viral entry, yet M2, an anti-FLAG antibody, neutralized the modified virus, demonstrating that neutralizing activity doesn't have to block functionality of the virus.
Ren2005
(neutralization)
-
2F5: A multi-epitope ELDKWA/ELDEWA string in a glutathione S-transferase (GST) backbone elicited Abs in mice and rabbits that could bind to gp41 carrying either the 2F5 susceptible ELDKWA variant, or the ELDEWA escape variant. Vaccinations with only the ELDKWA epitope or the ELDEWA embedded-peptide constructs yielded type specific Abs.
Wang2005
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, escape)
-
2F5: Alanine scanning mutations of the 21 amino acid region between positions 660-680 showed that only Ala substitutions in the DKW at the core of the epitope reduced binding, positions llelDKWanlwnwfdisnwlw. No single Ala mutation was resistant to both 2F4 and 4E10. Ala substitutions in 12 of the 20 positions enhanced neutralization sensitivity, LLeLdkwanLWNWFdIsnWLW.2F5 inhibits the neutralization activity of peptide T20.
Zwick2005
(antibody binding site, escape)
-
2F5: Passive immunization of 8 HIV-1 infected patients with 4E10, 2F5 and 2G12 (day 0, 4E10; days 7, 14 and 21 4E10+2G12+2F5; virus isolated on days 0 and 77) resulted in 0/8 patients with virus that escaped all three NAbs. No viruses fully escaped 2F5, although 5/8 developed a more than 2-fold increase in 2F5 IC50 concentrations at day 77. No changes in the 2F5 epitope were observed in the 77 day study period, although 3 patients had unusual 2F5 epitope sequences to start with (not A/ELDKWA but SLNNWN, ALDTWE, or KFDNWA); all viruses were susceptible to 2F5 neutralization, although to varying degrees. In a companion in vitro study, resistance to a single MAb emerged in 3-22 weeks, but triple combination resistance was slower and characterized by decreased viral fitness. In the core of the 2F5 epitope, LDKW, the L and W were completely conserved in the in vitro study, but 9/13 cases had a D->N change, 1/13 a K->N, and 1/13 a K->Q. The lack of resistance to the combination of MAbs in vivo and the reduced fitness of the escape mutants selected in vitro suggests passive immunotherapy may be of value in HIV infection.
Nakowitsch2005
(escape, immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Nine anti-gp41 bivalent Fabs that interacted with either or both of the 6-helix bundle and the internal coiled-coil of N-helices of gp41 were selected from a non-immune human phage display library. The IC50 range for the inhibition of LAV ENV-mediated cell-fusion was 6-61 ug/ml. For context, 2F5 and 2G12 (IC50s of 0.5-1.5 ug/ml) were about an order of magnitude more potent in this assay than the best Fabs generated here.
Louis2005
(neutralization)
-
2F5: This study is about the V2 MAb C108g, that is type-specific and neutralizes BaL and HXB2. JR-FL is a neutralization resistant strain; modification of JRFL at V2 positions 167 and 168 (GK->DE) created a C108g epitope, and C108g could potently neutralize the modified JR-FL. The modification in V2 also increased neutralization sensitivity to V3 MABs 4117c, 2219, 2191, and 447-52D, but only had minor effects on neutralization by CD4BS MAb 5145A, and broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, and 2F5.
Pinter2005
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: gp41 and p15E of the porcine endogenous retrovirus (PERV) share structural and functional similarities, and epitopes in the membrane proximal region of p15E are able to elicit NAbs upon immunization with soluble p15E. Rabbits immunized with a VSV recombinant expressing an HIV-1 membrane-proximal external region (MPER) fused to PERV p15E, with a fusion p15E-HIV MPER protein boost, elicited HIV specific NAbs. The MPER contains the 2F5 epitope, and the 2F5 MAb was used as a positive control for neutralization in this study, and could bind to the vaccine construct.
Luo2006
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A peptide containing eight copies of the ELDKWA-epitope separated by aa spacers GSGGGGS, RS, and GS was used to test the impact of spacers on eliciting antibody responses to peptides. Both GSGGGGS and GS induced high titers of ELDKWA peptide-specific Abs in BALB/c mice, which reacted with rsgp41. 2F5 served as a positive control in a Western Blot to determine whether epitope-specific Abs bound to recombinant protein rsgp41.
Liu2005a
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
2F5: Sera from subtype A infected individuals from Cameroon have antibodies that react strongly with subtype A and subtype B V3 loops in fusion proteins, and neutralize SF162 pseudotypes, while sera from 47 subtype B infected individuals reacted only with subtype B V3s. Sera from Cameroon did not neutralize primary A or B isolates, due to indirect masking by the V1/V2 domain rather than due to loss of the target epitope. Neutralization by Cameroonian sera MAbs was blocked by Clade A and B V3 loop fusion proteins, while NAbs to non-V3 epitopes, 2F5, 2G12, and b12, were not blocked.
Krachmarov2005
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: In an attempt to elicit 2F5-like antibodies, the 2F5 epitope ELDKWAS was constrained in the beta-turn sites of the immunoglobulin heavy chain, or alternatively was attached at the C-terminal ends of the immunoglobulin light chain. The constrained heavy chain inserted epitopes bound to 2F5 with 10-fold higher affinity than the light chain unconstrained versions, and when used as an immunogen, elicited epitope-specific antibodies in rabbits, but these antibodies could not neutralize the virus.
Ho2005
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
2F5:2F5 and 4E10 both bind to membrane proximal regions of gp41, and have long hydrophobic CDR3 regions characteristic of polyspecific autoreactive antibodies. Of 35 Env-specific MAbs tested, only 2F5 and 4E10 were reactive with phospholipid cardiolipin. Vaccine induction of antibodies that react with these gp41 membrane proximal regions may be rare because of elimination due to autoantigen mimicry. 2F5 also reacted with centromere B and histone autoantigens, and both 4E10 and 2F5 reacted with HEp-2 cells with diffuse cytoplasmic and nuclear patterns indicating polyspecific autoreactivity.
Haynes2005
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Guinea pigs were immunized with a hybrid HXB2/BaL Env (HIV HXB/BaL gp140δCFI, clade B) in which the tip of the V3 loop (GPGRA) was replaced with the 2F5 epitope LELDKWAS. 2F5 bound to the Env that carried the V3-replacement 2F5 epitope, but antibodies against this construct only neutralized the X4-tropic lab adapted HIV strain IIIB, and not CCR5-HIV BaL or SF162 isolates.
Chakrabarti2005
(vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: 2F5 recognizes the epitope ELDKWA, but does not neutralize viruses carrying the commonly found mutated epitope variants: ELDeWA, ELDsWA, ELDnWA, ELDqWA, ELDtWA, or ELnKWA. Peptide cocktails containing ELDKWA, ELnKWA, ELDeWk, and ELeKWA elicit polyclonal antibodies in rabbits that can bind to all of the natural variants that are escape variants for 2F5 expressed in gp41 via Western blotting, as well as ELDrWA.
Dong2005
(vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity, escape)
-
2F5: Circular dichroism and NMR were used to analyze the structure of the HIV-1 inhibitor peptide T-20 (gp41 HXB2 aa 638-673) that contains the full 2F5 and partial 4E10 epitope. T-20 was unstructured towards the N terminus, and helical in the central and C-terminal regions. The 2F5 epitope sequence (gp41 HXB2 657-670) forms an intrinsic helical structure, which is stable in water.
Biron2005
(structure)
-
2F5: This review summarizes properties of 2F5 and its binding to the prefusogenic membrane proximal region of gp41. The linear core epitope does not stimulate cross-reactive NAbs when placed outside the context of gp41, suggesting its presentation in a highly specific molecular framework is critical.
McGaughey2004
(vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: Infusions of 2F5 and 2G12 intravenously administered 24h prior to vaginal SHIV-89.P challenge are able to protect macaques from infections. Animals that receive a IL-2 adjuvanted DNA immunization SIV Gag and HIV Env have T-cell responses and lower viral loads, but were not protected. Suboptimal levels of 2F5 and 2G12 were not able to confer sterile protection in combination with the T-cell responses stimulated by DNA immunizations.
Mascola2003
(adjuvant comparison, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
2F5: Nabs against HIV-1 M group isolates were tested for their ability to neutralize 6 randomly selected HIV-1 O group strains. IgG1b12 could neutralize some O group strains when used on its own, and quadruple combination of b12, 2F5, 2G12, and 4E10, could neutralize the six Group O viruses tested between 62-97%. The 2F5 epitope in the O group viruses was : ELDEWA.
Ferrantelli2004a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Neonatal rhesus macaques were exposed orally to a pathogenic SHIV, 89.6P. 4/8 were given an intramuscular, passive immunization consisting of NAbs 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10, each given at a different body sites at 40 mg/kg per Ab, at one hour and again at 8 days after exposure to 89.6P. The four animals that were untreated all died with a mean survival time of 5.5 weeks, the four animals that got the NAb combination were protected from infection. This model suggests antibodies may be protective against mother-to-infant transmission of HIV.
Ferrantelli2004
(mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: Env sequences were derived from 4 men at primary infection and four years later; the antigenicity in terms of the ability to bind to 2G12, 2F5 and IgG1b12 was determined. 2G12 bound primarily to late clones in 3 of the 4 patients, and to both early and late in the other patient. Neither 2F5 nor IgG1b12 showed a difference in binding affinity to early or late envelopes.
Dacheux2004
(antibody binding site, acute/early infection, kinetics)
-
2F5: 93 viruses from different clades were tested for their neutralization cross-reactivity using a panel of HIV antibodies. 2F5 was cross-reactive with A, B, and E subtype viruses, some D, and no C clade viruses. DKW was defined as the core motif, and was found in only 25% of C clade sequences in the database. It was found in C clade viruses in a country specific manner -- common in Burundi, Brazil and Ethiopia, rare in Botswana, India, and S. Africa. The potency of the neutralizing activity was somewhat context-dependent. DQW is a common D clade variant from Uganda, and all D viruses in this study were Ugandan.
Binley2004
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: 2F5 was used for screening of phage-displayed peptide libraries. 2F5 requires the DKW core for synthetic and phage-displayed peptide recognition, but is multispecific for amino acid residues flanking C-terminally the DKW core epitope. Three clones from the AADKW-X12 library had high affinity for 2F5, but did not share obvious homology with gp41 or each other; Ala substitution showed each bound to 2F5 with a different mechanism.
Menendez2004
(antibody binding site, mimotopes)
-
2F5: This review discusses research presented at the Ghent Workshop of prevention of breast milk transmission and immunoprophylaxis for HIV-1 in pediatrics (Seattle, Oct. 2002), and makes the case for developing passive or active immunoprophylaxis in neonates to prevent mother-to-infant transmission. Macaque studies have shown that passive transfer of NAb combinations (for example, IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10; or 2G12 and 2F5) can confer partial or complete protection to infant macaques from subsequent oral SHIV challenge.
Safrit2004
(immunoprophylaxis, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: A primary isolate, CC1/85, was passaged 19 times in PBMC and gradually acquired increased sensitivity to FAb b12 and sCD4 that was attributed to changes in the V1V2 loop region, in particular the loss of a potential glycosylation site. The affinity for sCD4 was unchanged in the monomer, suggesting that the structural impact of the change was manifested at the level of the trimer. The passaged virus, CCcon19, retained an R5 phenotype and its neutralization susceptibility to other Abs was essentially the same as CC1/85. The IC50 for 2F5 was greater than 50 for CC1/85, and was 35 for CCcon19, so the passaged virus was weakly neutralized by 2F5.
Pugach2004
(variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
2F5: V1V2 was determined to be the region that conferred the neutralization phenotype differences between two R5-tropic primary HIV-1 isolates, JRFL and SF162. JRFL is resistant to neutralization by many sera and MAbs, while SF162 is sensitive. All MAbs tested, anti-V3, -V2, -CD4BS, and -CD4i, (except the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12, which neutralized both strains), neutralized the SF162 pseudotype but not JRFL, and chimeras that exchanged the V1V2 loops transferred the neutralization phenotype.
Pinter2004
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: An antigen panel representing different regions of gp41 was generated, and sera from 23 individuals were screened. Anti-gp41 titers were very high, and sera bound to many regions of gp41, there were no immunologically silent regions. Many individuals had broad responses to diverse regions. High titer responses tended to focus on the N-heptad, C-heptad and 2F5-4E10 regions, but there was no correlation between neutralization capacity of sera and the particular peptides recognized. 2F5 responded to the four antigens that carried the minimal EDLKWA epitope. 2F5 did not bind to the minimal epitope embedded in an alpha helix, supporting that the 2F5 conformation of EDLKWA is embedded in a beta sheet. 2F5 bound better to a synthetic peptide containing the proximal regions than to the native gp41.
Opalka2004
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: A set of HIV-1 chimeras that altered V3 net charge and glycosylation patterns in V1V2 and V3, involving inserting V1V2 loops from a late stage primary isolate taken after the R5 to X4 switch, were studied with regard to phenotype, co-receptor usage, and MAb neutralization. The loops were cloned into a HXB2 envelope with a LAI viral backbone. It was observed that the addition of the late-stage isolate V1V2 region and the loss of V3-linked glycosylation site in the context of high positive charge gave an X4 phenotype. R5X4, R5, and X4 viruses were generated, and sCD4, 2G12 and b12 neutralization resistance patterns were modified by addition of the late stage V1V2, glycosylation changes, and charge in concert, while neutralization by 2F5 was unaffected.
Nabatov2004
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
2F5: Sera from two HIV+ people and a panel of MAbs were used to explore susceptibility to neutralization in the presence or absence of glycans within or adjacent to the V3 loop and within the C2, C4 and V5 regions of HIV-1 SF162 env gp120. The loss of the glycan within the V3 loop (GM299 V3) and adjacent to the C-terminal end of the V3 loop (GM329 C3) did not alter neutralization susceptibility to 2F5, but the loss of glycans in C2 (GM292 C2), C4 (GM438 C4), or V5 (GM454 V5) increased 2F5 neutralization susceptibility. V3 glycans tended to shield V3 loop, CD4 and co-receptor MAb binding sites, while C4 and V5 glycans shielded V3 loop, CD4, gp41 but not co-receptor MAb binding sites. Selective removal of glycans from a vaccine candidate may enable greater access to neutralization susceptible epitopes.
McCaffrey2004
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Mice susceptible to MV infection were intraperitoneally immunized with native HIV-1 89.6 env gp160 and gp140 and δV3 HIV-1 89.6 mutants expressed in live attenuated Schwarz measles vector (MV). The gp160ΔV3 construct raised more cross-reactive NAbs to primary isolates. The constructs had an additional 2F5 MAb epitope, ELDKWAS, but responses were not directed towards this epitope. A HIVIG/2F5/2G12 combination was used as a positive control and could neutralize all isolates.
Lorin2004
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. gp41 MAbs 246D, 98.6, 50-69, were decreased by trypsin, unaltered by thrombin, while NAb 2F5 binding was increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: 2F5 was used as a positive control in a study that showed that A32-rgp120 complexes open up the CCR5 co-receptor binding site, but did not induce neutralizing antibodies with greater breadth among B subtype isolates than did uncomplexed rgp120 in vaccinated guinea pigs.
Liao2004
-
2F5: A set of oligomeric envelope proteins were made from six primary isolates for potential use as vaccine antigens: 92/UG/037 (clade A), HAN2/2 (clade B), 92/BR25/025 (clade C), 92/UG/021 (clade D), 93/BR/029 (clade F) and MVP5180 (clade O). This was one of a panel of MAbs used to explore folding and exposure of well characterized epitopes. The clade C isolate BR25 is apparently misfolded, as conformation-dependent antibodies did not bind to it. 2F5 bound to clade A, B, D and F HIV-1 primary isolates. Polyclonal sera raised in rabbits against these antigens cross-bound the other antigens, but none of the sera had neutralizing activity.
Jeffs2004
-
2F5: This paper reviews MAbs that bind to HIV-1 Env. 2F5 binds to a region of gp41 proximal to cluster II (aa 662-676), neighboring the binding site of the broadly neutralizing MAb 4E10 and of neutralizing Fab Z13. 2F5 is broadly neutralizing.
Gorny2003
(review)
-
2F5: The MAb 2F5 binds to the C-heptad and is neutralizing, but the MAb D50 binds to the C-heptad and is not neutralizing. 2F5 binds preferentially to native gp41 prior to receptor activation. D50 prefers the triggered form after receptor activation. Trapped fusion-intermediates suggest 2F5 remains present shortly after gp120 triggering by CD4, but may be lost by the time the six-helix bundle is formed. D50 binds equally to the fusion-intermediate and six-helix bundle. 2F5 neutralization seems to block a later step of the fusion process, but it does not inhibit binding of NC-1, a MAb specific for the six-helix bundle, so it does not prevent formation of the six-helix bundle. The results are most consistent with 2F5 inhibiting a post-fusion-intermediate step.
deRosny2004
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions)
-
2F5: The broadly neutralizing antibodies 2F5 and 2G12 were class-switched from IgG to IgA and IgM isotypes. Neutralizing potency was increased with valence for 2G12 so the IgM form was most potent, but for 2F5 the IgG form was most potent. Eight primary isolates were tested including two subtype A isolates. The polymeric IgM and IgA Abs, but not the corresponding IgGs, could interfere with HIV-1 entry across a mucosal epithelial layer, although they were limited in a standard neutralization assay. All isotypes could interact with activated human sera, presumably through complement, to inhibit HIV replication.
Wolbank2003
(complement, genital and mucosal immunity, isotype switch, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: The antiviral response to intravenously administered MAbs 2F5 and 2G12 was evaluated in 7 HAART-naive asymptomatic HIV-1 infected patients during a treatment period of 28 days. MAb therapy reduced plasma HIV RNA in 3/7 patients during the treatment period, and transiently reduced viral load in two more. CD4 counts were up in 3/7 through day 28, and transiently increased in three more. Vigorous complement activation was observed after 48/56 Ab infusions. Before treatment, 2F5 neutralized isolates from five patients and no escape was observed during treatment.
Stiegler2002
(complement, variant cross-reactivity, escape, immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Env genes derived from uncultured brain biopsy samples from four HIV-1 infected patients with late-stage AIDS were compared to env genes from PBMC samples. Brain isolates did not differ in the total number or positions of N-glycosylation sites, patterns of coreceptor usage, or ability to be recognized by gp160 and gp41 MAbs. 2F5 recognized most variants from 3/4 individuals by gp41 WB; the 4th individual had the ELDKWA variant Aldkwa in all three isolates. The other single Env that was not recognized carried eldRwa.
Ohagen2003
(brain/CSF, escape)
-
2F5: AC10 is a subject who was given treatment early after infection, and had a viral rebound after cessation of therapy, which then declined to a low level. The polyclonal sera from AC10 could potently neutralize the rebound virus, and NAb escape followed with a neutralizing response against the escape variant and subsequent escape from that response. Viral loads remained low in this subject despite escape. The rebound isolate that was potently neutralized by autologous sera was not particularly neutralization sensitive, as it resisted neutralization by sCD4 and MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12 and 2F5, and was only moderately sensitive to sera from other HIV+ individuals that had high titers of NAbs to TCLA strains.
Montefiori2003
(acute/early infection, escape)
-
2F5: Cyclic peptides ELLELDKWASLW that adopt constrained beta-turn conformation of the 2F5 epitope beta-turn in the complexed crystal structure were synthesized and optimize 2F5 binding affinity. This peptide elicits high titer peptide-specific immune responses in guinea pigs that do not neutralize; the authors propose this may be the result of a short CDR3 loop in guinea pigs.
McGaughey2003
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, structure)
-
2F5: A polyepitope vaccine was designed based on three repeats of the 2F5 core epitope ELDKWA combined with the V3 region peptide GPGRAFY. Abs raised in mice could recognize the peptides, sgp41, and CHO-WT cells that expressed HIV-1 Env on their surface.
Li2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10 were tested for their ability to neutralize two primary HIV-1 clade A isolates (UG/92/031 and UG/92/037) and two primary HIV-1 clade D isolates (UG/92/001 and UG/92/005). 4E10 demonstrated the most potent cross-neutralization activity. Quadruple administration of MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 induced strong synergistic neutralization of 4 clade A isolates (UG/92/031, UG/92/037, RW/92/020 and RW/92/025) as well as 5 clade D isolates (UG/92/001,UG/9/005, /93/086/RUG/94/108, UG/94/114). The authors note this combination of 4 MAbs neutralizes primary HIV A, B, C, and D isolates.
Kitabwalla2003
(antibody interactions, immunoprophylaxis, variant cross-reactivity, mother-to-infant transmission, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: A mouse MAb was raised against a variant of ELDKWA core epitope of the NAb 2F5, eldEwa, derived from the 2F5 neutralization resistant variant MVP5180. 2F5 does not bind to the variants eldEwa, elNkwa (B.TH.TH936705) or elEkwa, while 14D9 binds only to eldEwa and not ELDKWA. The eldEwa variant is common in the HIV-1 O group.
Huang2002
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Review of current neutralizing antibody-based HIV vaccine candidates and strategies of vaccine design. Strategies for targeting of the epitopes for NAbs 2F5, 2G12, 4E10, b12, and Z13 are described.
Wang2003
(vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: Most plasma samples of patients from early infection had NAb responses to early autologous viruses, and NAbs against heterologous strains tended to be delayed. Serial plasma samples were tested against serial isolates, and neutralization escape was shown to be rapid and continuous throughout infection. Autologous neutralization-susceptible and resistant viruses from four patients were tested for susceptibility to neutralizing Ab responses using MAbs 2G12, IgG1b12 and 2F5. No correlation was established, all viruses tested were susceptible to at least one of the neutralizing MAbs. Two patients that did not have an autologous NAb response also did not evolve changes in susceptibility to these MAbs, while one patient with a pattern of autologous neutralization and escape acquired a 2G12 sensitive virus at month 6, and lost IgG1b12 sensitivity at month 21.
Richman2003
(autologous responses, acute/early infection, escape)
-
2F5: A sCD4-17b single chain chimera was made that can bind to the CD4 binding site, then bind and block co-receptor interaction. This chimeric protein is a very potent neutralizing agent, more potent than IgG1b12, 2G12 or 2F5 against Ba-L infection of CCR5-MAGI cells. It has potential for prophylaxis or therapy.
Dey2003
-
2F5: UK1-br and MACS2-br are R5 isolates derived from brain tissue samples from AIDS patients with dementia and HIV-1 encephalitis; both are neurotropic, but only UK1-br induced neuronal apoptosis and high levels of syncytium formation in macrophages. UK1-br Env had a greater affinity for CCR5 than MACS-br, and required low levels of CCR5 and CD4 for cell-to-cell fusion and single round infection. PBMC infected with UK1-br and MACS2-br virus isolates were resistant to neutralization by MAb 2G12. UK1-br was more sensitive than MACS2-br to IgG1b12, 2F5 and CD4-IgG2 neutralization. This pattern of Ab reactivity was similar to the CD4-independent variant ADA197N/K, and thought to result from conformational changes which better expose the CCR5 binding regions, although the loss of the particular N-linked glycosylation site in the V1V2 stem region of ADA was experimentally shown to not be responsible for the CD4-independent phenotype of UK1-br.
Gorry2002
(brain/CSF, co-receptor)
-
2F5: Anti-gp41 MAbs were tested in a cell-cell fusion system to investigate the antigenic changes in gp41 during binding and fusion. Cluster I and Cluster II MAbs required CD4 expression on HIV HXB2 Env expressing HeLa target cells, but not the CXCR4 co-receptor, binding to a fusion intermediate. 2F5 behaved very differently than these non-neutralizing antibodies: it bound to Env in the absence of target cells, and it was distributed evenly all over the cell surface, not localized in fusion domains. It did not interact with cells that exhibited cytoplasmic mixing. 2F5 was unusual in that it exhibited temperature dependence, and did not interact below 19 degrees C, in contrast to 2G12, M77 98-6 and IgG1b12 which bound strongly at temperatures ranging between 4-37 degrees. The authors suggest the temperature dependence of 2F5 may be due to increased flexibility of the Envelope spike at warmer temperatures facilitating epitope exposure.
Finnegan2002
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
2F5: A complex of the epitope peptide ELDKWAS bound to 2F5 was crystalized, and the peptide was found to interact with amino acids near the base of the very long (22 residue) CDR 3H region of the Ab. Ala substitution of the CDR H3 region confirmed the importance of these sites near the base of the H3 loop for interaction with the epitope in the context of intact gp41 as well as the peptide. A Phe at the apex of the loop was not located directly in the binding site, however binding of 2F5 to the epitope was very sensitive to non-conservative substitutions in this position (F100G, F100H, and F100R); these diminished both binding affinity and 2F5 neutralization, suggesting a role for the very long CDR 3H region. The authors suggest that particularly long CDR H3 regions may be a common feature of HIV-1 NAbs, based on the 22 residues in H3 of 2F5, the 18 H3 residues in b12, and the 22 H3 residues in X5. They express concern that because small animals like mice are unable to elicit Ab responses with such long H3s, they may be poor model systems for HIV vaccine studies.
Zwick2004a
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, antibody sequence, structure)
-
2F5: This review discusses the importance and function of protective antibody responses in animal model studies in the context of effective vaccine development. SHIV models have shown protection using high levels of MAbs can prevent infection, and partial protection that can influence disease course can be obtained from modest levels of NAbs. SHIV challenges studies conducted with infusions of combinations of MAbs b12, 2G12, and 2F5 are reviewed.
Mascola2003a
(immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
2F5: This study investigates the effects of glycosylation inhibitors on the binding between HIV-1 gp120 and mannose-binding lectin (MBL). Mannosidase I inhibitor deoxymannojirimycin (dMM) inhibits formation of complex and hybrid N-linked saccharides and yields virus with more mannose residues. dMM added during viral production significantly enhanced the binding 2F5 and 2G12, but not IgG1b12 in a viral capture assay.
Hart2003
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Four newborn macaques were challenged with pathogenic SHIV 89.6 and given post exposure prophylaxis using a combination of NAbs 2F5, 2G12, 4E10 and IgG1b12. 2/4 treated animals did not show signs of infection, and 2/4 macaques maintained normal CD4+ T cell counts and had a lower delayed peak viremia compared to the controls.
Ferrantelli2003
(antibody interactions, immunoprophylaxis, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
2F5: This study examined antibody interactions, binding and neutralization with a B clade R5 isolate (92US660) and R5X4 isolate (92HT593). Abs generally bound and neutralized the R5X4 isolate better than the R5 isolate, with the exception of F240 which bound both equally well, which captured more virus than any other human MAb tested, and didn't neutralize either isolate. F240 enhanced the binding of CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105 and the gp41 MAb 2F5 for both R5X4 and R5 isolates. F240 also enhanced neutralization of the R5X4 isolate by 2F5, but had no effect on R5 virus. Anti-V3 MAb B4a1 did not impact 2F5 neutralization.
Cavacini2002
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, co-receptor)
-
2F5: Alanine mutations were introduced into the N- and C-terminal alpha-helices of gp41 to destabilize interhelical packing interactions in order to study their inhibitory effect on viral infectivity. These mutations were shown to inhibit viral replication though affecting the conformational transition to the fusion-active form of gp41, and allow increased inhibition by gp41 peptides. 2F5 sensitivity is increased in the mutated viruses, presumably because 2F5s neutralization activity is focused on the transition to the fusion active state. No other MAb against gp41 tested, including NC-1, 50-69D, 1281, 98-6D, 246-D and F240, neutralized the parental or the fusion-deficient mutated viruses.
Follis2002
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: The SOS mutant envelope protein introduces a covalent disulfide bond between gp120 surface and gp41 transmembrane proteins into the R5 isolate JR-FL by adding cysteines at residues 501 and 605. Pseudovirions bearing this protein bind to CD4 and co-receptor bearing cells, but do not fuse until treatment with a reducing agent, and are arrested prior to fusion after CD4 and co-receptor engagement. gp41 NAbs 2F5 and 4E10 are able to potently neutralize the SOS pseudovirion post-attachment, although 2F5 performed relatively poorly in the pre-attachment assay, a further support for previous studies that indicated it does not bind well to native Env, and may bind best after the virus is attached to cells.
Binley2003
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: IgG1b12 neutralized many South African (5/8) and Malawian (4/8) clade C primary HIV-1 isolates, being more effective than 2F5 which neutralized only two Malawian and no South African isolates. 2G12 did not neutralize any of the 16 isolates.
Bures2002
(subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 1475.
-
2F5: UK Medical Research Council AIDS reagent: ARP3063.
-
2F5: Review of NAbs that discusses mechanisms of neutralization, passive transfer of NAbs and protection in animal studies, and vaccine strategies.
Liu2002
(immunoprophylaxis, vaccine antigen design, review)
-
2F5: Review of NAbs that notes that 2F5 alone or in combination with other MAbs can protect some macaques against SHIV infection, that it is safe and well tolerated in humans, and that illustrates gp41's conformational change and exposure of the 2F5 epitope in the transient pre-hairpin form.
Ferrantelli2002
(immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
2F5: A 2F5 anti-idiotype murine MAb Ab2/3H6 was developed that blocks 2F5 binding to a synthetic epitope peptide and to gp160 in an ELISA competition assay -- Ab2/3H6 diminished the neutralizing potency of 2F5 -- Ab2/3H6 Fab fragments were capable of inducing neutralizing Abs and 2F5-epitope specific responses in immunized B6D2F1 mice.
Kunert2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Rhesus macaques were better protected from vaginal challenge with SHIV89.6D (MAb 2G12, 2/4; MAbs 2F5/2G12, 2/5; and HIVIG/2F5/2G12, 4/5 infected) than from intravenous challenge (MAb 2G12, 0/3; MAbs 2F5/2G12, 1/3; and HIVIG/2F5/2G12, 3/6 infected)-- the animals that were infected by vaginal challenge after Ab infusion had low or undetectable viral RNA levels and modest CD4 T-cell decline.
Mascola2002
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: HIV-1 gp160ΔCT (cytoplasmic tail-deleted) proteoliposomes (PLs) containing native, trimeric envelope glycoproteins from R5 strains YU2 and JRFL, and X4 strain HXBc2, were made in a physiologic membrane setting as candidate immunogens for HIV vaccines---2F5 bound to gp160ΔCT with a reconstituted membrane ten-fold better than the same protein on beads (except for the YU2 form that doesn't bind 2F5)---anti-CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105, A32 (C1-C4), C11 (C1-C5), and 39F (V3) MAbs bound gp160ΔCT PLs indistinguishably from gp160ΔCT expressed on the cell surface.
Grundner2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A series of mutational changes were introduced into the YU2 gp120 that favored different conformations -- 375 S/W seems to favor a conformation of gp120 closer to the CD4-bound state, and is readily bound by sCD4 and CD4i MAbs (17b, 48d, 49e, 21c and 23e) but binding of anti-CD4BS MAbs (F105, 15e, IgG1b12, 21h and F91 was markedly reduced -- IgG1b12 failed to neutralize this mutant, while neutralization by 2G12 was enhanced -- 2F5 did not neutralize either WT or mutant, probably due to polymorphism in the YU2 epitope -- another mutant, 423 I/P, disrupted the gp120 bridging sheet, favored a different conformation and did not bind CD4, CCR5, or CD4i antibodies, but did bind to CD4BS MAbs.
Xiang2002
-
2F5: A combination of MAbs 2F5 and 2G12 given in multiple infusions was found to be safe and well tolerated even in high doses in a phase I study of seven HIV-1 infected healthy volunteers---the median elimination half-life was 7.94 days for 2F5, and 16.48 for 2G12---no anti-2F5 or anti-2G12 IgM or IgG responses were detected---although there was some transient increases, overall plasma viral RNA levels decreased in 6/7 volunteers, by a median of 0.62 log10.
Armbruster2002
(immunotherapy)
-
2F5: Six sera from HIV-exposed uninfected individuals(EU) had IgA neutralizing activity dominated by recognition of a distinctive epitope within gp41, QARILAV -- sera of QAFILAV-immunized BALB/c mice was neutralizing with the dose-dependent behavior similar to 2F5.
Clerici2002
(HIV exposed persistently seronegative (HEPS))
-
2F5: DP178 is a peptide derived from the C-term heptad repeat of gp41 that is a potent inhibitor of viral-mediated fusion---it contains the 2F5 epitope but fails to stimulate 2F5-like NAbs upon immunization---the peptide was extended to force an increase in helicity, and the modified peptide had an increase in affinity for 2F5, but upon guinea pig immunization although high peptide-specific Ab titers were achieved the sera were incapable of viral neutralization---the authors propose that 2F5 may bind with low affinity to a maturation intermediate, which may account for its breadth and why it is hard to recreate the epitope, but also suggests that the high concentrations required for neutralization are not relevant in vivo.
Joyce2002
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: A modified gp140 (gp140deltaCFI), with C-term mutations intended to mimic a fusion intermediate and stabilize trimer formation, retained antigenic conformational determinants as defined by binding to CD4 and to MAbs 2F5, 2G12, F105, and b12, and enhanced humoral immunity without diminishing the CTL response in mice injected with a DNA vaccine.
Chakrabarti2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Passive immunization of neonate macaques with a combination of F105+2G12+2F5 conferred complete protection against oral challenge with SHIV-vpu+ or -- the combination b12+2G12+2F5 conferred partial protection against SHIV89.6 -- such combinations may be useful for prophylaxis at birth and against milk born transmission -- the synergistic combination of IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 neutralized a collection of HIV clade C primary isolates.
Xu2002
(antibody interactions, immunoprophylaxis, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: ELDKWAS was embedded into a beta-turn-like conformational site on a framework of an antibody specific for human leukocyte antigen HLA-DR -- this construct was recognized by 2F5, and is suggested as an adjuvant-independent vaccine candidate.
Ho2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Expanding the minimal epitope ELDKWA to an end-capped, linear nonapeptide, Ac-LELDKWASL-amide attained maximal affinity within a set of native gp41-sequence peptides -- scanning single residue substitutions confirmed that essential recognition requirements were the central DKW core sequence and the importance of the terminal Leu residues for high-affinity binding -- high specificity binding pockets at central Lys and Trp side-chains and an absolute requirement for the carboxylate group of the Asp side chain were found -- the nine residue fragment flanked by pairs of Ser and constrained by a disulfide bridge had high affinity for 2F5.
Tian2002
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Ab binding characteristics of SOS gp140 were tested using SPR and RIPA -- SOS gp140 is gp120-gp41 bound by a disulfide bond -- NAbs 2G12, 2F5, IgG1b12, CD4 inducible 17b, and 19b bound to SOS gp140 better than uncleaved gp140 (gp140unc) and gp120 -- non-neutralizing MAbs 2.2B (binds to gp41 in gp140unc) and 23A (binds gp120) did not bind SOS gp140 -- SOS gp140-2F5-IgG1b12 formed multiple ring structures composed of two SOS gp140 proteins bridged by two Ab molecules, while 2F5 and 2G12 formed extended chains rather than closed rings.
Schulke2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: The fusion process was slowed by using a suboptimal temperature (31.5 C) to re-evaluate the potential of Abs targeting fusion intermediates to block HIV entry -- preincubation of E/T cells at 31.5 C enabled polyclonal anti-N-HR Ab and anti-six-helix bundle Abs to inhibit fusion, indicating six-helix bundles form prior to fusion -- the preincubation 31.5 C step did not alter the inhibitory activity of neutralizing Abs anti-gp41 2F5, or anti-gp120 2G12, IG1b12, 48d, and 17b.
GoldingH2002
-
2F5: Oligomeric gp140 (o-gp140) derived from R5 primary isolate US4 was characterized for use as a vaccine reagent -- antigen capture ELISA was used to compare the antigenicity of gp120 and o-gp140 using a panel of well characterized MAbs -- 2F5 recognized o-gp140.
Srivastava2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Twenty HIV clade C isolates from five different countries were susceptible to neutralization by anti-clade B MAbs in a synergistic quadruple combination of mAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10.
Xu2001
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: A combination of MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12 was given postnatally to four neonates macaques that were then challenged with highly pathogenic SHIV89.6P -- one of the four infants remained uninfected after oral challenge, two infants had no or a delayed CD4(+) T-cell decline.
HofmannLehmann2001
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: 4E10 binds proximal to 2F5 and neutralizes primary isolates of clades A, B, C, D, and E -- viruses that were resistant to 2F5 were neutralized by 4E10 and vice versa.
Stiegler2001
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: A panel of 12 MAbs was used to identify those that could neutralize the dual-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 89.6 -- six gave significant neutralization at 2 to 10 ug/ml: 2F5, 50-69, IgG1b12, 447-52D, 2G12, and 670-D six did not have neutralizing activity: 654-D, 4.8D, 450-D, 246-D, 98-6, and 1281 -- no synergy, only additive effects were seen for pairwise combinations of MAbs, and antagonism was noted between gp41 MAbs 50-69 and 98-6, as well as 98-6 and 2F5.
Verrier2001
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: A luciferase-reporter gene-expressing T-cell line was developed to facilitate neutralization and drug-sensitivity assays -- luciferase and p24 antigen neutralization titer end points were found comparable using NAb from sera from HIV+ donors, and MAbs 2F5, 2G12 and IgG1b12.
Spenlehauer2001
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) in combination with proteolytic protection was used to identify the functional epitope for MAb 2F5, NEQELLELDKWASLWN, in the disulfide bond associated gp120/gp41 protein SOS-gp140 (JRFL) -- this minimal epitope is much larger than the ELDKWA core epitope previously defined by peptide ELISA, and this could help explain why ELDKWA-peptides are poor immunogens in terms of eliciting a 2F5-like antibody response.
Parker2001
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Neutralizing synergy between MAbs 1b12, 2G12 and 2F5 was studied using surface plasmon resonance to determine the binding kinetics for these three mAbs with respect to monomeric and oligomeric env protein gp160 IIIB -- the 2G12 epitope is highly accessible on both monomeric and oligomeric Envs, 1b12 is highly accessible on monomers but not oligomers, and 2F5 on neither form -- binding of 2G12 exposes the 2F5 epitope on gp160 oligomers.
ZederLutz2001
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Moore and colleagues review the data concerning the lack of a clear relationship between genetic subtype and serotype -- 2F5 is considered in some detail, as it represents a rare vulnerability from the neutralizing antibody perspective, although while it is apparently linear, attempts to present the peptide to the immune system have failed to elicit neutralizing Abs.
Moore2001
(review, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Review of studies in macaques that have shown immune control of pathogenic SHIV viremia, improved clinical outcome, and protection, and the implications of the observations for HIV vaccines.
Mascola2001
(review)
-
2F5: Neutralization synergy between anti-HIV NAbs b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 was studied -- a classic fixed-ratio method was used, as well as a method where one Ab was fixed at a low neutralization titer and the other was varied -- using primary isolates, a two-four fold enhancement of neutralization was observed with MAb pairs, and a ten-fold enhancement with a quadruple Ab combination -- no synergy was observed with any MAb pair in the neutralization of TCLA strain HXB2.
Zwick2001c
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: This paper primarily concerns 4E10 and Z13, MAbs that both bind proximally to the 2F5 binding site to a conserved epitope, and that neutralize some primary isolates from clades B, C, and E -- the minimal 2F5 epitope is determined to be EQELLELDKWASLW, based on screening a gp160 fragment expression library, longer than previous studies -- broadly neutralizing MAbs 2F5, IgG1b12, and 4E10 and Z13 fail to neutralize different subsets of viruses.
Zwick2001b
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Abs against the V3 loop (50.1, 58.2, 59.1, 257-D, 268-D, 447-52D), CD4BS (IgG1b12, 559-64D, F105), CD4i (17b), and to gp41 (2F5, F240) each showed similar binding efficiency to Env derived from related pairs of primary and TCLA lines (primary: 168P and 320SI, and TCLA: 168C and 320SI-C3.3), but the TCLA lines were much more susceptible to neutralization suggesting that the change in TCLA lines that make them more susceptible to NAbs alters some step after binding.
York2001
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: A phage peptide library was screened with MAb 2F5, and from the peptides that bound the amino acids DKW were found to be most critical for binding -- the mimetic peptide RDWSFDRWSLSEFWL elicited a cross-reactive Ab response to gp41 when used to immunize rabbits.
Tumanova2001
-
2F5: A peptide called 5-Helix was designed that binds to the C-peptide region of gp41 -- 5-Helix is a potent inhibitor of HIV-1 entry that binds immediately COOH-terminal to the C-peptide region targeted by 5-Helix -- the conformation of the bound 2F5 epitope is a hairpin turn.
Root2001a
-
2F5: Mutations in two glycosylation sites in the V2 region of HIV-1 ADA at positions 190 and 197 (187 DNTSYRLINCNTS 199) cause the virus to become CD4-independent and able to enter cells through CCR5 alone -- these same mutations tended to increase the neutralization sensitivity of the virus, including to antibody 2F5.
Kolchinsky2001
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: ELNKWA is an escape variant not recognized by the broadly neutralizing MAb 2F5, which recognizes the core epitope ELDKWA -- Abs were raised against the peptide escape variant CGELNKWAGELNKWA linked to KLH carrier -- these polyclonal antibodies, like the monoclonal antibody TH-Ab1 also raised to ELNKWA, could recognize ELDKWA and escape mutant peptide epitopes ELEKWA and ELDEWA.
Dong2001
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: SHIV-HXBc2 is a neutralization sensitive non-pathogenic virus, and several in vivo passages through monkey's yielded highly pathogenic SHIV KU-1 -- HXBc2 and the KU-1 clone HXBc2P3.2 differ in 12 amino acids in gp160 -- substitutions in both gp120 and gp41 reduced the ability of sCD4, IgG1b12, F105 and AG1121 to Env achieve saturation and full occupancy, and neutralize KU-1 -- 17b and 2F5 also bound less efficiently to HXBc2P3.2, although 2G12 was able to bind both comparably.
Si2001
-
2F5: A combination of gp41 fusion with the GNC4 trimeric sequences and disruption of the YU2 gp120-gp41 cleavage site resulted in stable gp140 trimers (gp140-GNC4) -- gp41 MAbs T4, D12, T3, and D50 bound less efficiently to gp140-GNC4 than did pooled sera, but T4 and D12 recognized the gp140-GNC4 timer equivalently to gp140(-), and T3 and D50 recognized the trimer at greater levels than gp140(-) -- 2F5 did not bind efficiently to these constructs, presumably because of the YU2 strain has a substitution in the 2F5 epitope (ALDKWA instead of ELDKWA).
Yang2000
(vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: 2F5 or sCD4-IgG chimeric immunoadhesin were transferred into 3T3 cells, incorporated into a collagen structure called the neo-organ, and transplanted into SCIDhu mice that were then challenged with MN or LAI -- the continuous production of the therapeutic molecules in this context resulted in dramatic reduction of viral load.
Sanhadji2000
(immunotherapy)
-
2F5: ELDKWAS co-crystallized bound to the Fab' 2F5 fragment showed the epitope peptide in a type I beta-turn conformation.
Pai2002
(structure)
-
2F5: 26 HIV-1 group M isolates (clades A to H) were tested for binding to 47 MAbs, including 6 cluster II anti-gp41 MAbs -- of these 2F5, 167-D, 126-6, and 1281 bound across clades, but usually weakly, while 98-6 and 1342 had poor cross reactivity -- Clade D isolates bound most consistently to cluster II MAbs.
Nyambi2000
(subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: ELDKWA peptide vaccine study.
Lu2000b
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: ELDKWA peptide vaccine study.
Lu2000a
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: A rare mutation in the neutralization sensitive R2-strain in the proximal limb of the V3 region caused Env to become sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed against the CD4 binding site (CD4BS), CD4-induced (CD4i) epitopes, soluble CD4 (sCD4), and HNS2, a broadly neutralizing sera -- 2/12 anti-V3 MAbs tested (19b and 694/98-D) neutralized R2, as did 2/3 anti-CD4BS MAbs (15e and IgG1b12), 2/2 CD4i MAbs (17b and 4.8D), and 2G12 and 2F5 -- thus multiple epitopes on R2 are functional targets for neutralization and the neutralization sensitivity profile of R2 is intermediate between the highly sensitive MN-TCLA strain and the typically resistant MN-primary strain.
Zhang2002
-
2F5: Low levels of anti-ELDKWA antibodies are observed in HIV-1+ individuals, so a C-domain P2 peptide linked to a carrier was used to immunize mice and rabbits, and stimulated a high-level anti-ELDKWA response.
Liao2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: 2F5 is a candidate for immunotherapy, but generally IgG1 has a longer half-life in humans than IgG3, so the isotype was switched -- rec CHO-derived MAb 2F5 IgG1kappa and hybridoma-derived MAb 2F5 IgG3kappa displayed identical specificity, in vitro function, and epitope (ELDKWA) -- it remains to be determined if isotype switching will prolongs beta-clearance.
Kunert2000
(immunotherapy)
-
2F5: MAbs 98-6 and 2F5 both bind to a peptide N51-C43 complex trimer of heterodimers that approximates the core of the fusogenic form of gp41, and to C43 alone but not to N51 alone -- 98-6 and 2F5 have comparable affinities for C43, but 98-6 has a higher affinity for the complex and 2F5 may bind to an epitope of C43 that is directly involved with complex formation --and IgG1 rec form of the Ab was used in this study.
Gorny2000a
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: A mini-review of observations of passive administration of IgG NAbs conferring protection against intervenous or vaginal SHIV challenge, that considers why IgG MAbs might protect against mucosal challenge. Database note: First author "RobertGuroff" is also found as "Robert-Guroff" on annotated papers in this database.
RobertGuroff2000
(review)
-
2F5: Paper uses IgG1 form of 2F5 -- a triple combination of 2F5, F105 and 2G12 effectively neutralized perinatal infection of macaque infants when challenged with SHIV-vpu+ -- the plasma half-life was 4.2 +/- 0.8 days.
Baba2000
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: Because HIV-1 is most often transmitted across mucosal surfaces, the ability of passive transfer of infused HIVIG/2F5/2G12 to protect against mucosal exposure of macaques to pathogenic SHIV 89.6PD was studied -- HIVIG/2F5/2G12 protected 4/5 animals against vaginal challenge, 2F5/2G12 combined protected 2/5 animals, and 2G12 alone protected 2/4 animals -- in contrast, Mascola and co-workers had previously shown single MAbs could not protect against intervenous challenge -- Ab treated animals that got infected through vaginal inoculation had low viral loads and only modest declines in CD4 counts -- the infused Abs were detected in the nasal, vaginal, and oral mucosa.
Mascola2000a
(genital and mucosal immunity, immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: Combinations of HIVIG, 2F5, 2G12 were administered in passive-transfer experiments 24 hours prior to challenge with pathogenic SHIV 89.6PD -- 3/6 animals given HIVIG/2F5/2G12 were completely protected, the others had reduced viremia and normal CD4 counts -- 1/3 monkeys given 2F5/2G12 showed transient infection, the other two had reduced viral load -- all monkeys that received HIVIG, 2F5, or 2G12 alone became infected and developed high-level plasma viremia, although animals that got HIVIG or 2G12 had a less profound CD4 T cell decline.
Mascola1999
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: Review of the neutralizing Ab response to HIV-1.
Parren1999
(review)
-
2F5: In a study of 116 HIV-1+ individuals, Ab reactivity to a peptide encompassing the ELDKWA peptide decreased in CDC stage C patients compared with stage A patients, and longitudinal studies showed a decline in 6/8 patients, while overall Ab reactivity to rec soluble gp160 stayed constant.
Muhlbacher1999
-
2F5: Hu-PBL-SCID mice were infected with HIV-1s JRCSF and SF162 to study the effect of NAbs on an established infection -- no significant differences in the initial rate of decrease in viral load or the plateau levels of viral RNA between the b12 treated and control mice were seen -- in most of the Ab treated mice b12 escape mutants were observed with varying patterns of mutations -- a combination of b12, 2G12 and 2F5 protected 1/3 mice, and an isolate from one of the other two was resistant to neutralization by all three MAbs.
Poignard1999
(immunotherapy)
-
2F5: A meeting summary presented results regarding neutralization --MAbs 2G12 and 2F5 tested for their ability to neutralize primary isolate infection of genetically engineered cell lines (cMAGI and others, presented by T. Matthews, A. Trkola, J. Bradac) -- an advantage of such cells lines over PBMCs is that markers (X-Gal) can be added for staining to simplify the assay -- the consensus of the meeting was that these engineered cell lines did not improve the sensitivity of detection of primary isolate neutralization -- D. Burton and J. Mascola presented results concerning passive immunization and protection of hu-PBL-SCID mice and macaques, respectively, and both found combinations of MAbs that were able to achieve 99% neutralization in vitro corresponded to efficacy in vivo.
Montefiori1999
(review)
-
2F5: rgp120 derived from a R5X4 subtype B virus was used to vaccinate healthy volunteers and the resulting sera were compared with sera from HIV-1 positive subjects and neutralizing MAbs.
Beddows1999
-
2F5: Infection of dendritic cells cultured from CD14+ blood cells or from cadaveric human skin was blocked by neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, or 2F5 and 2G12 delivered together, but not by control non-neutralizing anti-gp120 MAb 4.8D, indicating that NAbs could interrupt early mucosal transmission events.
Frankel1998
(genital and mucosal immunity)
-
2F5: The complete V, J and D(H) domain was sequenced -- unlike non-neutralizing anti-gp41 MAb 3D6, five neutralizing MAbs (2F5, 2G12, 1B1, 1F7, and 3D5) showed extensive somatic mutations giving evidence of persistent antigenic pressure over long periods -- in contrast to Geffin98, where multiple pediatric sera were found to compete with 2F5, cross-competition was noted to be very rare in sera from HIV+ adults -- Kunert et al. propose that because there is a binding site of human complement factor H which overlaps the 2F5 binding site, it may generally be masked from the immune system -- 2F5 also has a remarkably long CDR3 loop of 22 amino acids, and this region could not be readily assigned to any described D(H) fragment, leading to the suggestion of recombination of two fragments from novel regions.
Kunert1998
(antibody sequence)
-
2F5: The natural immune response to the epitope of 2F5, ELDKWA, was studied in perinatally infected children and levels of reactivity to this epitope were correlated with absolute CD4 numbers over time and health status -- 3/10 children who had no antibody reactivity to ELDKWA had substitutions in the epitope (ALDKWA, ELDQWA, and KLDKWA) -- 2F5 competed with the ELDKWA-reactive sera depending on the serum titer.
Geffin1998
-
2F5: MAbs 2G12, 2F5 and b12 are broadly neutralizing, as are some human polyconal sera, but this paper describes a set of primary isolates that are resistant to all three MAbs and 2 broadly neutralizing sera -- results indicate that resistance levels of pediatric isolates might be higher than adult isolates -- resistance in general did not seem to be conferred by a loss of binding affinity for gp120 or gp41, rather by a more global perturbation of oligomeric Envelope.
Parren1998a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Used as a control in the study of anti-gp41 MAb NC-1 -- 2F5 does not react with HIV-2 gp41 or gp160.
Jiang1998
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Neutralization synergy was observed when the MAbs 694/98-D (V3), 2F5 (gp41), and 2G12 (gp120 discontinuous) were used in combination, and even greater neutralizing potential was seen with the addition of a fourth MAb, F105 (CD4 BS).
Li1998
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Induces complement-mediated lysis in MN but not primary isolates -- primary isolates are refractive to CML.
Takefman1998
(complement)
-
2F5: The ELDKWA epitope was inserted into the antigenic site B of influenza hemagglutinin and expressed on baculovirus infected insect cells, flanked by 3 additional random amino acids, xELDKWAxx -- FACS was used to isolate the clone that displayed the epitope with the most markedly increased binding capacity for 2F5, to identify particularly specific immunogenic constructs -- PELDKWAPP was a high affinity form selected by FACS.
Ernst1998
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: Points out that 2G12 and 2F5, potent neutralizing antibodies, were identified by screening for cell surface (oligomeric Envelope) reactivity.
Fouts1998
-
2F5: A wide range of neutralizing titers was observed that was independent of co-receptor usage -- 2F5 was the most potent of the MAbs tested.
Trkola1998
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: A neutralization assay was developed based on hemi-nested PCR amplification of the LTR (HNPCR) -- LTR-HNPCR consistently revealed HIV DNA and was shown to be a rapid, specific and reliable neutralization assay based on tests with 6 MAbs and 5 isolates.
Yang1998
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: Ab from gp120 vaccinated individuals prior to infection, who subsequently became HIV infected, could not achieve 90% neutralization of the primary virus by which the individuals were ultimately infected -- these viruses were not particularly refractive to neutralization, as determined by their susceptibility to neutralization by MAbs 2G12, IgG1b12, 2F5 and 447-52D.
Connor1998
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: This MAb and the results of Ugolini1997 are discussed -- the authors propose that an Ab bound to gp41 would typically project less from the surface of the virion and so be unable to interfere with attachment Parren1998.
Ugolini1997,Parren1998
(review)
-
2F5: Post-exposure prophylaxis was effective when MAb 694/98-D was delivered 15 min post-exposure to HIV-1 LAI in hu-PBL-SCID mice, but declined to 50% if delivered 60 min post-exposure, and similar time constraints have been observed for HIVIG, 2F5 and 2G12, in contrast to MAb BAT123 that could protect delivered 4 hours post infection.
Andrus1998
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: This review summarizes results about 2F5: it binds extracellularly, near the transmembrane domain, it is the only gp41 MAb that is neutralizing, it reacts with many non-B clade viruses and has a paradoxically weak binding to virus, given the neutralizing titers.
Burton1997
(review)
-
2F5: The only MAb out of a large panel to show no correlation between viral binding inhibition and neutralization.
Ugolini1997
-
2F5: Used to standardize polyclonal response to CD4 BS.
Turbica1997
-
2F5: Using concentrations of Abs achievable in vivo, the triple combination of 2F5, 2G12 and HIVIG was found to be synergistic to have the greatest breadth and magnitude of response against 15 clade B primary isolates.
Mascola1997
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Binding of anti-gp120 MAbs IgG1b12 or 654-30D does not mediate significant exposure of the gp41 epitopes for MAbs 2F5 and 50-69.
Stamatatos1997
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Review: MAbs 2F5, 2G12 and IgG1b12 have potential for use in combination with CD4-IgG2 as an immunotherapeutic or immunoprophylactic -- homologous MAbs to these are rare in humans and vaccine strategies should consider including constructs that may enhance exposure of these MAbs' epitopes.
Moore1997
(review)
-
2F5: IgG1b12 was more potent with greater breadth than MAb 2F5 in an infection reduction assay including 35 primary isolates.
Kessler1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: One of 14 human MAbs tested for ability to neutralize a chimeric SHIV-vpu+, which expressed HIV-1 IIIB Env -- strong neutralizer of SHIV-vpu+ -- all Ab combinations tested showed synergistic neutralization -- 2F5 has synergistic response with MAbs 694/98-D (anti-V3), 2G12, b12, and F105.
Li1997
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: A JRCSF variant that was selected for IgG1b12 resistance remained sensitive to MAbs 2G12 and 2F5, for combination therapy.
Mo1997
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: In a multilab evaluation of monoclonal antibodies, only IgG1b12, 2G12, and 2F5 could neutralize at least half of the 9 primary test isolates at a concentration of < 25 mug per ml for 90% viral inhibition -- the isolates with no 2F5 neutralizing susceptibility had the sequences ALGQWA or ELDTWA instead of EDLKWA -- 7/9 primary isolates were neutralized, and ALDKWQ and ALDKWA were susceptible to neutralization.
DSouza1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Of three neutralizing MAbs (257-D, IgG1b12, and 2F5), 2F5 was the only one to inhibit the entry of all viruses studied, both SI and NSI, with a potency proportional to its affinity for monomeric gp126.
Schutten1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Called IAM 2F5 -- antibody mediated enhancement or inhibition seemed to be determined by isolate rather than antibody specificity -- in this study, only 2F5 inhibited the entry of all the viruses studied, irrespective of their phenotype, and directly proportional to its affinity to monomeric HIV-1 gp160.
Schutten1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: A panel of immunotoxins were generated by linking Env MAbs to ricin A -- immunotoxins mediated cell killing, but killing was not directly proportional to binding.
Pincus1996
(immunotoxin)
-
2F5: 2F5 was infused into two chimpanzees which were then given an intravenous challenge with a primary HIV-1 isolate -- both became infected, but with delayed detection and prolonged decrease in viral load relative to controls, indicating that preexisting, neutralizing antibodies (passively administered or actively elicited) affect the course of acute-phase virus replication and can be influential after the Ab can no longer be detected in the peripheral circulation.
Conley1996
(immunoprophylaxis)
-
2F5: Review: only four epitopes have been described which can stimulate a useful neutralizing response to a broad spectrum of primary isolates, represented by the binding sites of MAbs: 447-52-D, 2G12, Fab b12, and 2F5.
Sattentau1996
(review)
-
2F5: Review: one of three MAbs (IgG1b12, 2G12, and 2F5) generally accepted as having significant potency against primary isolates.
Poignard1996
(review)
-
2F5: Neutralizes HXB2, primary isolates, and chimeric virus with gp120 from primary isolates in an HXB2 background.
McKeating1996b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Primary isolates from clade A, B, and E are neutralized by 2F5 -- neutralization requires the LDKW motif -- neutralization resistant isolates or 2F5 selected variants all had substitutions in the D or K.
Purtscher1996
(subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: ELDKWAS is in a gp41 binding region for the negative regulator of complement factor H (CFH) -- Abs to HIV generally do not cause efficient complement-mediated lysis, but binding of 2F5 can interfere with CHF binding, facilitating HIV destruction by complement.
Stoiber1996
(complement)
-
2F5: Only 4/20 Argentinian and 3/43 Swedish HIV+ sera reacted with LLELDKWASL -- sera reacting with peptides that contained ELDKWA tended to have high neutralization titers -- the region carboxyl terminal to EDLKWA was found to be more important for polyclonal sera AB binding, 670-675 WNWFDI -- 2F5 bound most strongly to the peptide QELLELDKWA.
Calarota1996
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Broad cross-clade neutralization of primary isolates -- additive neutralization in combination with anti-CD4BS MAb IgG1b12 (Called BM12).
Kessler1995
(subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: MAb binding decreases the accessibility or alters the conformation of the gp41 fusion domain and of gp120 domains, including the binding site for the CD4 cell receptor.
Neurath1995
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Review: binds to the only generally accepted strong neutralizing epitope outside of gp120, one of only 3 MAbs with strong broad activity against primary viruses, the others are 2G12 and IgG1b12 -- unique member of epitope cluster Moore1995c and John Moore, per comm 1996.
Moore1995c
(review)
-
2F5: Called IAM 41-2F5 -- exposed in the presence of gp120 on the cell surface, while most of gp41 is masked -- binds proximal to transmembrane region.
Sattentau1995
(antibody binding site)
-
2F5: Cross-clade primary virus neutralizing activity -- LDKW defined as the core epitope.
Trkola1995a
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: Found to neutralize MN, JRCSF, and two B subtype primary isolates, but not a D subtype primary isolate, by most labs in a multi-laboratory study involving 11 labs.
DSouza1995
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
2F5: 2F5 epitope ELDKWA inserted into an immunogenic loop in influenza virus hemagglutinin can elicit IIIB, MN and RF neutralizing sera in immunized mice.
Muster1994
(vaccine antigen design)
-
2F5: gp41 mutation (582 A/T) that reduces neutralization of anti-CD4 binding site MAbs does not alter 2F5's ability to neutralize.
Thali1994
-
2F5: Called IAM-41-2F5 -- neutralized lab and primary isolates -- t 1/2 dissociation 122 min for the peptide, and 156 min for gp41 -- core D(K/R)W -- Ab resistant isolate had the sequence KLDNWA.
Conley1994a
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Included in a multi-lab study for antibody characterization binding and neutralization assay comparison.
DSouza1994
(assay or method development)
-
2F5: MAb generated by electrofusion of PBL from HIV-1 positive volunteers with CB-F7 cells.
Buchacher1994
(antibody generation)
-
2F5: Failed to show synergy with anti-CD4 binding site IIIB neutralizing antibodies.
Laal1994
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: Broadly reactive neutralizing activity, ELDKWA is relatively conserved -- neutralized 2 primary isolates.
Purtscher1994
(neutralization)
-
2F5: Called IAM-41-2F5 -- reports MAb to be IgG1 -- the gp41 mutation 582(Ala to Thr) results in conformational changes in gp120 that confer neutralization resistance to conformationally sensitive neutralizing MAbs -- neutralization efficiency of 2F5 is not affected.
Klasse1993b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2F5: Synergy with combinations of CD4-based molecules in inhibition of HIV-1 Env mediated cell fusion.
Allaway1993
(antibody interactions)
-
2F5: DKWA defined as the core sequence -- highly conserved epitope neutralizing MAb.
Buchacher1992,Muster1993
(antibody binding site)
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David Beauparlant, Peter Rusert, Carsten Magnus, Claus Kadelka, Jacqueline Weber, Therese Uhr, Osvaldo Zagordi, Corinna Oberle, Maria J. Duenas-Decamp, Paul R. Clapham, Karin J. Metzner, Huldrych F. Günthard, and Alexandra Trkola. Delineating CD4 Dependency of HIV-1: Adaptation to Infect Low Level CD4 Expressing Target Cells Widens Cellular Tropism But Severely Impacts on Envelope Functionality. PLoS Pathog., 13(3):e1006255, Mar 2017. PubMed ID: 28264054.
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Elisabetta Bianchi, Joseph G. Joyce, Michael D. Miller, Adam C. Finnefrock, Xiaoping Liang, Marco Finotto, Paolo Ingallinella, Philip McKenna, Michael Citron, Elizabeth Ottinger, Robert W. Hepler, Renee Hrin, Deborah Nahas, Chengwei Wu, David Montefiori, John W. Shiver, Antonello Pessi, and Peter S. Kim. Vaccination with Peptide Mimetics of the gp41 Prehairpin Fusion Intermediate Yields Neutralizing Antisera against HIV-1 Isolates. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(23):10655-10660, 8 Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20483992.
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James M. Binley, Terri Wrin, Bette Korber, Michael B. Zwick, Meng Wang, Colombe Chappey, Gabriela Stiegler, Renate Kunert, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Hermann Katinger, Christos J. Petropoulos, and Dennis R. Burton. Comprehensive Cross-Clade Neutralization Analysis of a Panel of Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(23):13232-13252, Dec 2004. PubMed ID: 15542675.
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James M. Binley, Elizabeth A. Lybarger, Emma T. Crooks, Michael S. Seaman, Elin Gray, Katie L. Davis, Julie M. Decker, Diane Wycuff, Linda Harris, Natalie Hawkins, Blake Wood, Cory Nathe, Douglas Richman, Georgia D. Tomaras, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, James E. Robinson, Lynn Morris, George M. Shaw, David C. Montefiori, and John R. Mascola. Profiling the Specificity of Neutralizing Antibodies in a Large Panel of Plasmas from Patients Chronically Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Subtypes B and C. J. Virol., 82(23):11651-11668, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18815292.
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James Binley. Specificities of Broadly Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Sera. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):364-372, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048699.
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James M Binley, Yih-En Andrew Ban, Emma T. Crooks, Dirk Eggink, Keiko Osawa, William R. Schief, and Rogier W. Sanders. Role of Complex Carbohydrates in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection and Resistance to Antibody Neutralization. J. Virol., 84(11):5637-5655, Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20335257.
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Zohar Biron, Sanjay Khare, Sabine R. Quadt, Yehezkiel Hayek, Fred Naider, and Jacob Anglister. The 2F5 Epitope is Helical in the HIV-1 Entry Inhibitor T-20. Biochemistry, 44(41):13602-13611, 18 Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16216084.
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Wendy M. Blay, Theresa Kasprzyk, Lynda Misher, Barbra A. Richardson, and Nancy L. Haigwood. Mutations in Envelope gp120 Can Impact Proteolytic Processing of the gp160 Precursor and Thereby Affect Neutralization Sensitivity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Pseudoviruses. J. Virol., 81(23):13037-13049, Dec 2007. PubMed ID: 17855534.
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Blish2009
Catherine A. Blish, Zahra Jalalian-Lechak, Stephanie Rainwater, Minh-An Nguyen, Ozge C. Dogan, and Julie Overbaugh. Cross-Subtype Neutralization Sensitivity Despite Monoclonal Antibody Resistance among Early Subtype A, C, and D Envelope Variants of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 83(15):7783-7788, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19474105.
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Bontjer2010
Ilja Bontjer, Mark Melchers, Dirk Eggink, Kathryn David, John P. Moore, Ben Berkhout, and Rogier W. Sanders. Stabilized HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers Lacking the V1V2 Domain, Obtained by Virus Evolution. J. Biol. Chem, 285(47):36456-36470, 19 Nov 2010. PubMed ID: 20826824.
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Borggren2011
Marie Borggren, Johanna Repits, Jasminka Sterjovski, Hannes Uchtenhagen, Melissa J. Churchill, Anders Karlsson, Jan Albert, Adnane Achour, Paul R. Gorry, Eva Maria Fenyö, and Marianne Jansson. Increased Sensitivity to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies of End-Stage Disease R5 HIV-1 Correlates with Evolution in Env Glycosylation and Charge. PLoS One, 6(6):e20135, 2011. PubMed ID: 21698221.
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Bouvin-Pley2014
M. Bouvin-Pley, M. Morgand, L. Meyer, C. Goujard, A. Moreau, H. Mouquet, M. Nussenzweig, C. Pace, D. Ho, P. J. Bjorkman, D. Baty, P. Chames, M. Pancera, P. D. Kwong, P. Poignard, F. Barin, and M. Braibant. Drift of the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp120 Toward Increased Neutralization Resistance over the Course of the Epidemic: A Comprehensive Study Using the Most Potent and Broadly Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 88(23):13910-13917, Dec 2014. PubMed ID: 25231299.
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Bradley2016a
Todd Bradley, Ashley Trama, Nancy Tumba, Elin Gray, Xiaozhi Lu, Navid Madani, Fatemeh Jahanbakhsh, Amanda Eaton, Shi-Mao Xia, Robert Parks, Krissey E. Lloyd, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Cindy M. Bowman, Susan Barnett, Salim S. Abdool-Karim, Scott D. Boyd, Bruno Melillo, Amos B. Smith, 3rd., Joseph Sodroski, Thomas B. Kepler, S. Munir Alam, Feng Gao, Mattia Bonsignori, Hua-Xin Liao, M Anthony Moody, David Montefiori, Sampa Santra, Lynn Morris, and Barton F. Haynes. Amino Acid Changes in the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane Proximal Region Control Virus Neutralization Sensitivity. EBioMedicine, 12:196-207, Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27612593.
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Braibant2006
Martine Braibant, Sylvie Brunet, Dominique Costagliola, Christine Rouzioux, Henri Agut, Hermann Katinger, Brigitte Autran, and Francis Barin. Antibodies to Conserved Epitopes of the HIV-1 Envelope in Sera from Long-Term Non-Progressors: Prevalence and Association with Neutralizing Activity. AIDS, 20(15):1923-30, 3 Oct 2006. PubMed ID: 16988513.
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Braibant2013
Martine Braibant, Eun-Yeung Gong, Jean-Christophe Plantier, Thierry Moreau, Elodie Alessandri, François Simon, and Francis Barin. Cross-Group Neutralization of HIV-1 and Evidence for Conservation of the PG9/PG16 Epitopes within Divergent Groups. AIDS, 27(8):1239-1244, 15 May 2013. PubMed ID: 23343910.
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Bricault2019
Christine A. Bricault, Karina Yusim, Michael S. Seaman, Hyejin Yoon, James Theiler, Elena E. Giorgi, Kshitij Wagh, Maxwell Theiler, Peter Hraber, Jennifer P. Macke, Edward F. Kreider, Gerald H. Learn, Beatrice H. Hahn, Johannes F. Scheid, James M. Kovacs, Jennifer L. Shields, Christy L. Lavine, Fadi Ghantous, Michael Rist, Madeleine G. Bayne, George H. Neubauer, Katherine McMahan, Hanqin Peng, Coraline Chéneau, Jennifer J. Jones, Jie Zeng, Christina Ochsenbauer, Joseph P. Nkolola, Kathryn E. Stephenson, Bing Chen, S. Gnanakaran, Mattia Bonsignori, LaTonya D. Williams, Barton F. Haynes, Nicole Doria-Rose, John R. Mascola, David C. Montefiori, Dan H. Barouch, and Bette Korber. HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody Signatures and Application to Epitope-Targeted Vaccine Design. Cell Host Microbe, 25(1):59-72.e8, 9 Jan 2019. PubMed ID: 30629920.
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Brown2005a
Bruce K. Brown, Janice M. Darden, Sodsai Tovanabutra, Tamara Oblander, Julie Frost, Eric Sanders-Buell, Mark S. de Souza, Deborah L. Birx, Francine E. McCutchan, and Victoria R. Polonis. Biologic and Genetic Characterization of a Panel of 60 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates, Representing Clades A, B, C, D, CRF01\_AE, and CRF02\_AG, for the Development and Assessment of Candidate Vaccines. J. Virol., 79(10):6089-6101, May 2005. PubMed ID: 15857994.
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Bryson2008
Steve Bryson, Jean-Philippe Julien, David E. Isenman, Renate Kunert, Hermann Katinger, and Emil F. Pai. Crystal Structure of the Complex Between the Fab' Fragment of the Cross-Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Antibody 2F5 and the Fab Fragment of Its Anti-Idiotypic Antibody 3H6. J. Mol. Biol., 382(4):910-919, 17 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18692506.
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Bryson2009
Steve Bryson, Jean-Philippe Julien, Rosemary C. Hynes, and Emil F. Pai. Crystallographic Definition of the Epitope Promiscuity of the Broadly Neutralizing Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibody 2F5: Vaccine Design Implications. J. Virol., 83(22):11862-11875, Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19740978.
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Buchacher1992
Andrea Buchacher, Renate Predl, Christa Tauer, Martin Purtscher, Gerhard Gruber, Renate Heider, Fraz Steindl, Alexandra Trkola, Alois Jungbauer, and Herman Katinger. Human Monoclonal Antibodies against gp41 and gp120 as Potential Agent for Passive Immunization. Vaccines, 92:191-195, 1992.
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Bunnik2007
Evelien M Bunnik, Esther D Quakkelaar, Ad C. van Nuenen, Brigitte Boeser-Nunnink, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Increased Neutralization Sensitivity of Recently Emerged CXCR4-Using Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Strains Compared to Coexisting CCR5-Using Variants from the Same Patient. J. Virol., 81(2):525-531, Jan 2007. PubMed ID: 17079299.
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Bunnik2009
Evelien M. Bunnik, Marit J. van Gils, Marilie S. D. Lobbrecht, Linaida Pisas, Ad C. van Nuenen, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Changing Sensitivity to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 of Primary Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants in the Natural Course of Infection. Virology, 390(2):348-355, 1 Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19539340.
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Bunnik2010
Evelien M. Bunnik, Marit J. van Gils, Marilie S. D. Lobbrecht, Linaida Pisas, Nening M. Nanlohy, Debbie van Baarle, Ad C. van Nuenen, Ann J. Hessell, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Emergence of Monoclonal Antibody b12-Resistant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants during Natural Infection in the Absence of Humoral Or Cellular Immune Pressure. J. Gen. Virol., 91(5):1354-1364, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20053822.
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Bunnik2010a
Evelien M. Bunnik, Zelda Euler, Matthijs R. A. Welkers, Brigitte D. M. Boeser-Nunnink, Marlous L. Grijsen, Jan M. Prins, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Adaptation of HIV-1 Envelope gp120 to Humoral Immunity at a Population Level. Nat. Med., 16(9):995-997, Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20802498.
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Bures2002
Renata Bures, Lynn Morris, Carolyn Williamson, Gita Ramjee, Mark Deers, Susan A Fiscus, Salim Abdool-Karim, and David C. Montefiori. Regional Clustering of Shared Neutralization Determinants on Primary Isolates of Clade C Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 from South Africa. J. Virol., 76(5):2233-2244, Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11836401.
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Burrer2005
Renaud Burrer, Sandrine Haessig-Einius, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Neutralizing as Well as Non-Neutralizing Polyclonal Immunoglobulin (Ig)G from Infected Patients Capture HIV-1 via Antibodies Directed against the Principal Immunodominant Domain of gp41. Virology, 333(1):102-113, 1 Mar 2005. PubMed ID: 15708596.
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Burton1997
D. R. Burton and D. C. Montefiori. The antibody response in HIV-1 infection. AIDS, 11 Suppl A:S87-S98, 1997. An excellent review of Ab epitopes and the implications for Envelope structure, neutralization of HIV, the distinction between primary and TCLA strains, ADCC and its role in clearance, and the Ab response during the course of infection. PubMed ID: 9451972.
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Burton2005
Dennis R. Burton, Robyn L. Stanfield, and Ian A. Wilson. Antibody vs. HIV in a Clash of Evolutionary Titans. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 102(42):14943-14948, 18 Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16219699.
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Burton2012
Dennis R. Burton, Pascal Poignard, Robyn L. Stanfield, and Ian A. Wilson. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Present New Prospects to Counter Highly Antigenically Diverse Viruses. Science, 337(6091):183-186, 13 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22798606.
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Burton2016
Dennis R. Burton and Lars Hangartner. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to HIV and Their Role in Vaccine Design. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 34:635-659, 20 May 2016. PubMed ID: 27168247.
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Buzon2010
Victor Buzon, Ganesh Natrajan, David Schibli, Felix Campelo, Michael M. Kozlov, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Crystal Structure of HIV-1 gp41 Including Both Fusion Peptide and Membrane Proximal External Regions. PLoS Pathog, 6(5):e1000880, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20463810.
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Calarota1996
S. Calarota, M. Jansson, M. Levi, K. Broliden, O. Libonatti, H. Wigzell, and B. Wahren. Immunodominant Glycoprotein 41 Epitope Identified by Seroreactivity in HIV Type 1-Infected Individuals. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 12:705-713, 1996. PubMed ID: 8744581.
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Cavacini2002
Lisa A. Cavacini, Mark Duval, James Robinson, and Marshall R. Posner. Interactions of Human Antibodies, Epitope Exposure, Antibody Binding and Neutralization of Primary Isolate HIV-1 Virions. AIDS, 16(18):2409-2417, 6 Dec 2002. Erratum in AIDS. 2003 Aug 15;17(12):1863. PubMed ID: 12461414.
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Chakrabarti2002
Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Wing-pui Kong, Bei-yue Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Jacques Friborg, Xu Ling, Steven R. King, David C. Montefiori, and Gary J. Nabel. Modifications of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein Enhance Immunogenicity for Genetic Immunization. J. Virol., 76(11):5357-5368, Jun 2002. PubMed ID: 11991964.
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Chakrabarti2005
Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Xu Ling, Zhi-Yong Yang, David C. Montefiori, Amos Panet, Wing-Pui Kong, Brent Welcher, Mark K. Louder, John R. Mascola, and Gary J. Nabel. Expanded Breadth of Virus Neutralization after Immunization with a Multiclade Envelope HIV Vaccine Candidate. Vaccine, 23(26):3434-3445, 16 May 2005. PubMed ID: 15837367.
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Chakrabarti2011
B. K. Chakrabarti, L. M. Walker, J. F. Guenaga, A. Ghobbeh, P. Poignard, D. R. Burton, and R. T. Wyatt. Direct Antibody Access to the HIV-1 Membrane-Proximal External Region Positively Correlates with Neutralization Sensitivity. J. Virol., 85(16):8217-8226, Aug 2011. PubMed ID: 21653673.
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Cham2006
Fatim Cham, Peng Fei Zhang, Leo Heyndrickx, Peter Bouma, Ping Zhong, Herman Katinger, James Robinson, Guido van der Groen, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. Neutralization and Infectivity Characteristics of Envelope Glycoproteins from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infected Donors Whose Sera Exhibit Broadly Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Activity. Virology, 347(1):36-51, 30 Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16378633.
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Cheeseman2017
Hannah M. Cheeseman, Natalia J. Olejniczak, Paul M. Rogers, Abbey B. Evans, Deborah F. L. King, Paul Ziprin, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, and Robin J. Shattock. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Display Potential for Prevention of HIV-1 Infection of Mucosal Tissue Superior to That of Nonneutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 91(1), 1 Jan 2017. PubMed ID: 27795431.
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Chen1994
Y.-H. Chen, A. Susanna, G. Bock, F. Steindl, H. Katinger, and M. P. Dierich. HIV-1 gp41 Shares a Common Immunologic Determinant with Human T, B and Monocyte Cell Lines. Immunol. Lett., 39:219-222, 1994. The MAb 3D6 binds to HIV gp41, and to a 43 kd protein found in human T, B and monocyte cell lines. The authors suggest the possibility of molecular mimicry. PubMed ID: 7518416.
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Chen2007
Ping Chen, Wolfgang Hübner, Matthew A. Spinelli, and Benjamin K. Chen. Predominant Mode of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transfer between T Cells Is Mediated by Sustained Env-Dependent Neutralization-Resistant Virological Synapses. J. Virol., 81(22):12582-12595, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 17728240.
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Chen2008a
Hongying Chen, Xiaodong Xu, Hsin-Hui Lin, Ssu-Hsien Chen, Anna Forsman, Marlen Aasa-Chapman, and Ian M. Jones. Mapping the Immune Response to the Outer Domain of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Clade C gp120. J. Gen. Virol., 89(10):2597-2604, Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18796729.
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Chen2009b
Weizao Chen and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Human Monoclonal Antibodies and Engineered Antibody Domains as HIV-1 Entry Inhibitors. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(2):112-117, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19339949.
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Chen2013
Yao Chen, Jinsong Zhang, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Shi-Mao Xia, Amanda Newman, Ying-Bin Ouyang, Barton F. Haynes, and Laurent Verkoczy. Common Tolerance Mechanisms, but Distinct Cross-Reactivities Associated with gp41 and Lipids, Limit Production of HIV-1 Broad Neutralizing Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10. J. Immunol., 191(3):1260-1275, Aug 1 2013. PubMed ID: 23825311.
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Chen2015
Jia Chen, James M. Kovacs, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Jianming Lu, Donghyun Park, Elise Zablowsky, Michael S. Seaman, and Bing Chen. Effect of the Cytoplasmic Domain on Antigenic Characteristics of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Science, 349(6244):191-195, 10 Jul 2015. PubMed ID: 26113642.
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Chenine2013
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, and Sodsai Tovanabutra. Impact of HIV-1 Backbone on Neutralization Sensitivity: Neutralization Profiles of Heterologous Envelope Glycoproteins Expressed in Native Subtype C and CRF01\_AE Backbone. PLoS One, 8(11):e76104, 2013. PubMed ID: 24312165.
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Chenine2018
Agnes-Laurence Chenine, Melanie Merbah, Lindsay Wieczorek, Sebastian Molnar, Brendan Mann, Jenica Lee, Anne-Marie O'Sullivan, Meera Bose, Eric Sanders-Buell, Gustavo H. Kijak, Carolina Herrera, Robert McLinden, Robert J. O'Connell, Nelson L. Michael, Merlin L. Robb, Jerome H. Kim, Victoria R. Polonis, and Sodsai Tovanabutra. Neutralization Sensitivity of a Novel HIV-1 CRF01\_AE Panel of Infectious Molecular Clones. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 78(3):348-355, 1 Jul 2018. PubMed ID: 29528942.
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Ching2010
Lance Ching and Leonidas Stamatatos. Alterations in the Immunogenic Properties of Soluble Trimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Proteins Induced by Deletion or Heterologous Substitutions of the V1 Loop. J. Virol., 84(19):9932-9946, Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20660181.
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Chomont2008
Nicolas Chomont, Hakim Hocini, Jean-Chrysostome Gody, Hicham Bouhlal, Pierre Becquart, Corinne Krief-Bouillet, Michel Kazatchkine, and Laurent Bélec. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Do Not Inhibit Viral Transcytosis Through Mucosal Epithelial Cells. Virology, 370(2):246-254, 20 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17920650.
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Chong2008
Huihui Chong, Kunxue Hong, Chuntao Zhang, Jianhui Nie, Aijing Song, Wei Kong, and Youchun Wang. Genetic and Neutralization Properties of HIV-1 env Clones from Subtype B/BC/AE Infections in China. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 47(5):535-543, 15 Apr 2008. PubMed ID: 18209676.
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Choudhry2006
Vidita Choudhry, Mei-Yun Zhang, Ilia Harris, Igor A. Sidorov, Bang Vu, Antony S. Dimitrov, Timothy Fouts, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Increased Efficacy of HIV-1 Neutralization by Antibodies at Low CCR5 Surface Concentration. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 348(3):1107-1115, 29 Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16904645.
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Choudhry2007
Vidita Choudhry, Mei-Yun Zhang, Igor A. Sidorov, John M. Louis, Ilia Harris, Antony S. Dimitrov, Peter Bouma, Fatim Cham, Anil Choudhary, Susanna M. Rybak, Timothy Fouts, David C. Montefiori, Christopher C. Broder, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies Selected by Screening of an Immune Human Phage Library Against an Envelope Glycoprotein (gp140) Isolated from a Patient (R2) with Broadly HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies. Virology, 363(1):79-90, 20 Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17306322.
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Chuang2013
Gwo-Yu Chuang, Priyamvada Acharya, Stephen D. Schmidt, Yongping Yang, Mark K. Louder, Tongqing Zhou, Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Robert T. Bailer, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Michel C. Nussenzweig, John R. Mascola, Peter D. Kwong, and Ivelin S. Georgiev. Residue-Level Prediction of HIV-1 Antibody Epitopes Based on Neutralization of Diverse Viral Strains. J. Virol., 87(18):10047-10058, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 23843642.
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Chun2014
Tae-Wook Chun, Danielle Murray, Jesse S. Justement, Jana Blazkova, Claire W. Hallahan, Olivia Fankuchen, Kathleen Gittens, Erika Benko, Colin Kovacs, Susan Moir, and Anthony S. Fauci. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Suppress HIV in the Persistent Viral Reservoir. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 111(36):13151-13156, 9 Sep 2014. PubMed ID: 25157148.
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Clerici2002
Mario Clerici, Claudia Barassi, Claudia Devito, Claudia Pastori, Stefania Piconi, Daria Trabattoni, Renato Longhi, Jorma Hinkula, Kristina Broliden, and Lucia Lopalco. Serum IgA of HIV-Exposed Uninfected Individuals Inhibit HIV Through Recognition of a Region within the Alpha-Helix of gp41. AIDS, 16(13):1731-1741, 6 Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12218383.
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Coeffier2000
E. Coeffier, J. M. Clement, V. Cussac, N. Khodaei-Boorane, M. Jehanno, M. Rojas, A. Dridi, M. Latour, R. El Habib, F. Barre-Sinoussi, M. Hofnung, and C. Leclerc. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of the HIV-1 gp41 Epitope ELDKWA Inserted into Permissive Sites of the MalE Protein. Vaccine, 19(7-8):684-693, 22 Nov 2000. PubMed ID: 11115689.
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Cognasse2009
Fabrice Cognasse, Hind Hamzeh-Cognasse, Julien Berthet, Pauline Damien, Frédéric Lucht, Bruno Pozzetto, and Olivier Garraud. Altered Release of Regulated upon Activation, Normal T-Cell Expressed and Secreted Protein from Human, Normal Platelets: Contribution of Distinct HIV-1MN gp41 Peptides. AIDS, 23(15):2057-2059, 24 Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 19654498.
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Conley1994a
A. J. Conley, J. A. Kessler, II, L. J. Boots, J.-S. Tung, B. A. Arnold, P. M. Keller, A. R. Shaw, and E. A. Emini. Neutralization of Divergent Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants and Primary Isolates by IAM-41-2F5, an Anti-gp41 Human Monoclonal Antibody. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 91:3348-3352, 1994. 2F5 is capable of neutralizing a broad range of primary isolates and lab strains. Susceptibility to neutralization was dependent on presence of a conserved antibody binding site. Kinetic studies were done, and 2F5 has a very long t$_1/2$ of dissociation, 156 minutes for gp41. The authors point out that LDKW core is present in highly diverged international isolates. PubMed ID: 7512731.
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Conley1996
A. J. Conley, J. A. Kessler, II, L. J. Boots, P. M. McKenna, W. A. Schleif, E. A. Emini, G. E. Mark, III, H. Katinger, E. K. Cobb, S. M. Lunceford, S. R. Rouse, and K. K. Murthy. The Consequence of Passive Administration of an Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody before Challenge of Chimpanzees with a Primary Virus Isolate. J. Virol., 70:6751-6758, 1996. The MAb 2F5 was infused into two chimpanzees which were then given an intravenous challenge with a primary HIV-1 isolate -- both became infected, but with delayed detection and prolonged decrease in viral load relative to controls, indicating that preexisting, neutralizing antibodies (passively administered or actively elicited) affect the course of acute-phase virus replication and can be influential after the Ab can no longer be detected in the peripheral circulation. PubMed ID: 8794312.
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Connor1998
R. I. Connor, B. T. Korber, B. S. Graham, B. H. Hahn, D. D. Ho, B. D. Walker, A. U. Neumann, S. H. Vermund, J. Mestecky, S. Jackson, E. Fenamore, Y. Cao, F. Gao, S. Kalams, K. J. Kunstman, D. McDonald, N. McWilliams, A. Trkola, J. P. Moore, and S. M. Wolinsky. Immunological and virological analyses of persons infected by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 while participating in trials of recombinant gp120 subunit vaccines. J. Virol., 72:1552-76, 1998. No gp120-vaccine induced antibodies in a human trial of gp120 MN and SF2 could neutralize the primary viruses that infected the vaccinees. The primary isolates from the infected vaccinees were shown not to be particularly refractive to neutralization by their susceptibility to a panel of neutralizing MAbs. PubMed ID: 9445059.
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Corti2010
Davide Corti, Johannes P. M. Langedijk, Andreas Hinz, Michael S. Seaman, Fabrizia Vanzetta, Blanca M. Fernandez-Rodriguez, Chiara Silacci, Debora Pinna, David Jarrossay, Sunita Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh, Betty Willems, Maria J. Zekveld, Hanna Dreja, Eithne O'Sullivan, Corinna Pade, Chloe Orkin, Simon A. Jeffs, David C. Montefiori, David Davis, Winfried Weissenhorn, Áine McKnight, Jonathan L. Heeney, Federica Sallusto, Quentin J. Sattentau, Robin A. Weiss, and Antonio Lanzavecchia. Analysis of Memory B Cell Responses and Isolation of Novel Monoclonal Antibodies with Neutralizing Breadth from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. PLoS One, 5(1):e8805, 2010. PubMed ID: 20098712.
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Coutant2008
Jérôme Coutant, Huifeng Yu, Marie-Jeanne Clément, Annette Alfsen, Flavio Toma, Patrick A. Curmi, and Morgane Bomsel. Both Lipid Environment and pH Are Critical for Determining Physiological Solution Structure of 3-D-Conserved Epitopes of the HIV-1 gp41-MPER Peptide P1. FASEB J., 22(12):4338-4351, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18776068.
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Crooks2005
Emma T. Crooks, Penny L. Moore, Douglas Richman, James Robinson, Jeffrey A. Crooks, Michael Franti, Norbert Schülke, and James M. Binley. Characterizing Anti-HIV Monoclonal Antibodies and Immune Sera by Defining the Mechanism of Neutralization. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):101-113, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720980.
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Crooks2008
Emma T. Crooks, Pengfei Jiang, Michael Franti, Sharon Wong, Michael B. Zwick, James A. Hoxie, James E. Robinson, Penny L. Moore, and James M. Binley. Relationship of HIV-1 and SIV Envelope Glycoprotein Trimer Occupation and Neutralization. Virology, 377(2):364-378, 1 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18539308.
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Crooks2011
Ema T. Crooks, Tommy Tong, Keiko Osawa, and James M. Binley. Enzyme Digests Eliminate Nonfunctional Env from HIV-1 Particle Surfaces, Leaving Native Env Trimers Intact and Viral Infectivity Unaffected. J. Virol., 85(12):5825-5839, Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21471242.
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Crooks2015
Ema T. Crooks, Tommy Tong, Bimal Chakrabarti, Kristin Narayan, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Sergey Menis, Xiaoxing Huang, Daniel Kulp, Keiko Osawa, Janelle Muranaka, Guillaume Stewart-Jones, Joanne Destefano, Sijy O'Dell, Celia LaBranche, James E. Robinson, David C. Montefiori, Krisha McKee, Sean X. Du, Nicole Doria-Rose, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, Ping Zhu, William R. Schief, Richard T. Wyatt, Robert G. Whalen, and James M. Binley. Vaccine-Elicited Tier 2 HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Bind to Quaternary Epitopes Involving Glycan-Deficient Patches Proximal to the CD4 Binding Site. PLoS Pathog, 11(5):e1004932, May 2015. PubMed ID: 26023780.
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Dacheux2004
Laurent Dacheux, Alain Moreau, Yasemin Ataman-Önal, François Biron, Bernard Verrier, and Francis Barin. Evolutionary Dynamics of the Glycan Shield of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope during Natural Infection and Implications for Exposure of the 2G12 Epitope. J. Virol., 78(22):12625-12637, Nov 2004. PubMed ID: 15507649.
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Danesh2020
Ali Danesh, Yanqin Ren, and R. Brad Jones. Roles of Fragment Crystallizable-Mediated Effector Functions in Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Activity against HIV. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 15(5):316-323, Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32732552.
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Davis2006
David Davis, Helen Donners, Betty Willems, Michel Ntemgwa, Tine Vermoesen, Guido van der Groen, and Wouter Janssens. Neutralization Kinetics of Sensitive and Resistant Subtype B Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates. J. Med. Virol., 78(7):864-786, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16721864.
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Davis2009
Katie L. Davis, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Hui Li, Julie M. Decker, Olaf Kutsch, Lynn Morris, Aidy Salomon, Abraham Pinter, James A. Hoxie, Beatrice H. Hahn, Peter D. Kwong, and George M. Shaw. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 2 (HIV-2)/HIV-1 Envelope Chimeras Detect High Titers of Broadly Reactive HIV-1 V3-Specific Antibodies in Human Plasma. J. Virol., 83(3):1240-1259, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 19019969.
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Decamp2014
Allan deCamp, Peter Hraber, Robert T. Bailer, Michael S. Seaman, Christina Ochsenbauer, John Kappes, Raphael Gottardo, Paul Edlefsen, Steve Self, Haili Tang, Kelli Greene, Hongmei Gao, Xiaoju Daniell, Marcella Sarzotti-Kelsoe, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Celia C. LaBranche, John R. Mascola, Bette T. Korber, and David C. Montefiori. Global Panel of HIV-1 Env Reference Strains for Standardized Assessments of Vaccine-Elicited Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 88(5):2489-2507, Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24352443.
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delaArada2009
Igor de la Arada, Jean-Philippe Julien, Beatriz G. de la Torre, Nerea Huarte, David Andreu, Emil F. Pai, José L. R. Arrondo, and José L. Nieva. Structural Constraints Imposed by the Conserved Fusion Peptide on the HIV-1 gp41 Epitope Recognized by the Broadly Neutralizing Antibody 2F5. J. Phys. Chem. B, 113(41):13626-13637, 15 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19754136.
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Dennison2009
S. Moses Dennison, Shelley M. Stewart, Kathryn C. Stempel, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Stable Docking of Neutralizing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41 Membrane-Proximal External Region Monoclonal Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10 Is Dependent on the Membrane Immersion Depth of Their Epitope Regions. J. Virol., 83(19):10211-10223, Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19640992.
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Dennison2011
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, and Barton F. Haynes. Induction of Antibodies in Rhesus Macaques That Recognize a Fusion-Intermediate Conformation of HIV-1 gp41. PLoS One, 6(11):e27824, 2011. PubMed ID: 22140469.
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Dennison2011a
S. Moses Dennison, Kara Anasti, Richard M. Scearce, Laura Sutherland, Robert Parks, Shi-Mao Xia, Hua-Xin Liao, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Nonneutralizing HIV-1 gp41 Envelope Cluster II Human Monoclonal Antibodies Show Polyreactivity for Binding to Phospholipids and Protein Autoantigens. J. Virol., 85(3):1340-1347, Feb 2011. PubMed ID: 21106741.
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Dennison2014
S. Moses Dennison, Kara M. Anasti, Frederick H. Jaeger, Shelley M. Stewart, Justin Pollara, Pinghuang Liu, Erika L. Kunz, Ruijun Zhang, Nathan Vandergrift, Sallie Permar, Guido Ferrari, Georgia D. Tomaras, Mattia Bonsignori, Nelson L. Michael, Jerome H Kim, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Vaccine-Induced HIV-1 Envelope gp120 Constant Region 1-Specific Antibodies Expose a CD4-Inducible Epitope and Block the Interaction of HIV-1 gp140 with Galactosylceramide. J. Virol., 88(16):9406-9417, Aug 2014. PubMed ID: 24920809.
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Depetris2012
Rafael S Depetris, Jean-Philippe Julien, Reza Khayat, Jeong Hyun Lee, Robert Pejchal, Umesh Katpally, Nicolette Cocco, Milind Kachare, Evan Massi, Kathryn B. David, Albert Cupo, Andre J. Marozsan, William C. Olson, Andrew B. Ward, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, and John P Moore. Partial Enzymatic Deglycosylation Preserves the Structure of Cleaved Recombinant HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. J. Biol. Chem., 287(29):24239-24254, 13 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22645128.
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Derby2006
Nina R. Derby, Zane Kraft, Elaine Kan, Emma T. Crooks, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, James M. Binley, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Antibody Responses Elicited in Macaques Immunized with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) SF162-Derived gp140 Envelope Immunogens: Comparison with Those Elicited during Homologous Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4 and Heterologous HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 80(17):8745-8762, Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16912322.
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Derby2007
Nina R. Derby, Sean Gray, Elizabeth Wayner, Dwayne Campogan, Giorgos Vlahogiannis, Zane Kraft, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Isolation and Characterization of Monoclonal Antibodies Elicited by Trimeric HIV-1 Env gp140 Protein Immunogens. Virology, 366(2):433-445, 30 Sep 2007. PubMed ID: 17560621.
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deRosny2004
Eve de Rosny, Russell Vassell, Shibo Jiang, Renate Kunert, and Carol D. Weiss. Binding of the 2F5 Monoclonal Antibody to Native and Fusion-Intermediate Forms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41: Implications for Fusion-Inducing Conformational Changes. J. Virol., 78(5):2627-2631, Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 14963170.
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Dervillez2010
Xavier Dervillez, Volker Klaukien, Ralf Dürr, Joachim Koch, Alexandra Kreutz, Thomas Haarmann, Michaela Stoll, Donghan Lee, Teresa Carlomagno, Barbara Schnierle, Kalle Möbius, Christoph Königs, Christian Griesinger, and Ursula Dietrich. Peptide Ligands Selected with CD4-Induced Epitopes on Native Dualtropic HIV-1 Envelope Proteins Mimic Extracellular Coreceptor Domains and Bind to HIV-1 gp120 Independently of Coreceptor Usage. J. Virol., 84(19):10131-10138, Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20660187.
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Dey2003
Barna Dey, Christie S. Del Castillo, and Edward A. Berger. Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by sCD4-17b, a Single-Chain Chimeric Protein, Based on Sequential Interaction of gp120 with CD4 and Coreceptor. J. Virol., 77(5):2859-2865, Mar 2003. PubMed ID: 12584309.
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Dey2007
Antu K. Dey, Kathryn B. David, Per J. Klasse, and John P. Moore. Specific Amino Acids in the N-Terminus of the gp41 Ectodomain Contribute to the Stabilization of a Soluble, Cleaved gp140 Envelope Glycoprotein from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. Virology, 360(1):199-208, 30 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17092531.
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Dey2008
Antu K. Dey, Kathryn B. David, Neelanjana Ray, Thomas J. Ketas, Per J. Klasse, Robert W. Doms, and John P. Moore. N-Terminal Substitutions in HIV-1 gp41 Reduce the Expression of Non-Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins on the Virus. Virology, 372(1):187-200, 1 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18031785.
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Dhillon2007
Amandeep K. Dhillon, Helen Donners, Ralph Pantophlet, Welkin E. Johnson, Julie M. Decker, George M. Shaw, Fang-Hua Lee, Douglas D. Richman, Robert W. Doms, Guido Vanham, and Dennis R. Burton. Dissecting the Neutralizing Antibody Specificities of Broadly Neutralizing Sera from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Donors. J. Virol., 81(12):6548-6562, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17409160.
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Dieltjens2009
Tessa Dieltjens, Leo Heyndrickx, Betty Willems, Elin Gray, Lies Van Nieuwenhove, Katrijn Grupping, Guido Vanham, and Wouter Janssens. Evolution of Antibody Landscape and Viral Envelope Escape in an HIV-1 CRF02\_AG Infected Patient with 4E10-Like Antibodies. Retrovirology, 6:113, 2009. PubMed ID: 20003438.
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Dimitrov2007
Antony S. Dimitrov, Amy Jacobs, Catherine M. Finnegan, Gabriela Stiegler, Hermann Katinger, and Robert Blumenthal. Exposure of the Membrane-Proximal External Region of HIV-1 gp41 in the Course of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein-Mediated Fusion. Biochemistry, 46(5):1398-1401, 6 Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 17260969.
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Diomede2012
L. Diomede, S. Nyoka, C. Pastori, L. Scotti, A. Zambon, G. Sherman, C. M. Gray, M. Sarzotti-Kelsoe, and L. Lopalco. Passively Transmitted gp41 Antibodies in Babies Born from HIV-1 Subtype C-Seropositive Women: Correlation between Fine Specificity and Protection. J. Virol., 86(8):4129-4138, Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22301151.
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Dong2001
X. N. Dong, Y. Xiao, and Y. H. Chen. ELNKWA-epitope specific antibodies induced by epitope-vaccine recognize ELDKWA- and other two neutralizing-resistant mutated epitopes on HIV-1 gp41. Immunol. Lett., 75(2):149--52, 1 Jan 2001. PubMed ID: 11137140.
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Dong2005
Xiao-Nan Dong, Yi Wu, and Ying-Hua Chen. The Neutralizing Epitope ELDKWA on HIV-1 gp41: Genetic Variability and Antigenicity. Immunol. Lett., 101(1):81-86, 15 Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 15951025.
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Dong2006
Xiao-Nan Dong and Ying-Hua Chen. Neutralizing Epitopes in the Membrane-Proximal Region of HIV-1 gp41: Genetic Variability and Co-Variation. Immunol. Lett., 106(2):180-186, 15 Aug 2006. PubMed ID: 16859756.
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Doria-Rose2010
Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Rachel M. Klein, Marcus G. Daniels, Sijy O'Dell, Martha Nason, Alan Lapedes, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Stephen A. Migueles, Richard T. Wyatt, Bette T. Korber, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Breadth of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Specific Neutralizing Activity in Sera: Clustering Analysis and Association with Clinical Variables. J. Virol., 84(3):1631-1636, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19923174.
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Doria-Rose2017
Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Han R. Altae-Tran, Ryan S. Roark, Stephen D. Schmidt, Matthew S. Sutton, Mark K. Louder, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Robert T. Bailer, Valerie Cortez, Rui Kong, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Felicia Wang, Salim S. Abdool Karim, James M. Binley, Mark Connors, Barton F. Haynes, Malcolm A. Martin, David C. Montefiori, Lynn Morris, Julie Overbaugh, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Ivelin S. Georgiev. Mapping Polyclonal HIV-1 Antibody Responses via Next-Generation Neutralization Fingerprinting. PLoS Pathog., 13(1):e1006148, Jan 2017. PubMed ID: 28052137.
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Dorosko2008
Stephanie M. Dorosko, Sandra L. Ayres, and Ruth I. Connor. Induction of HIV-1 MPR(649-684)-Specific IgA and IgG Antibodies in Caprine Colostrum Using a Peptide-Based Vaccine. Vaccine, 26(42):5416-5422, 3 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18708113.
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Drummer2013
Heidi E. Drummer, Melissa K. Hill, Anne L. Maerz, Stephanie Wood, Paul A. Ramsland, Johnson Mak, and Pantelis Poumbourios. Allosteric Modulation of the HIV-1 gp120-gp41 Association Site by Adjacent gp120 Variable Region 1 (V1) N-Glycans Linked to Neutralization Sensitivity. PLoS Pathog., 9(4):e1003218, 2013. PubMed ID: 23592978.
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DSouza1994
M. P. D'Souza, S. J. Geyer, C. V. Hanson, R. M. Hendry, G. Milman, and Collaborating Investigators. Evaluation of Monoclonal Antibodies to HIV-1 Envelope by Neutralization and Binding Assays: An International Collaboration. AIDS, 8:169-181, 1994. PubMed ID: 7519019.
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DSouza1995
M. P. D'Souza, G. Milman, J. A. Bradac, D. McPhee, C. V. Hanson, and R. M. Hendry. Neutralization of Primary HIV-1 Isolates by Anti-Envelope Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS, 9:867-874, 1995. Eleven labs tested the 6 human MAbs 1125H, TH9, 4.8D, 257-D-IV, TH1, 2F5, and also HIVIG for neutralization of MN, JRCSF, the two B clade primary isolates 301657 and THA/92/026, and the D clade isolate UG/92/21. 2F5 was the most broadly neutralizing, better than HIVIG. The other MAbs showed limited neutralization of only MN (anti-CD4BS MAbs 1125H, TH9, and 4.8D), or MN and JRCSF (anti-V3 MAbs 257-D-IV and TH1). PubMed ID: 7576320.
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DSouza1997
M. P. D'Souza, D. Livnat, J. A. Bradac, S. H. Bridges, the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Antibody Selection Working Group, and Collaborating Investigators. Evaluation of monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 primary isolates by neutralization assays: performance criteria for selecting candidate antibodies for clinical trials. J. Infect. Dis., 175:1056-1062, 1997. Five laboratories evaluated neutralization of nine primary B clade isolates by a coded panel of seven human MAbs to HIV-1 subtype B envelope. IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 showed potent and broadly cross-reactive neutralizing ability; F105, 447/52-D, 729-D, 19b did not neutralize the primary isolates. PubMed ID: 9129066.
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Du2009
Sean X. Du, Rebecca J. Idiart, Ellaine B. Mariano, Helen Chen, Peifeng Jiang, Li Xu, Kristin M. Ostrow, Terri Wrin, Pham Phung, James M. Binley, Christos J. Petropoulos, John A. Ballantyne, and Robert G. Whalen. Effect of Trimerization Motifs on Quaternary Structure, Antigenicity, and Immunogenicity of a Noncleavable HIV-1 gp140 Envelope Glycoprotein. Virology, 395(1):33-44, 5 Dec 2009. PubMed ID: 19815247.
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Dunfee2007
Rebecca L. Dunfee, Elaine R. Thomas, Jianbin Wang, Kevin Kunstman, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Loss of the N-Linked Glycosylation Site at Position 386 in the HIV Envelope V4 Region Enhances Macrophage Tropism and Is Associated with Dementia. Virology, 367(1):222-234, 10 Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17599380.
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Earl1997
P. L. Earl, C. C. Broder, R. W. Doms, and B. Moss. Epitope map of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp41 derived from 47 monoclonal antibodies produced by immunization with oligomeric envelope protein. J. Virol., 71:2674-84, 1997. PubMed ID: 9060620.
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Edmonds2010
Tara G. Edmonds, Haitao Ding, Xing Yuan, Qing Wei, Kendra S. Smith, Joan A. Conway, Lindsay Wieczorek, Bruce Brown, Victoria Polonis, John T. West, David C. Montefiori, John C. Kappes, and Christina Ochsenbauer. Replication Competent Molecular Clones of HIV-1 Expressing Renilla Luciferase Facilitate the Analysis of Antibody Inhibition in PBMC. Virology, 408(1):1-13, 5 Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 20863545.
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Ernst1998
W. Ernst, R. Grabherr, D. Wegner, N. Borth, A. Grassauer, and H. Katinger. Baculovirus surface display: construction and screening of a eukaryotic epitope library. Nucl. Acids Res., 26:1718-23, 1998. PubMed ID: 9512544.
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Euler2011
Zelda Euler, Evelien M. Bunnik, Judith A. Burger, Brigitte D. M. Boeser-Nunnink, Marlous L. Grijsen, Jan M. Prins, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Activity of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies, Including PG9, PG16, and VRC01, against Recently Transmitted Subtype B HIV-1 Variants from Early and Late in the Epidemic. J. Virol., 85(14):7236-7245, Jul 2011. PubMed ID: 21561918.
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Falkowska2012
Emilia Falkowska, Alejandra Ramos, Yu Feng, Tongqing Zhou, Stephanie Moquin, Laura M. Walker, Xueling Wu, Michael S. Seaman, Terri Wrin, Peter D. Kwong, Richard T. Wyatt, John R. Mascola, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. PGV04, an HIV-1 gp120 CD4 Binding Site Antibody, Is Broad and Potent in Neutralization but Does Not Induce Conformational Changes Characteristic of CD4. J. Virol., 86(8):4394-4403, Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22345481.
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Fenyo2009
Eva Maria Fenyö, Alan Heath, Stefania Dispinseri, Harvey Holmes, Paolo Lusso, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Helen Donners, Leo Heyndrickx, Jose Alcami, Vera Bongertz, Christian Jassoy, Mauro Malnati, David Montefiori, Christiane Moog, Lynn Morris, Saladin Osmanov, Victoria Polonis, Quentin Sattentau, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Ruengpung Sutthent, Terri Wrin, and Gabriella Scarlatti. International Network for Comparison of HIV Neutralization Assays: The NeutNet Report. PLoS One, 4(2):e4505, 2009. PubMed ID: 19229336.
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Ferrantelli2002
Flavia Ferrantelli and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Neutralizing Antibodies Against HIV --- Back in the Major Leagues? Curr. Opin. Immunol., 14(4):495-502, Aug 2002. PubMed ID: 12088685.
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Ferrantelli2003
Flavia Ferrantelli, Regina Hofmann-Lehmann, Robert A. Rasmussen, Tao Wang, Weidong Xu, Pei-Lin Li, David C. Montefiori, Lisa A. Cavacini, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Daniel C. Anderson, Harold M. McClure, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Post-Exposure Prophylaxis with Human Monoclonal Antibodies Prevented SHIV89.6P Infection or Disease in Neonatal Macaques. AIDS, 17(3):301-309, 14 Feb 2003. PubMed ID: 12556683.
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Ferrantelli2004
Flavia Ferrantelli, Robert A. Rasmussen, Kathleen A. Buckley, Pei-Lin Li, Tao Wang, David C. Montefiori, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Daniel C. Anderson, Harold M. McClure, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Complete Protection of Neonatal Rhesus Macaques against Oral Exposure to Pathogenic Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Human Anti-HIV Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Infect. Dis., 189(12):2167-2173, 15 Jun 2004. PubMed ID: 15181562.
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Ferrantelli2004a
Flavia Ferrantelli, Moiz Kitabwalla, Robert A. Rasmussen, Chuanhai Cao, Ting-Chao Chou, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Lisa A. Cavacini, Yun Bai, Joseph Cotropia, Kenneth E. Ugen, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Potent Cross-Group Neutralization of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Isolates with Monoclonal Antibodies--Implications for Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Vaccine. J. Infect. Dis., 189(1):71-74, 1 Jan 2004. PubMed ID: 14702155.
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Ferrantelli2007
Flavia Ferrantelli, Kathleen A. Buckley, Robert A. Rasmussen, Alistair Chalmers, Tao Wang, Pei-Lin Li, Alison L. Williams, Regina Hofmann-Lehmann, David C. Montefiori, Lisa A. Cavacini, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Daniel C. Anderson, Harold M. McClure, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Time Dependence of Protective Post-Exposure Prophylaxis with Human Monoclonal Antibodies Against Pathogenic SHIV Challenge in Newborn Macaques. Virology, 358(1):69-78, 5 Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 16996554.
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Fiebig2009
Uwe Fiebig, Mirco Schmolke, Magdalena Eschricht, Reinhard Kurth, and Joachim Denner. Mode of Interaction between the HIV-1-Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5 and Its Epitope. AIDS, 23(8):887-895, 15 May 2009. PubMed ID: 19414989.
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Finnegan2002
Catherine M. Finnegan, Werner Berg, George K. Lewis, and Anthony L. DeVico. Antigenic Properties of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmembrane Glycoprotein during Cell-Cell Fusion. J. Virol., 76(23):12123-12134, Dec 2002. PubMed ID: 12414953.
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Finton2013
Kathryn A. K. Finton, Kevin Larimore, H. Benjamin Larman, Della Friend, Colin Correnti, Peter B. Rupert, Stephen J. Elledge, Philip D. Greenberg, and Roland K. Strong. Autoreactivity and Exceptional CDR Plasticity (but Not Unusual Polyspecificity) Hinder Elicitation of the Anti-HIV Antibody 4E10. PLoS Pathog., 9(9):e1003639, 2013. PubMed ID: 24086134.
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Floss2008
Doreen M. Floss, Markus Sack, Johannes Stadlmann, Thomas Rademacher, Jürgen Scheller, Eva Stöger, Rainer Fischer, and Udo Conrad. Biochemical and Functional Characterization of Anti-HIV Antibody-ELP Fusion Proteins from Transgenic Plants. Plant Biotechnol. J., 6(4):379-391, May 2008. PubMed ID: 18312505.
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Follis2002
Kathryn E. Follis, Scott J. Larson, Min Lu, and Jack H. Nunberg. Genetic Evidence that Interhelical Packing Interactions in the gp41 Core Are Critical for Transition of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein to the Fusion-Active State. J. Virol., 76(14):7356-7362, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12072535.
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Forthal2009
Donald N. Forthal and Christiane Moog. Fc Receptor-Mediated Antiviral Antibodies. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):388-393, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048702.
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Fouts1998
T. R. Fouts, A. Trkola, M. S. Fung, and J. P. Moore. Interactions of Polyclonal and Monoclonal Anti-Glycoprotein 120 Antibodies with Oligomeric Glycoprotein 120-Glycoprotein 41 Complexes of a Primary HIV Type 1 Isolate: Relationship to Neutralization. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:591-597, 1998. Ab reactivity to oligomeric forms of gp120 were compared to neutralization of the macrophage tropic primary virus JRFL, and did not always correlate. This builds upon studies which have shown that oligomer binding while required for neutralization, is not always sufficient. MAb 205-46-9 and 2G6 bind oligomer with high affinity, comparable to IgG1b12, but unlike IgG1b12, cannot neutralize JRFL. Furthermore, neutralizing and non-neutralizing sera from HIV-1 infected people are similar in their reactivities to oligomeric JRFL Envelope. PubMed ID: 9591713.
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Frankel1998
S. S. Frankel, R. M. Steinman, N. L. Michael, S. R. Kim, N. Bhardwaj, M. Pope, M. K. Louder, P. K. Ehrenberg, P. W. Parren, D. R. Burton, H. Katinger, T. C. VanCott, M. L. Robb, D. L. Birx, and J. R. Mascola. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies Block Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection of Dendritic Cells and Transmission to T Cells. J. Virol., 72:9788-9794, 1998. Investigation of three human MAbs to elicit a neutralizing effect and block HIV-1 infection in human dendritic cells. Preincubation with NAbs IgG1b12 or a combination of 2F5/2G12 prevented infection of purified DC and transmission in DC/T-cell cultures. PubMed ID: 9811714.
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Franquelim2011
Henri G. Franquelim, Salvatore Chiantia, Ana Salomé Veiga, Nuno C. Santos, Petra Schwille, and Miguel A. R. B. Castanho. Anti-HIV-1 Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10 Interact Differently with Lipids to Bind Their Epitopes. AIDS, 25(4):419-428, 20 Feb 2011. PubMed ID: 21245727.
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Frey2008
Gary Frey, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Marco Morelli, Yifan Cheng, and Bing Chen. A Fusion-Intermediate State of HIV-1 gp41 Targeted by Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(10):3739-3744, 11 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18322015.
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Frey2010
Gary Frey, Jia Chen, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Michael M. Freeman, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Bing Chen. Distinct Conformational States of HIV-1 gp41 Are Recognized by Neutralizing and Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(12):1486-1491, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21076402.
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Fu2018
Qingshan Fu, Md Munan Shaik, Yongfei Cai, Fadi Ghantous, Alessandro Piai, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Zhijun Liu, Stephen C. Harrison, Michael S. Seaman, Bing Chen, and James J. Chou. Structure of the Membrane Proximal External Region of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 115(38):E8892-E8899, 18 Sep 2018. PubMed ID: 30185554.
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Gach2007a
Johannes S. Gach, Heribert Quendler, Robert Weik, Hermann Katinger, and Renate Kunert. Partial Humanization and Characterization of an Anti-Idiotypic Antibody against Monoclonal Antibody 2F5, a Potential HIV Vaccine? AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 23(11):1405-1415, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18184084.
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Gach2008
Johannes Simon Gach, Heribert Quendler, Boris Ferko, Hermann Katinger, and Renate Kunert. Expression, Purification, and In Vivo Administration of a Promising Anti-Idiotypic HIV-1 Vaccine. Mol. Biotechnol., 39(2):119-125, Jun 2008. PubMed ID: 18327550.
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Gach2008a
Johannes Simon Gach, Heribert Quendler, Stefanie Strobach, Hermann Katinger, and Renate Kunert. Structural Analysis and In Vivo Administration of an Anti-Idiotypic Antibody against mAb 2F5. Mol. Immunol., 45(4):1027-1034, Feb 2008. PubMed ID: 17804071.
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Gach2013
Johannes S. Gach, Heribert Quendler, Tommy Tong, Kristin M. Narayan, Sean X. Du, Robert G. Whalen, James M. Binley, Donald N. Forthal, Pascal Poignard, and Michael B. Zwick. A Human Antibody to the CD4 Binding Site of gp120 Capable of Highly Potent but Sporadic Cross Clade Neutralization of Primary HIV-1. PLoS One, 8(8):e72054, 2013. PubMed ID: 23991039.
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Gach2014
Johannes S. Gach, Chad J. Achenbach, Veronika Chromikova, Baiba Berzins, Nina Lambert, Gary Landucci, Donald N. Forthal, Christine Katlama, Barbara H. Jung, and Robert L. Murphy. HIV-1 Specific Antibody Titers and Neutralization among Chronically Infected Patients on Long-Term Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy (ART): A Cross-Sectional Study. PLoS One, 9(1):e85371, 2014. PubMed ID: 24454852.
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Gao2005a
Feng Gao, Eric A. Weaver, Zhongjing Lu, Yingying Li, Hua-Xin Liao, Benjiang Ma, S Munir Alam, Richard M. Scearce, Laura L. Sutherland, Jae-Sung Yu, Julie M. Decker, George M. Shaw, David C. Montefiori, Bette T. Korber, Beatrice H. Hahn, and Barton F. Haynes. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of a Synthetic Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Group M Consensus Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 79(2):1154-1163, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15613343.
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Gao2007
Feng Gao, Hua-Xin Liao, Beatrice H. Hahn, Norman L. Letvin, Bette T. Korber, and Barton F. Haynes. Centralized HIV-1 Envelope Immunogens and Neutralizing Antibodies. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):572-577, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045113.
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Gao2009
Feng Gao, Richard M. Scearce, S. Munir Alam, Bhavna Hora, Shimao Xia, Julie E. Hohm, Robert J. Parks, Damon F. Ogburn, Georgia D. Tomaras, Emily Park, Woodrow E. Lomas, Vernon C. Maino, Susan A. Fiscus, Myron S. Cohen, M. Anthony Moody, Beatrice H. Hahn, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, and Barton F. Haynes. Cross-reactive Monoclonal Antibodies to Multiple HIV-1 Subtype and SIVcpz Envelope Glycoproteins. Virology, 394(1):91-98, 10 Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19744690.
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Geffin1998
R. B. Geffin, G. B. Scott, M. Melenwick, C. Hutto, S. Lai, L. J. Boots, P. M. McKenna, JA 2nd. Kessler, and A. J. Conley. Association of Antibody Reactivity to ELDKWA, a Glycoprotein 41 Neutralization Epitope, with Disease Progression in Children Perinatally Infected with HIV Type 1. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:579-590, 1998. PubMed ID: 9591712.
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Geonnotti2010
Anthony R. Geonnotti, Miroslawa Bilska, Xing Yuan, Christina Ochsenbauer, Tara G. Edmonds, John C. Kappes, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, and David C. Montefiori. Differential Inhibition of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells and TZM-bl Cells by Endotoxin-Mediated Chemokine and Gamma Interferon Production. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 26(3):279-291, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20218881.
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Georgiev2013
Ivelin S. Georgiev, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Tongqing Zhou, Young Do Kwon, Ryan P. Staupe, Stephanie Moquin, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Mark K. Louder, Stephen D. Schmidt, Han R. Altae-Tran, Robert T. Bailer, Krisha McKee, Martha Nason, Sijy O'Dell, Gilad Ofek, Marie Pancera, Sanjay Srivatsan, Lawrence Shapiro, Mark Connors, Stephen A. Migueles, Lynn Morris, Yoshiaki Nishimura, Malcolm A. Martin, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Delineating Antibody Recognition in Polyclonal Sera from Patterns of HIV-1 Isolate Neutralization. Science, 340(6133):751-756, 10 May 2013. PubMed ID: 23661761.
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GoldingH2002
Hana Golding, Marina Zaitseva, Eve de Rosny, Lisa R. King, Jody Manischewitz, Igor Sidorov, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, and Carol D. Weiss. Dissection of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Entry with Neutralizing Antibodies to gp41 Fusion Intermediates. J. Virol., 76(13):6780-6790, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12050391.
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Gonzalez2010
Nuria Gonzalez, Amparo Alvarez, and Jose Alcami. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and their Significance for HIV-1 Vaccines. Curr. HIV Res., 8(8):602-612, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21054253.
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Gorny1997
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Thomas C. VanCott, Catarina Hioe, Zimra R. Israel, Nelson L. Michael, Anthony J. Conley, Constance Williams, Joseph A. Kessler II, Padmasree Chigurupati, Sherri Burda, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the V3 Loop of HIV-1 With Intra- and Interclade Cross-Reactivity. J. Immunol., 159:5114-5122, 1997. PubMed ID: 9366441.
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Gorny2000a
M. K. Gorny and S. Zolla-Pazner. Recognition by Human Monoclonal Antibodies of Free and Complexed Peptides Representing the Prefusogenic and Fusogenic Forms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 74:6186-6192, 2000. PubMed ID: 10846104.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Gorry2002
Paul R. Gorry, Joann Taylor, Geoffrey H. Holm, Andrew Mehle, Tom Morgan, Mark Cayabyab, Michael Farzan, Hui Wang, Jeanne E. Bell, Kevin Kunstman, John P. Moore, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Increased CCR5 Affinity and Reduced CCR5/CD4 Dependence of a Neurovirulent Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 76(12):6277-6292, Jun 2002. PubMed ID: 12021361.
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Gray2006
Elin Solomonovna Gray, Tammy Meyers, Glenda Gray, David Charles Montefiori, and Lynn Morris. Insensitivity of Paediatric HIV-1 Subtype C Viruses to Broadly Neutralising Monoclonal Antibodies Raised against Subtype B. PLoS Med., 3(7):e255, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16834457.
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Gray2009a
Elin S. Gray, Maphuti C. Madiga, Penny L. Moore, Koleka Mlisana, Salim S. Abdool Karim, James M. Binley, George M. Shaw, John R. Mascola, and Lynn Morris. Broad Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Mediated by Plasma Antibodies against the gp41 Membrane Proximal External Region. J. Virol., 83(21):11265-11274, Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19692477.
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Grundner2002
Christoph Grundner, Tajib Mirzabekov, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Solid-Phase Proteoliposomes Containing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 76(7):3511-3521, Apr 2002. PubMed ID: 11884575.
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Grundner2005
Christoph Grundner, Yuxing Li, Mark Louder, John Mascola, Xinzhen Yang, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Analysis of the Neutralizing Antibody Response Elicited in Rabbits by Repeated Inoculation with Trimeric HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins. Virology, 331(1):33-46, 5 Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15582651.
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Guenaga2011
Javier Guenaga, Pia Dosenovic, Gilad Ofek, David Baker, William R. Schief, Peter D. Kwong, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, and Richard T. Wyatt. Heterologous Epitope-Scaffold Prime: Boosting Immuno-Focuses B Cell Responses to the HIV-1 gp41 2F5 Neutralization Determinant. PLoS One, 6(1):e16074, 2011. PubMed ID: 21297864.
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Guenaga2012
Javier Guenaga and Richard T Wyatt. Structure-Guided Alterations of the gp41-Directed HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibody 2F5 Reveal New Properties Regarding Its Neutralizing Function. PLoS Pathog, 8(7):e1002806, 2012. PubMed ID: 22829767.
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Gupta2013
Sandeep Gupta, Johannes S. Gach, Juan C. Becerra, Tran B. Phan, Jeffrey Pudney, Zina Moldoveanu, Sarah B. Joseph, Gary Landucci, Medalyn Jude Supnet, Li-Hua Ping, Davide Corti, Brian Moldt, Zdenek Hel, Antonio Lanzavecchia, Ruth M. Ruprecht, Dennis R. Burton, Jiri Mestecky, Deborah J. Anderson, and Donald N. Forthal. The Neonatal Fc Receptor (FcRn) Enhances Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Transcytosis across Epithelial Cells. PLoS Pathog., 9(11):e1003776, Nov 2013. PubMed ID: 24278022.
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Gustchina2007
Elena Gustchina, John M. Louis, Son N. Lam, Carole A. Bewley, and G. Marius Clore. A Monoclonal Fab Derived from a Human Nonimmune Phage Library Reveals a New Epitope on gp41 and Neutralizes Diverse Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Strains. J. Virol., 81(23):12946-12953, Dec 2007. PubMed ID: 17898046.
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Gustchina2008
Elena Gustchina, Carole A. Bewley, and G. Marius Clore. Sequestering of the Prehairpin Intermediate of gp41 by Peptide N36Mut(e,g) Potentiates the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Neutralizing Activity of Monoclonal Antibodies Directed against the N-Terminal Helical Repeat of gp41. J. Virol., 82(20):10032-10041, Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18667502.
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Habte2015
Habtom H. Habte, Saikat Banerjee, Heliang Shi, Yali Qin, and Michael W. Cho. Immunogenic Properties of a Trimeric gp41-Based Immunogen Containing an Exposed Membrane-Proximal External Region. Virology, 486:187-197, Dec 2015. PubMed ID: 26454663.
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Haim2007
Hillel Haim, Israel Steiner, and Amos Panet. Time Frames for Neutralization during the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Entry Phase, as Monitored in Synchronously Infected Cell Cultures. J. Virol., 81(7):3525-3534, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17251303.
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Haim2011
Hillel Haim, Bettina Strack, Aemro Kassa, Navid Madani, Liping Wang, Joel R. Courter, Amy Princiotto, Kathleen McGee, Beatriz Pacheco, Michael S. Seaman, Amos B. Smith, 3rd., and Joseph Sodroski. Contribution of Intrinsic Reactivity of the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins to CD4-Independent Infection and Global Inhibitor Sensitivity. PLoS Pathog., 7(6):e1002101, Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21731494.
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Hammond2010
Philip W. Hammond. Accessing the Human Repertoire for Broadly Neutralizing HIV Antibodies. MAbs, 2(2):157-164, Mar-Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20168075.
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Hardy2012
Gregory J. Hardy, Yee Lam, Shelley M. Stewart, Kara Anasti, S. Munir Alam, and Stefan Zauscher. Screening the Interactions between HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies and Model Lipid Surfaces. J. Immunol. Methods, 376(1-2):13-19, 28 Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22033342.
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Hart2003
Melanie L. Hart, Mohammed Saifuddin, and Gregory T. Spear. Glycosylation Inhibitors and Neuraminidase Enhance Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Binding and Neutralization by Mannose-Binding Lectin. J. Gen. Virol., 84(Pt 2):353-360, Feb 2003. PubMed ID: 12560567.
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Haynes2005
Barton F. Haynes, Judith Fleming, E. William St. Clair, Herman Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Renate Kunert, James Robinson, Richard M. Scearce, Kelly Plonk, Herman F. Staats, Thomas L. Ortel, Hua-Xin Liao, and S. Munir Alam. Cardiolipin Polyspecific Autoreactivity in Two Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies. Science, 308(5730):1906-1908, 24 Jun 2005. Comment in Science 2005 Jun 24;308(5730):1878-9. PubMed ID: 15860590.
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Haynes2005a
Barton F. Haynes, M. Anthony Moody, Laurent Verkoczy, Garnett Kelsoe, and S. Munir Alam. Antibody Polyspecificity and Neutralization of HIV-1: A Hypothesis. Hum. Antibodies, 14(3-4):59-67, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720975.
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Haynes2006a
Barton F. Haynes and David C. Montefiori. Aiming to Induce Broadly Reactive Neutralizing Antibody Responses with HIV-1 Vaccine Candidates. Expert Rev. Vaccines, 5(4):579-595, Aug 2006. PubMed ID: 16989638.
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Haynes2008
Barton F. Haynes and Robin J. Shattock. Critical Issues in Mucosal Immunity for HIV-1 Vaccine Development. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol., 122(1):3-9, Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18468671.
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Haynes2010
Barton F. Haynes, Nathan I. Nicely, and S. Munir Alam. HIV-1 Autoreactive Antibodies: Are They Good or Bad for HIV-1 Prevention? Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(5):543-545, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20442740.
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Haynes2012
Barton F. Haynes, Garnett Kelsoe, Stephen C. Harrison, and Thomas B. Kepler. B-Cell-Lineage Immunogen Design in Vaccine Development with HIV-1 as a Case Study. Nat. Biotechnol., 30(5):423-433, May 2012. PubMed ID: 22565972.
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Haynes2012a
Barton F. Haynes, Peter B. Gilbert, M. Juliana McElrath, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Georgia D. Tomaras, S. Munir Alam, David T. Evans, David C. Montefiori, Chitraporn Karnasuta, Ruengpueng Sutthent, Hua-Xin Liao, Anthony L. DeVico, George K. Lewis, Constance Williams, Abraham Pinter, Youyi Fong, Holly Janes, Allan DeCamp, Yunda Huang, Mangala Rao, Erik Billings, Nicos Karasavvas, Merlin L. Robb, Viseth Ngauy, Mark S. de Souza, Robert Paris, Guido Ferrari, Robert T. Bailer, Kelly A. Soderberg, Charla Andrews, Phillip W. Berman, Nicole Frahm, Stephen C. De Rosa, Michael D. Alpert, Nicole L. Yates, Xiaoying Shen, Richard A. Koup, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Nelson L. Michael, and Jerome H. Kim. Immune-Correlates Analysis of an HIV-1 Vaccine Efficacy Trial. N. Engl. J. Med., 366(14):1275-1286, 5 Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22475592.
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Haynes2013
Barton F. Haynes and M. Juliana McElrath. Progress in HIV-1 Vaccine Development. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 8(4):326-332, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 23743722.
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Haynes2016
Barton F. Haynes, George M. Shaw, Bette Korber, Garnett Kelsoe, Joseph Sodroski, Beatrice H. Hahn, Persephone Borrow, and Andrew J. McMichael. HIV-Host Interactions: Implications for Vaccine Design. Cell Host Microbe, 19(3):292-303, 9 Mar 2016. PubMed ID: 26922989.
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Henderson2019
Rory Henderson, Brian E. Watts, Hieu N. Ergin, Kara Anasti, Robert Parks, Shi-Mao Xia, Ashley Trama, Hua-Xin Liao, Kevin O. Saunders, Mattia Bonsignori, Kevin Wiehe, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Selection of Immunoglobulin Elbow Region Mutations Impacts Interdomain Conformational Flexibility in HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Commun., 10(1):654, 8 Feb 2019. PubMed ID: 30737386.
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Herrera2005
Carolina Herrera, Per Johan Klasse, Elizabeth Michael, Shivani Kake, Kelly Barnes, Christopher W. Kibler, Lila. Campbell-Gardener, Zhihai Si, Joseph Sodroski, John P. Moore, and Simon Beddows. The Impact of Envelope Glycoprotein Cleavage on the Antigenicity, Infectivity, and Neutralization Sensitivity of Env-Pseudotyped Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Particles. Virology, 338(1):154-172, 20 Jul 2005. PubMed ID: 15932765.
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Herrera2006
Carolina Herrera, Per Johan Klasse, Christopher W. Kibler, Elizabeth Michael, John P. Moore, and Simon Beddows. Dominant-Negative Effect of Hetero-Oligomerization on the Function of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein Complex. Virology, 351(1):121-132, 20 Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16616288.
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Hessell2010
Ann J. Hessell, Eva G. Rakasz, David M. Tehrani, Michael Huber, Kimberly L. Weisgrau, Gary Landucci, Donald N. Forthal, Wayne C. Koff, Pascal Poignard, David I. Watkins, and Dennis R. Burton. Broadly Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10 Directed Against the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41 Membrane-Proximal External Region Protect against Mucosal Challenge by Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVBa-L. J. Virol., 84(3):1302-1313, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19906907.
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Hicar2010
Mark D. Hicar, Xuemin Chen, Bryan Briney, Jason Hammonds, Jaang-Jiun Wang, Spyros Kalams, Paul W. Spearman, and James E. Crowe, Jr. Pseudovirion Particles Bearing Native HIV Envelope Trimers Facilitate a Novel Method for Generating Human Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies Against HIV. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 54(3):223-235, Jul 2010. PubMed ID: 20531016.
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Hildgartner2009
Alexander Hildgartner, Doris Wilflingseder, Christoph Gassner, Manfred P. Dierich, Heribert Stoiber, and Zoltán Bánki. Induction of Complement-Mediated Lysis of HIV-1 by a Combination of HIV-Specific and HLA Allotype-Specific Antibodies. Immunol. Lett., 126(1-2):85-90, 22 Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 19698750.
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Hinz2009
Andreas Hinz, Guy Schoehn, Heribert Quendler, David Lutje Hulsik, Gabi Stiegler, Hermann Katinger, Michael S. Seaman, David Montefiori, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Characterization of a Trimeric MPER Containing HIV-1 gp41 Antigen. Virology, 390(2):221-227, 1 Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19539967.
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Ho2002
Jason Ho, Kelly S. MacDonald, and Brian H. Barber. Construction of Recombinant Targeting Immunogens Incorporating an HIV-1 Neutralizing Epitope into Sites of Differing Conformational Constraint. Vaccine, 20(7-8):1169-1180, 15 Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11803079.
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Ho2005
Jason Ho, Robert A. Uger, Michael B. Zwick, Mark A. Luscher, Brian H. Barber, and Kelly S. MacDonald. Conformational Constraints Imposed on a Pan-Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibody Epitope Result in Increased Antigenicity but not Neutralizing Response. Vaccine, 23(13):1559-1573, 18 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15694508.
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Hoffenberg2013
Simon Hoffenberg, Rebecca Powell, Alexei Carpov, Denise Wagner, Aaron Wilson, Sergei Kosakovsky Pond, Ross Lindsay, Heather Arendt, Joanne DeStefano, Sanjay Phogat, Pascal Poignard, Steven P. Fling, Melissa Simek, Celia LaBranche, David Montefiori, Terri Wrin, Pham Phung, Dennis Burton, Wayne Koff, C. Richter King, Christopher L. Parks, and Michael J. Caulfield. Identification of an HIV-1 Clade A Envelope That Exhibits Broad Antigenicity and Neutralization Sensitivity and Elicits Antibodies Targeting Three Distinct Epitopes. J. Virol., 87(10):5372-5383, May 2013. PubMed ID: 23468492.
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HofmannLehmann2001
R. Hofmann-Lehmann, J. Vlasak, R. A. Rasmussen, B. A. Smith, T. W. Baba, V. Liska, F. Ferrantelli, D. C. Montefiori, H. M. McClure, D. C. Anderson, B. J. Bernacky, T. A. Rizvi, R. Schmidt, L. R. Hill, M. E. Keeling, H. Katinger, G. Stiegler, L. A. Cavacini, M. R. Posner, T. C. Chou, J. Andersen, and R. M. Ruprecht. Postnatal passive immunization of neonatal macaques with a triple combination of human monoclonal antibodies against oral simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenge. J. Virol., 75(16):7470--80, Aug 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/16/7470. PubMed ID: 11462019.
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Hogan2018
Michael J. Hogan, Angela Conde-Motter, Andrea P. O. Jordan, Lifei Yang, Brad Cleveland, Wenjin Guo, Josephine Romano, Houping Ni, Norbert Pardi, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Shiu-Lok Hu, James A. Hoxie, and Drew Weissman. Increased Surface Expression of HIV-1 Envelope Is Associated with Improved Antibody Response in Vaccinia Prime/Protein Boost Immunization. Virology, 514:106-117, 15 Jan 2018. PubMed ID: 29175625.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Holl2006a
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Sylvie Schmidt, Thomas Decoville, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Efficient Inhibition of HIV-1 Replication in Human Immature Monocyte-Derived Dendritic Cells by Purified Anti-HIV-1 IgG without Induction of Maturation. Blood, 107(11):4466-4474, 1 Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16469871.
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Holl2014
T. Matt Holl, Guang Yang, Masayuki Kuraoka, Laurent Verkoczy, S. Munir Alam, M. Anthony Moody, Barton F. Haynes, and Garnett Kelsoe. Enhanced Antibody Responses to an HIV-1 Membrane-Proximal External Region Antigen in Mice Reconstituted with Cultured Lymphocytes. J. Immunol., 192(7):3269-3279, 1 Apr 2014. PubMed ID: 24591365.
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Hoxie2010
James A. Hoxie. Toward an Antibody-Based HIV-1 Vaccine. Annu. Rev. Med., 61:135-52, 2010. PubMed ID: 19824826.
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Hraber2014
Peter Hraber, Michael S. Seaman, Robert T. Bailer, John R. Mascola, David C. Montefiori, and Bette T. Korber. Prevalence of Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Responses during Chronic HIV-1 Infection. AIDS, 28(2):163-169, 14 Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 24361678.
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Hrin2008
Renee Hrin, Donna L. Montgomery, Fubao Wang, Jon H. Condra, Zhiqiang An, William R. Strohl, Elisabetta Bianchi, Antonello Pessi, Joseph G. Joyce, and Ying-Jie Wang. Short Communication: In Vitro Synergy between Peptides or Neutralizing Antibodies Targeting the N- and C-Terminal Heptad Repeats of HIV Type 1 gp41. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 24(12):1537-1544, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 19102685.
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Hu2007
Qinxue Hu, Naheed Mahmood, and Robin J. Shattock. High-Mannose-Specific Deglycosylation of HIV-1 gp120 Induced by Resistance to Cyanovirin-N and the Impact on Antibody Neutralization. Virology, 368(1):145-154, 10 Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 17658575.
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Hu2014
Bin Hu, Hua-Xin Liao, S. Munir Alam, and Byron Goldstein. Estimating the Probability of Polyreactive Antibodies 4E10 and 2F5 Disabling a gp41 Trimer after T Cell-HIV Adhesion. PLoS Comput. Biol., 10(1):e1003431, Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 24499928.
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Huang2002
Jin Huang, Xiaonan Dong, Zuqiang Liu, Li Qin, and Ying-Hua Chen. A Predefined Epitope-Specific Monoclonal Antibody Recognizes ELDEWA-Epitope Just Presenting on gp41 of HIV-1 O Clade. Immunol. Lett., 84(3):205-209, 3 Dec 2002. PubMed ID: 12413738.
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Huang2007
Li Huang, Weihong Lai, Phong Ho, and Chin Ho Chen. Induction of a Nonproductive Conformational Change in gp120 by a Small Molecule HIV Type 1 Entry Inhibitor. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 23(1):28-32, Jan 2007. PubMed ID: 17263629.
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Huang2012a
Jinghe Huang, Gilad Ofek, Leo Laub, Mark K. Louder, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Nancy S. Longo, Hiromi Imamichi, Robert T. Bailer, Bimal Chakrabarti, Shailendra K. Sharma, S. Munir Alam, Tao Wang, Yongping Yang, Baoshan Zhang, Stephen A. Migueles, Richard Wyatt, Barton F. Haynes, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 by a gp41-Specific Human Antibody. Nature, 491(7424):406-412, 15 Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 23151583.
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Huarte2008
Nerea Huarte, Maier Lorizate, Renate Kunert, and José L. Nieva. Lipid Modulation of Membrane-Bound Epitope Recognition and Blocking by HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies. FEBS Lett, 582(27):3798-3804, 12 Nov 2008. PubMed ID: 18930052.
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Huarte2008a
Nerea Huarte, Maier Lorizate, Rubén Maeso, Renate Kunert, Rocio Arranz, José M. Valpuesta, and José L. Nieva. The Broadly Neutralizing Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 4E10 Monoclonal Antibody Is Better Adapted to Membrane-Bound Epitope Recognition and Blocking than 2F5. J. Virol., 82(18):8986-8996, Sep 2008. PubMed ID: 18596094.
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Huarte2012
Nerea Huarte, Aitziber Araujo, Rocio Arranz, Maier Lorizate, Heribert Quendler, Renate Kunert, José M. Valpuesta, and José L. Nieva. Recognition of Membrane-Bound Fusion-Peptide/MPER Complexes by the HIV-1 Neutralizing 2F5 Antibody: Implications for Anti-2F5 Immunogenicity. PLoS One, 7(12):e52740, 2012. PubMed ID: 23285173.
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Huber2007
M. Huber and A. Trkola. Humoral Immunity to HIV-1: Neutralization and Beyond. J. Intern. Med., 262(1):5-25, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17598812.
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Janda2016
Alena Janda, Anthony Bowen, Neil S. Greenspan, and Arturo Casadevall. Ig Constant Region Effects on Variable Region Structure and Function. Front. Microbiol., 7:22, 4 Feb 2016. PubMed ID: 26870003.
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Jeffs2004
S. A. Jeffs, S. Goriup, B. Kebble, D. Crane, B. Bolgiano, Q. Sattentau, S. Jones, and H. Holmes. Expression and Characterisation of Recombinant Oligomeric Envelope Glycoproteins Derived from Primary Isolates of HIV-1. Vaccine, 22(8):1032-1046, 25 Feb 2004. PubMed ID: 15161081.
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Jenabian2010
Mohammad-Ali Jenabian, Héla Saïdi, Charlotte Charpentier, Hicham Bouhlal, Dominique Schols, Jan Balzarini, Thomas W. Bell, Guido Vanham, and Laurent Bélec. Differential Activity of Candidate Microbicides against Early Steps of HIV-1 Infection upon Complement Virus Opsonization. AIDS Res. Ther., 7:16, 2010. PubMed ID: 20546571.
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Jiang1998
S. Jiang, K. Lin, and M. Lu. A conformation-specific monoclonal antibody reacting with fusion-active gp41 from the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein. J. Virol., 72:10213-7, 1998. MAb NC-1 specifically recognizes the fusogenic core of gp41, which allows for analysis of CD4-induced conformational changes in gp120 and gp41 as well as identification of mediators for HIV-1 fusion. PubMed ID: 9811763.
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Jiang2006
Pengfei Jiang, Yanxia Liu, Xiaolei Yin, Fei Yuan, YuChun Nie, Min Luo, Zheng Aihua, Du Liyin, Mingxiao Ding, and Hongkui Deng. Elicitation of Neutralizing Antibodies by Intranasal Administration of Recombinant Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Expressing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 339(2):526-352, 13 Jan 2006. PubMed ID: 16313884.
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Joos2006
Beda Joos, Alexandra Trkola, Herbert Kuster, Leonardo Aceto, Marek Fischer, Gabriela Stiegler, Christine Armbruster, Brigitta Vcelar, Hermann Katinger, and Huldrych F. Günthard. Long-Term Multiple-Dose Pharmacokinetics of Human Monoclonal Antibodies (MAbs) against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope gp120 (MAb 2G12) and gp41 (MAbs 4E10 and 2F5). Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 50(5):1773-1779, May 2006. PubMed ID: 16641449.
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Joshi2020
Vinita R. Joshi, Ruchi M. Newman, Melissa L. Pack, Karen A. Power, James B. Munro, Ken Okawa, Navid Madani, Joseph G. Sodroski, Aaron G. Schmidt, and Todd M. Allen. Gp41-Targeted Antibodies Restore Infectivity of a Fusion-Deficient HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. PLoS Pathog, 16(5):e1008577, May 2020. PubMed ID: 32392227.
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Joyce2002
Joseph G. Joyce, William M. Hurni, Michael J. Bogusky, Victor M. Garsky, Xiaoping. Liang, Michael P. Citron, Renee C. Danzeisen, Michael D. Miller, John W. Shiver, and Paul M. Keller. Enhancement of Alpha -Helicity in the HIV-1 Inhibitory Peptide DP178 Leads to an Increased Affinity for Human Monoclonal Antibody 2F5 but Does Not Elicit Neutralizing Responses in Vitro: Implications for Vaccine Design. J. Biol. Chem., 277(48):45811-45820, 29 Nov 2002. PubMed ID: 12237296.
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Joyner2011
Amanda S. Joyner, Jordan R. Willis, James E.. Crowe, Jr., and Christopher Aiken. Maturation-Induced Cloaking of Neutralization Epitopes on HIV-1 Particles. PLoS Pathog., 7(9):e1002234, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21931551.
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Julg2005
B. Jülg and F. D. Goebel. What's New in HIV/AIDS? Neutralizing HIV Antibodies: Do They Really Protect? Infection, 33(5-6):405-407, Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16258878.
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Julien2008
Jean-Philippe Julien, Steve Bryson, Jose L. Nieva, and Emil F. Pai. Structural Details of HIV-1 Recognition by the Broadly Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5: Epitope Conformation, Antigen-Recognition Loop Mobility, and Anion-Binding Site. J. Mol. Biol., 384(2):377-392, 12 Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18824005.
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Julien2010
Jean-Philippe Julien, Nerea Huarte, Rubén Maeso, Stefka G. Taneva, Annie Cunningham, José L. Nieva, and Emil F. Pai. Ablation of the Complementarity-Determining Region H3 Apex of the Anti-HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibody 2F5 Abrogates Neutralizing Capacity without Affecting Core Epitope Binding. J. Virol., 84(9):4136-4147, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20147404.
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Kalia2005
Vandana Kalia, Surojit Sarkar, Phalguni Gupta, and Ronald C. Montelaro. Antibody Neutralization Escape Mediated by Point Mutations in the Intracytoplasmic Tail of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 79(4):2097-2107, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15681412.
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Kanduc2008
Darja Kanduc, Rosario Serpico, Alberta Lucchese, and Yehuda Shoenfeld. Correlating Low-Similarity Peptide Sequences and HIV B-Cell Epitopes. Autoimmun. Rev., 7(4):291-296, Feb 2008. PubMed ID: 18295732.
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Kang2005
Sang-Moo Kang, Fu Shi Quan, Chunzi Huang, Lizheng Guo, Ling Ye, Chinglai Yang, and Richard W. Compans. Modified HIV Envelope Proteins with Enhanced Binding to Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies. Virology, 331(1):20-32, 5 Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15582650.
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Kang2009
Yun Kenneth Kang, Sofija Andjelic, James M. Binley, Emma T. Crooks, Michael Franti, Sai Prasad N. Iyer, Gerald P. Donovan, Antu K. Dey, Ping Zhu, Kenneth H. Roux, Robert J. Durso, Thomas F. Parsons, Paul J. Maddon, John P. Moore, and William C. Olson. Structural and Immunogenicity Studies of a Cleaved, Stabilized Envelope Trimer Derived from Subtype A HIV-1. Vaccine, 27(37):5120-5132, 13 Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19567243.
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Keele2008
Brandon F. Keele, Elena E. Giorgi, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Julie M. Decker, Kimmy T. Pham, Maria G. Salazar, Chuanxi Sun, Truman Grayson, Shuyi Wang, Hui Li, Xiping Wei, Chunlai Jiang, Jennifer L. Kirchherr, Feng Gao, Jeffery A. Anderson, Li-Hua Ping, Ronald Swanstrom, Georgia D. Tomaras, William A. Blattner, Paul A. Goepfert, J. Michael Kilby, Michael S. Saag, Eric L. Delwart, Michael P. Busch, Myron S. Cohen, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Brian Gaschen, Gayathri S. Athreya, Ha Y. Lee, Natasha Wood, Cathal Seoighe, Alan S. Perelson, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Bette T. Korber, Beatrice H. Hahn, and George M. Shaw. Identification and Characterization of Transmitted and Early Founder Virus Envelopes in Primary HIV-1 Infection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(21):7552-7557, 27 May 2008. PubMed ID: 18490657.
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Kelsoe2017
Garnett Kelsoe and Barton F. Haynes. Host Controls of HIV Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Development. Immunol. Rev., 275(1):79-88, Jan 2017. PubMed ID: 28133807.
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Kessler1995
J. A. Kessler, II, P. M. McKenna, E. A. Emini, and A. J. Conley. In vitro assessment of the therapeutic potential of anti-HIV-1 monoclonal neutralizing antibodies. Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., 95:586, T-25, 1995. Aidsline: 96050622 Abstract.
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J. A. Kessler II, P. M. McKenna, E. A. Emini, C. P. Chan, M. D. Patel, S. K. Gupta, G. E. Mark III, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, and A. J. Conley. Recombinant human monoclonal antibody IgG1b12 neutralizes diverse human immunodeficiency virus type 1 primary isolates. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:575-82, 1997. Anti-CD4 binding domain antibodies generally do not neutralize primary HIV-1 isolates, with the exception of IgG1b12. Many primary isolates were shown to be neutralized by IgG1b12, including several non-B clade international isolates. Neutralization of a primary isolate with MAb IgG1b12 did not require continuous exposure to the antibody. A complete IgG1 molecule of a selected b12 FAb mutant with a > 400-fold increase in affinity was assembled and evaluated in the infectivity reduction assay in comparative studies with the parent IgG1b12 antibody. The mutant did not retain the level of primary isolate neutralization potency of IgG1b12, despite the increase in affinity for gp120. PubMed ID: 9135875.
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Kim2005
Mikyung Kim, Zhi-Song Qiao, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Ellis L. Reinherz, and Hua-Xin Liao. Comparison of HIV Type 1 ADA gp120 Monomers Versus gp140 Trimers as Immunogens for the Induction of Neutralizing Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 21(1):58-67, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15665645.
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Kim2007
Mikyung Kim, Zhisong Qiao, Jessica Yu, David Montefiori, and Ellis L. Reinherz. Immunogenicity of Recombinant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Like Particles Expressing gp41 Derivatives in a Pre-Fusion State. Vaccine, 25(27):5102-5114, 28 Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17055621.
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Kirchherr2007
Jennifer L. Kirchherr, Xiaozhi Lu, Webster Kasongo, Victor Chalwe, Lawrence Mwananyanda, Rosemary M. Musonda, Shi-Mao Xia, Richard M. Scearce, Hua-Xin Liao, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, and Feng Gao. High Throughput Functional Analysis of HIV-1 env Genes Without Cloning. J. Virol. Methods, 143(1):104-111, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17416428.
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Kishko2011
Michael Kishko, Mohan Somasundaran, Frank Brewster, John L. Sullivan, Paul R. Clapham, and Katherine Luzuriaga. Genotypic and Functional Properties of Early Infant HIV-1 Envelopes. Retrovirology, 8:67, 2011. PubMed ID: 21843318.
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Moiz Kitabwalla, Flavia Ferrantelli, Tao Wang, Alistair Chalmers, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Lisa A. Cavacini, Ting-Chao Chou, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Primary African HIV Clade A and D Isolates: Effective Cross-Clade Neutralization with a Quadruple Combination of Human Monoclonal Antibodies Raised against Clade B. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 19(2):125-131, Feb 2003. PubMed ID: 12639248.
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Joshua S. Klein and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Few and Far Between: How HIV May Be Evading Antibody Avidity. PLoS Pathog., 6(5):e1000908, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20523901.
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Florian Klein, Ron Diskin, Johannes F. Scheid, Christian Gaebler, Hugo Mouquet, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Marie Pancera, Tongqing Zhou, Reha-Baris Incesu, Brooks Zhongzheng Fu, Priyanthi N. P. Gnanapragasam, Thiago Y. Oliveira, Michael S. Seaman, Peter D. Kwong, Pamela J. Bjorkman, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Somatic Mutations of the Immunoglobulin Framework Are Generally Required for Broad and Potent HIV-1 Neutralization. Cell, 153(1):126-138, 28 Mar 2013. PubMed ID: 23540694.
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Bette Korber and S. Gnanakaran. The Implications of Patterns in HIV Diversity for Neutralizing Antibody Induction and Susceptibility. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):408-417, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048705.
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Denise L. Kothe, Julie M Decker, Yingying Li, Zhiping Weng, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Kenneth P. Zammit, Maria G. Salazar, Yalu Chen, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Zina Moldoveanu, Jiri Mestecky, Feng Gao, Barton F. Haynes, George M. Shaw, Mark Muldoon, Bette T. M. Korber, and Beatrice H. Hahn. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of HIV-1 Consensus Subtype B Envelope Glycoproteins. Virology, 360(1):218-234, 30 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17097711.
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James M. Kovacs, Joseph P. Nkolola, Hanqin Peng, Ann Cheung, James Perry, Caroline A. Miller, Michael S. Seaman, Dan H. Barouch, and Bing Chen. HIV-1 Envelope Trimer Elicits More Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses than Monomeric gp120. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 109(30):12111-12116, 24 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22773820.
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Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Phillipe N. Nyambi, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. Antibodies That Are Cross-Reactive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Clade A and Clade B V3 Domains Are Common in Patient Sera from Cameroon, but Their Neutralization Activity Is Usually Restricted by Epitope Masking. J. Virol., 79(2):780-790, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15613306.
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Zane Kraft, Nina R. Derby, Ruth A. McCaffrey, Rachel Niec, Wendy M. Blay, Nancy L. Haigwood, Eirini Moysi, Cheryl J. Saunders, Terri Wrin, Christos J. Petropoulos, M. Juliana McElrath, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Macaques Infected with a CCR5-Tropic Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV) Develop Broadly Reactive Anti-HIV Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 81(12):6402-6411, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17392364.
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Victor G. Kramer, Nagadenahalli B. Siddappa, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Passive Immunization as Tool to Identify Protective HIV-1 Env Epitopes. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):642-55, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045119.
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Shelly J. Krebs, Young D. Kwon, Chaim A. Schramm, William H. Law, Gina Donofrio, Kenneth H. Zhou, Syna Gift, Vincent Dussupt, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Sebastian Schätzle, Jonathan R. McDaniel, Yen-Ting Lai, Mallika Sastry, Baoshan Zhang, Marissa C. Jarosinski, Amy Ransier, Agnes L. Chenine, Mangaiarkarasi Asokan, Robert T. Bailer, Meera Bose, Alberto Cagigi, Evan M. Cale, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Samuel Darko, Jefferson I. Driscoll, Aliaksandr Druz, Jason Gorman, Farida Laboune, Mark K. Louder, Krisha McKee, Letzibeth Mendez, M. Anthony Moody, Anne Marie O'Sullivan, Christopher Owen, Dongjun Peng, Reda Rawi, Eric Sanders-Buell, Chen-Hsiang Shen, Andrea R. Shiakolas, Tyler Stephens, Yaroslav Tsybovsky, Courtney Tucker, Raffaello Verardi, Keyun Wang, Jing Zhou, Tongqing Zhou, George Georgiou, S Munir Alam, Barton F. Haynes, Morgane Rolland, Gary R. Matyas, Victoria R. Polonis, Adrian B. McDermott, Daniel C. Douek, Lawrence Shapiro, Sodsai Tovanabutra, Nelson L. Michael, John R. Mascola, Merlin L. Robb, Peter D. Kwong, and Nicole A. Doria-Rose. Longitudinal Analysis Reveals Early Development of Three MPER-Directed Neutralizing Antibody Lineages from an HIV-1-Infected Individual. Immunity, 50(3):677-691.e13, 19 Mar 2019. PubMed ID: 30876875.
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Smita S. Kulkarni, Alan Lapedes, Haili Tang, S. Gnanakaran, Marcus G. Daniels, Ming Zhang, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Ming Li, Victoria R. Polonis, Francine E. McCutchan, Lynn Morris, Dennis Ellenberger, Salvatore T. Butera, Robert C. Bollinger, Bette T. Korber, Ramesh S. Paranjape, and David C. Montefiori. Highly Complex Neutralization Determinants on a Monophyletic Lineage of Newly Transmitted Subtype C HIV-1 Env Clones from India. Virology, 385(2):505-520, 15 Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19167740.
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Kumar2018
Amit Kumar, Claire E. P. Smith, Elena E. Giorgi, Joshua Eudailey, David R. Martinez, Karina Yusim, Ayooluwa O. Douglas, Lisa Stamper, Erin McGuire, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Genevieve G. Fouda, Feng Gao, and Sallie R. Permar. Infant Transmitted/Founder HIV-1 Viruses from Peripartum Transmission Are Neutralization Resistant to Paired Maternal Plasma. PLoS Pathog., 14(4):e1006944, Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29672607.
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R. Kunert, F. Ruker, and H. Katinger. Molecular Characterization of Five Neutralizing Anti-HIV Type 1 Antibodies: Identification of Nonconventional D Segments in the Human Monoclonal Antibodies 2G12 and 2F5. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:1115-1128, 1998. Study identifies five human MAbs which were able to neutralize primary isolates of different clades in vitro and reports the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of the heavy and light chain V segments of the antibodies. PubMed ID: 9737583.
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R. Kunert, W. Steinfellner, M. Purtscher, A. Assadian, and H. Katinger. Stable recombinant expression of the anti HIV-1 monoclonal antibody 2F5 after IgG3/IgG1 subclass switch in CHO cells. Biotechnol. Bioeng., 67:97-103, 2000. PubMed ID: 10581440.
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Renate E. Kunert, Robert Weik, Boris Ferko, Gabriela Stiegler, and Hermann Katinger. Anti-Idiotypic Antibody Ab2/3H6 Mimics the Epitope of the Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Monoclonal Antibody 2F5. AIDS, 16(4):667-668, 8 Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11873012.
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Renate Kunert and Alexander Mader. Anti-Idiotypic Antibody Ab2/3H6 Mimicking gp41: A Potential HIV-1 vaccine? BMC Proc, 5(Suppl 8):P64, 22 Nov 2011. PubMed ID: 22373352.
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Peter D. Kwong and Ian A. Wilson. HIV-1 and Influenza Antibodies: Seeing Antigens in New Ways. Nat. Immunol., 10(6):573-578, Jun 2009. PubMed ID: 19448659.
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Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Gary J. Nabel. Rational Design of Vaccines to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to HIV-1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Med., 1(1):a007278, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 22229123.
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Peter D. Kwong and John R. Mascola. Human Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1: Identification, Structures, and B Cell Ontogenies. Immunity, 37(3):412-425, 21 Sep 2012. PubMed ID: 22999947.
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Kwong2013
Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Gary J. Nabel. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and the Search for an HIV-1 Vaccine: The End of the Beginning. Nat. Rev. Immunol., 13(9):693-701, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 23969737.
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Suman Laal, Sherri Burda, Miroslav K. Gorny, Sylwia Karwowska, Aby Buchbinder, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 68(6):4001-4008, Jun 1994. PubMed ID: 7514683.
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Laurel A. Lagenaur, Vadim A. Villarroel, Virgilio Bundoc, Barna Dey, and Edward A. Berger. sCD4-17b Bifunctional Protein: Extremely Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 Env Pseudotyped Viruses from Genetically Diverse Primary Isolates. Retrovirology, 7:11, 2010. PubMed ID: 20158904.
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Rachel P. J. Lai, Jin Yan, Jonathan Heeney, Myra O. McClure, Heinrich Göttlinger, Jeremy Luban, and Massimo Pizzato. Nef Decreases HIV-1 Sensitivity to Neutralizing Antibodies that Target the Membrane-Proximal External Region of TMgp41. PLoS Pathog, 7(12):e1002442, Dec 2011. PubMed ID: 22194689.
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Lai2012
Rachel P. J. Lai, Michael S. Seaman, Paul Tonks, Frank Wegmann, David J. Seilly, Simon D. W. Frost, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Antu K. Dey, Indresh K. Srivastava, Quentin Sattentau, Susan W. Barnett, and Jonathan L. Heeney. Mixed Adjuvant Formulations Reveal a New Combination That Elicit Antibody Response Comparable to Freund's Adjuvants. PLoS One, 7(4):e35083, 2012. PubMed ID: 22509385.
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Lambotte2009
Olivier Lambotte, Guido Ferrari, Christiane Moog, Nicole L. Yates, Hua-Xin Liao, Robert J. Parks, Charles B. Hicks, Kouros Owzar, Georgia D. Tomaras, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, and Jean-François Delfraissy. Heterogeneous Neutralizing Antibody and Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity Responses in HIV-1 Elite Controllers. AIDS, 23(8):897-906, 15 May 2009. PubMed ID: 19414990.
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Lapelosa2009
Mauro Lapelosa, Emilio Gallicchio, Gail Ferstandig Arnold, Eddy Arnold, and Ronald M. Levy. In Silico Vaccine Design Based on Molecular Simulations of Rhinovirus Chimeras Presenting HIV-1 gp41 Epitopes. J. Mol. Biol., 385(2):675-691, 16 Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19026659.
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Lapelosa2010
Mauro Lapelosa, Gail Ferstandig Arnold, Emilio Gallicchio, Eddy Arnold, and Ronald M. Levy. Antigenic Characteristics of Rhinovirus Chimeras Designed In Silico for Enhanced Presentation of HIV-1 gp41 Epitopes. J. Mol. Biol., 397(3):752-766, 2 Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20138057.
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Christy L. Lavine, Socheata Lao, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Joseph G. Sodroski, Xinzhen Yang, and NIAID Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI). High-Mannose Glycan-Dependent Epitopes Are Frequently Targeted in Broad Neutralizing Antibody Responses during Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection. J. Virol., 86(4):2153-2164, Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22156525.
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Mansun Law, Rosa M. F. Cardoso, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Antigenic and Immunogenic Study of Membrane-Proximal External Region-Grafted gp120 Antigens by a DNA Prime-Protein Boost Immunization Strategy. J. Virol., 81(8):4272-4285, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17267498.
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Daniel P. Leaman, Heather Kinkead, and Michael B. Zwick. In-Solution Virus Capture Assay Helps Deconstruct Heterogeneous Antibody Recognition of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 84(7):3382-3395, Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20089658.
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Daniel P. Leaman and Michael B. Zwick. Increased Functional Stability and Homogeneity of Viral Envelope Spikes through Directed Evolution. PLoS Pathog., 9(2):e1003184, Feb 2013. PubMed ID: 23468626.
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Oliver Lenz, Matthias T Dittmar, Andreas Wagner, Boris Ferko, Karola Vorauer-Uhl, Gabriela Stiegler, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Trimeric Membrane-Anchored gp41 Inhibits HIV Membrane Fusion. J. Biol. Chem., 280(6):4095-4101, 11 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15574416.
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A. Li, T. W. Baba, J. Sodroski, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Robinson, M. R. Posner, H. Katinger, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, T.-C. Chou, and R. M Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of a Chimeric SIV/HIV Type 1 Virus with Combinations of Human Anti-HIV Type 1 Envelope Monoclonal Antibodies or Hyperimmune Globulins. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:647-656, 1997. Multiple combinations of MAbs were tested for their ability to synergize neutralization of a SHIV construct containing HIV IIIB env. All of the MAb combinations tried were synergistic, suggesting such combinations may be useful for passive immunotherapy or immunoprophylaxis. Because SHIV can replicate in rhesus macaques, such approaches can potentially be studied in an it in vivo monkey model. PubMed ID: 9168233.
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Li1998
A. Li, H. Katinger, M. R. Posner, L. Cavacini, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Sodroski, T. C. Chou, T. W. Baba, and R. M. Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIV-vpu+ by Triple and Quadruple Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies and High-Titer Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Immunoglobulins. J. Virol., 72:3235-3240, 1998. PubMed ID: 9525650.
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Hua Li, Zu-Qiang Liu, Jian Ding, and Ying-Hua Chen. Recombinant Multi-Epitope Vaccine Induce Predefined Epitope-Specific Antibodies against HIV-1. Immunol. Lett., 84(2):153-157, 1 Nov 2002. PubMed ID: 12270553.
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Ming Li, Feng Gao, John R. Mascola, Leonidas Stamatatos, Victoria R. Polonis, Marguerite Koutsoukos, Gerald Voss, Paul Goepfert, Peter Gilbert, Kelli M. Greene, Miroslawa Bilska, Denise L Kothe, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Xiping Wei, Julie M. Decker, Beatrice H. Hahn, and David C. Montefiori. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 env Clones from Acute and Early Subtype B Infections for Standardized Assessments of Vaccine-Elicited Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 79(16):10108-10125, Aug 2005. PubMed ID: 16051804.
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Li2006a
Ming Li, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Cynthia A. Derdeyn, Lynn Morris, Carolyn Williamson, James E. Robinson, Julie M. Decker, Yingying Li, Maria G. Salazar, Victoria R. Polonis, Koleka Mlisana, Salim Abdool Karim, Kunxue Hong, Kelli M. Greene, Miroslawa Bilska, Jintao Zhou, Susan Allen, Elwyn Chomba, Joseph Mulenga, Cheswa Vwalika, Feng Gao, Ming Zhang, Bette T. M. Korber, Eric Hunter, Beatrice H. Hahn, and David C. Montefiori. Genetic and Neutralization Properties of Subtype C Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Molecular env Clones from Acute and Early Heterosexually Acquired Infections in Southern Africa. J. Virol., 80(23):11776-11790, Dec 2006. PubMed ID: 16971434.
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Li2009c
Yuxing Li, Krisha Svehla, Mark K. Louder, Diane Wycuff, Sanjay Phogat, Min Tang, Stephen A. Migueles, Xueling Wu, Adhuna Phogat, George M. Shaw, Mark Connors, James Hoxie, John R. Mascola, and Richard Wyatt. Analysis of Neutralization Specificities in Polyclonal Sera Derived from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Individuals. J Virol, 83(2):1045-1059, Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19004942.
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Li2017
Hongru Li, Chati Zony, Ping Chen, and Benjamin K. Chen. Reduced Potency and Incomplete Neutralization of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies against Cell-to-Cell Transmission of HIV-1 with Transmitted Founder Envs. J. Virol., 91(9), 1 May 2017. PubMed ID: 28148796.
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M. Liao, Y. Lu, Y. Xiao, M. P. Dierich, and Y. Chen. Induction of High Level of Specific Antibody Response to the Neutralizing Epitope ELDKWA on HIV-1 gp41 by Peptide-Vaccine. Peptides, 21:463-468, 2000. PubMed ID: 10822100.
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Hua-Xin Liao, S Munir Alam, John R. Mascola, James Robinson, Benjiang Ma, David C. Montefiori, Maria Rhein, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard Scearce, and Barton F. Haynes. Immunogenicity of Constrained Monoclonal Antibody A32-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Env gp120 Complexes Compared to That of Recombinant HIV Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 78(10):5270-5278, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113908.
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Liao2006
Hua-Xin Liao, Laura L. Sutherland, Shi-Mao Xia, Mary E. Brock, Richard M. Scearce, Stacie Vanleeuwen, S. Munir Alam, Mildred McAdams, Eric A. Weaver, Zenaido Camacho, Ben-Jiang Ma, Yingying Li, Julie M. Decker, Gary J. Nabel, David C. Montefiori, Beatrice H. Hahn, Bette T. Korber, Feng Gao, and Barton F. Haynes. A Group M Consensus Envelope Glycoprotein Induces Antibodies That Neutralize Subsets of Subtype B and C HIV-1 Primary Viruses. Virology, 353(2):268-282, 30 Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 17039602.
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Liao2009
Hua-Xin Liao, Marc C. Levesque, Ashleigh Nagel, Ashlyn Dixon, Ruijun Zhang, Emmanuel Walter, Robert Parks, John Whitesides, Dawn J. Marshall, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Yi Yang, Xi Chen, Feng Gao, Supriya Munshaw, Thomas B. Kepler, Thomas Denny, M. Anthony Moody, and Barton F. Haynes. High-Throughput Isolation of Immunoglobulin Genes from Single Human B Cells and Expression as Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol. Methods, 158(1-2):171-179, Jun 2009. PubMed ID: 19428587.
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Hua-Xin Liao, Chun-Yen Tsao, S. Munir Alam, Mark Muldoon, Nathan Vandergrift, Ben-Jiang Ma, Xiaozhi Lu, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Cindy Bowman, Robert Parks, Haiyan Chen, Julie H. Blinn, Alan Lapedes, Sydeaka Watson, Shi-Mao Xia, Andrew Foulger, Beatrice H. Hahn, George M. Shaw, Ron Swanstrom, David C. Montefiori, Feng Gao, Barton F. Haynes, and Bette Korber. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of Transmitted/Founder, Consensus, and Chronic Envelope Glycoproteins of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 87(8):4185-4201, Apr 2013. PubMed ID: 23365441.
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George Lin and Peter L. Nara. Designing Immunogens to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):514-541, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045109.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Liu2002
Xiao Song Liu, Wen Jun Liu, Kong Nan Zhao, Yue Hua Liu, Graham Leggatt, and Ian H. Frazer. Route of Administration of Chimeric BPV1 VLP Determines the Character of the Induced Immune Responses. Immunol. Cell Biol., 80(1):21-9, Feb 2002. PubMed ID: 11869359.
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Liu2005a
Zuqiang Liu, Zuguang Wang, and Ying-Hua Chen. Predefined Spacers between Epitopes on a Recombinant Epitope-Peptide Impacted Epitope-Specific Antibody Response. Immunol. Lett., 97(1):41-45, 15 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15626474.
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Liu2009
Jie Liu, Yiqun Deng, Antu K. Dey, John P. Moore, and Min Lu. Structure of the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane-Proximal Ectodomain Region in a Putative Prefusion Conformation. Biochemistry, 48(13):2915-2923, 7 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19226163.
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Liu2010
Jie Liu, Yiqun Deng, Qunnu Li, Antu K. Dey, John P. Moore, and Min Lu. Role of a Putative gp41 Dimerization Domain in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Membrane Fusion. J. Virol., 84(1):201-209, Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 19846514.
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Liu2015a
Mengfei Liu, Guang Yang, Kevin Wiehe, Nathan I. Nicely, Nathan A. Vandergrift, Wes Rountree, Mattia Bonsignori, S. Munir Alam, Jingyun Gao, Barton F. Haynes, and Garnett Kelsoe. Polyreactivity and Autoreactivity among HIV-1 Antibodies. J. Virol., 89(1):784-798, Jan 2015. PubMed ID: 25355869.
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Lorin2004
Clarisse Lorin, Lucile Mollet, Frédéric Delebecque, Chantal Combredet, Bruno Hurtrel, Pierre Charneau, Michel Brahic, and Frédéric Tangy. A Single Injection of Recombinant Measles Virus Vaccines Expressing Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Clade B Envelope Glycoproteins Induces Neutralizing Antibodies and Cellular Immune Responses to HIV. J. Virol., 78(1):146-157, Jan 2004. PubMed ID: 14671096.
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Lorizate2006
Maier Lorizate, Antonio Cruz, Nerea Huarte, Renate Kunert, Jesús Pérez-Gil, and José L. Nieva. Recognition and Blocking of HIV-1 gp41 Pre-Transmembrane Sequence by Monoclonal 4E10 Antibody in a Raft-Like Membrane Environment. J. Biol. Chem., 281(51):39598-39606, 22 Dec 2006. PubMed ID: 17050535.
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Lorizate2006a
Maier Lorizate, Igor de la Arada, Nerea Huarte, Silvia Sánchez-Martínez, Beatriz G. de la Torre, David Andreu, José L. R. Arrondo, and José L. Nieva. Structural Analysis and Assembly of the HIV-1 Gp41 Amino-Terminal Fusion Peptide and the Pretransmembrane Amphipathic-At-Interface Sequence. Biochemistry, 45(48):14337-14346, 5 Dec 2006. PubMed ID: 17128972.
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Louder2005
Mark K. Louder, Anna Sambor, Elena Chertova, Tai Hunte, Sarah Barrett, Fallon Ojong, Eric Sanders-Buell, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Francine E. McCutchan, James D. Roser, Dana Gabuzda, Jeffrey D. Lifson, and John R. Mascola. HIV-1 Envelope Pseudotyped Viral Vectors and Infectious Molecular Clones Expressing the Same Envelope Glycoprotein Have a Similar Neutralization Phenotype, but Culture in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells Is Associated with Decreased Neutralization Sensitivity. Virology, 339(2):226-238, 1 Sep 2005. PubMed ID: 16005039.
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Louis2005
John M. Louis, Carole A. Bewley, Elena Gustchina, Annie Aniana, and G. Marius Clore. Characterization and HIV-1 Fusion Inhibitory Properties of Monoclonal Fabs Obtained from a Human Non-Immune Phage Library Selected against Diverse Epitopes of the Ectodomain of HIV-1 gp41. J. Mol. Biol., 353(5):945-951, 11 Nov 2005. PubMed ID: 16216270.
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Lovelace2011
Erica Lovelace, Hengyu Xu, Catherine A. Blish, Roland Strong, and Julie Overbaugh. The Role of Amino Acid Changes in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Transmembrane Domain in Antibody Binding and Neutralization. Virology, 421(2):235-244, 20 Dec 2011. PubMed ID: 22029936.
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Lu2000a
Y. Lu, Y. Xiao, J. Ding, M. P. Dierich, and Y. H. Chen. Multiepitope vaccines intensively increased levels of antibodies recognizing three neutralizing epitopes on human immunodeficiency virus-1 envelope protein. Scand. J. Immunol., 51:497-501, 2000. PubMed ID: 10792842.
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Y. Lu, Y. Xiao, J. Ding, M. Dierich, and Y. H. Chen. Immunogenicity of neutralizing epitopes on multiple-epitope vaccines against HIV-1. Int. Arch. Allergy Immunol., 121:80-84, 2000. PubMed ID: 10686512.
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Luallen2009
Robert J. Luallen, Hu Fu, Caroline Agrawal-Gamse, Innocent Mboudjeka, Wei Huang, Fang-Hua Lee, Lai-Xi Wang, Robert W. Doms, and Yu Geng. A Yeast Glycoprotein Shows High-Affinity Binding to the Broadly Neutralizing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Antibody 2G12 and Inhibits gp120 Interactions with 2G12 and DC-SIGN. J. Virol., 83(10):4861-4870, May 2009. PubMed ID: 19264785.
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Luo2006
Min Luo, Fei Yuan, Yanxia Liu, Siming Jiang, Xijun Song, Pengfei Jiang, Xiaolei Yin, Mingxiao Ding, and Hongkui Deng. Induction of Neutralizing Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) by Immunization with gp41 Membrane-Proximal External Region (MPER) Fused with Porcine Endogenous Retrovirus (PERV) p15E Fragment. Vaccine, 24(4):4354-4342, 23 Jan 2006. PubMed ID: 16143433.
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Lusso2005
Paolo Lusso, Patricia L. Earl, Francesca Sironi, Fabio Santoro, Chiara Ripamonti, Gabriella Scarlatti, Renato Longhi, Edward A. Berger, and Samuele E. Burastero. Cryptic Nature of a Conserved, CD4-Inducible V3 Loop Neutralization Epitope in the Native Envelope Glycoprotein Oligomer of CCR5-Restricted, but not CXCR4-Using, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Strains. J. Virol., 79(11):6957-6968, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890935.
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Lynch2011
John B. Lynch, Ruth Nduati, Catherine A. Blish, Barbra A. Richardson, Jennifer M. Mabuka, Zahra Jalalian-Lechak, Grace John-Stewart, and Julie Overbaugh. The Breadth and Potency of Passively Acquired Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Specific Neutralizing Antibodies Do Not Correlate with the Risk of Infant Infection. J. Virol., 85(11):5252-5261, Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21411521.
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Ma2011
Ben-Jiang Ma, S. Munir Alam, Eden P. Go, Xiaozhi Lu, Heather Desaire, Georgia D. Tomaras, Cindy Bowman, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Sampa Santra, Norman L. Letvin, Thomas B. Kepler, Hua-Xin Liao, and Barton F. Haynes. Envelope Deglycosylation Enhances Antigenicity of HIV-1 gp41 Epitopes for Both Broad Neutralizing Antibodies and Their Unmutated Ancestor Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 7(9):e1002200, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21909262.
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Mader2010
A. Mader and R. Kunert. Humanization Strategies for an Anti-Idiotypic Antibody Mimicking HIV-1 gp41. Protein Eng. Des. Sel., 23(12):947-954, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21037278.
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Magnus2010
Carsten Magnus and Roland R. Regoes. Estimating the Stoichiometry of HIV Neutralization. PLoS Comput. Biol., 6(3):e1000713, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20333245.
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Magnus2016
Carsten Magnus, Lucia Reh, and Alexandra Trkola. HIV-1 Resistance to Neutralizing Antibodies: Determination of Antibody Concentrations Leading to Escape Mutant Evolution. Virus Res., 218:57-70, 15 Jun 2016. PubMed ID: 26494166.
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Malherbe2014
Delphine C. Malherbe, Franco Pissani, D. Noah Sather, Biwei Guo, Shilpi Pandey, William F. Sutton, Andrew B. Stuart, Harlan Robins, Byung Park, Shelly J. Krebs, Jason T. Schuman, Spyros Kalams, Ann J. Hessell, and Nancy L. Haigwood. Envelope variants circulating as initial neutralization breadth developed in two HIV-infected subjects stimulate multiclade neutralizing antibodies in rabbits. J Virol, 88(22):12949-67 doi, Nov 2014. PubMed ID: 25210191
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Mann2009
Axel M. Mann, Peter Rusert, Livia Berlinger, Herbert Kuster, Huldrych F. Günthard, and Alexandra Trkola. HIV Sensitivity to Neutralization Is Determined by Target and Virus Producer Cell Properties. AIDS, 23(13):1659-1667, 24 Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19581791.
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Martin2011
Grégoire Martin, Brian Burke, Robert Thaï, Antu K. Dey, Olivier Combes, Bernadette Heyd, Anthony R. Geonnotti, David C. Montefiori, Elaine Kan, Ying Lian, Yide Sun, Toufik Abache, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, Hocine Madaoui, Raphaël Guérois, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, Pascal Kessler, and Loïc Martin. Stabilization of HIV-1 Envelope in the CD4-Bound Conformation through Specific Cross-Linking of a CD4 Mimetic. J. Biol. Chem., 286(24):21706-21716, 17 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21487012.
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Martinez2009
Valérie Martinez, Marie-Claude Diemert, Martine Braibant, Valérie Potard, Jean-Luc Charuel, Francis Barin, Dominique Costagliola, Eric Caumes, Jean-Pierre Clauvel, Brigitte Autran, Lucile Musset, and ALT ANRS CO15 Study Group. Anticardiolipin Antibodies in HIV Infection Are Independently Associated with Antibodies to the Membrane Proximal External Region of gp41 and with Cell-Associated HIV DNA and Immune Activation. Clin. Infect. Dis., 48(1):123-32, 1 Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19035778.
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Marusic2009
Carla Marusic, Alessandro Vitale, Emanuela Pedrazzini, Marcello Donini, Lorenzo Frigerio, Ralph Bock, Philip J. Dix, Matthew S. McCabe, Michele Bellucci, and Eugenio Benvenuto. Plant-Based Strategies Aimed at Expressing HIV Antigens and Neutralizing Antibodies at High Levels. Nef as a Case Study. Transgenic Res., 18(4):499-512, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19169897.
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Mascola1997
J. R. Mascola, M. K. Louder, T. C. VanCott, C. V. Sapan, J. S. Lambert, L. R. Muenz, B. Bunow, D. L. Birx, and M. L. Robb. Potent and Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Primary Isolates by Hyperimmune Anti-HIV Immunoglobulin Combined with Monoclonal Antibodies 2F5 and 2G12. J. Virol., 71:7198-7206, 1997. HIVIG derived from the plasma of HIV-1-infected donors, and MAbs 2F5 and 2G12 were tested against a panel of 15 clade B HIV-1 isolates, using a single concentration that is achievable in vivo (HIVIG, 2,500 microg/ml; MAbs, 25 microg/ml). While the three antibody reagents neutralized many of the viruses tested, potency varied. The virus neutralization achieved by double or triple combinations was generally equal to or greater than that predicted by the effect of individual antibodies, and the triple combination was shown to be synergistic and to have the greatest breadth and potency. Passive immunotherapy for treatment or prophylaxis of HIV-1 should consider mixtures of these potent neutralizing antibody reagents. PubMed ID: 9311792.
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Mascola1999
J. R. Mascola, M. G. Lewis, G. Stiegler, D. Harris, T. C. VanCott, D. Hayes, M. K. Louder, C. R. Brown, C. V. Sapan, S. S. Frankel, Y. Lu, M. L. Robb, H. Katinger, and D. L. Birx. Protection of Macaques against pathogenic simian/human immunodeficiency virus 89.6PD by passive transfer of neutralizing antibodies. J. Virol., 73(5):4009--18, May 1999. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/73/5/4009. PubMed ID: 10196297.
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Mascola2000a
John R. Mascola, Gabriela Stiegler, Thomas C. VanCott, Hermann Katinger, Calvin B. Carpenter, Chris E. Hanson, Holly Beary, Deborah Hayes, Sarah S. Frankel, Deborah L. Birx, and Mark G. Lewis. Protection of Macaques against Vaginal Transmission of a Pathogenic HIV-1/SIV Chimeric Virus by Passive Infusion of Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Med., 6(2):207-210, Feb 2000. PubMed ID: 10655111.
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Mascola2001
J. R. Mascola and G. J. Nabel. Vaccines for the prevention of HIV-1 disease. Curr. Opin. Immunol., 13(4):489--95, Aug 2001. PubMed ID: 11498307.
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Mascola2002
John R. Mascola. Passive Transfer Studies to Elucidate the Role of Antibody-Mediated Protection against HIV-1. Vaccine, 20(15):1922-1925, 6 May 2002. PubMed ID: 11983246.
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Mascola2003
John R. Mascola, Mark G. Lewis, Thomas C. VanCott, Gabriela Stiegler, Hermann Katinger, Michael Seaman, Kristin Beaudry, Dan H. Barouch, Birgit Korioth-Schmitz, Georgia Krivulka, Anna Sambor, Brent Welcher, Daniel C. Douek, David C. Montefiori, John W. Shiver, Pascal Poignard, Dennis R. Burton, and Norman L. Letvin. Cellular Immunity Elicited by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1/Simian Immunodeficiency Virus DNA Vaccination Does Not Augment the Sterile Protection Afforded by Passive Infusion of Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 77(19):10348-10356, Oct 2003. PubMed ID: 12970419.
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Mascola2003a
John R. Mascola. Defining the Protective Antibody Response for HIV-1. Curr. Mol. Med., 3(3):209-216, May 2003. PubMed ID: 12699358.
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Mascola2010
John R. Mascola and David C. Montefiori. The Role of Antibodies in HIV Vaccines. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 28:413-444, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20192810.
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Massanella2009
Marta Massanella, Isabel Puigdomènech, Cecilia Cabrera, Maria Teresa Fernandez-Figueras, Anne Aucher, Gerald Gaibelet, Denis Hudrisier, Elisabet García, Margarita Bofill, Bonaventura Clotet, and Julià Blanco. Antigp41 Antibodies Fail to Block Early Events of Virological Synapses but Inhibit HIV Spread between T Cells. AIDS, 23(2):183-188, 14 Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19098487.
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Matoba2008
Nobuyuki Matoba, Tagan A. Griffin, Michele Mittman, Jeffrey D. Doran, Annette Alfsen, David C. Montefiori, Carl V. Hanson, Morgane Bomsel, and Tsafrir S. Mor. Transcytosis-Blocking Abs Elicited by an Oligomeric Immunogen Based on the Membrane Proximal Region of HIV-1 gp41 Target Non-Neutralizing Epitopes. Curr. HIV Res., 6(3):218-229, May 2008. PubMed ID: 18473785.
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Matyas2009
Gary R. Matyas, Zoltan Beck, Nicos Karasavvas, and Carl R. Alving. Lipid Binding Properties of 4E10, 2F5, and WR304 Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1788(3):660-665, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19100711.
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Matyas2009a
Gary R. Matyas, Lindsay Wieczorek, Zoltan Beck, Christina Ochsenbauer-Jambor, John C. Kappes, Nelson L. Michael, Victoria R. Polonis, and Carl R. Alving. Neutralizing Antibodies Induced by Liposomal HIV-1 Glycoprotein 41 Peptide Simultaneously Bind to Both the 2F5 or 4E10 Epitope and Lipid Epitopes. AIDS, 23(16):2069-2077, 23 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19710597.
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McCaffrey2004
Ruth A McCaffrey, Cheryl Saunders, Mike Hensel, and Leonidas Stamatatos. N-Linked Glycosylation of the V3 Loop and the Immunologically Silent Face of gp120 Protects Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 from Neutralization by Anti-gp120 and Anti-gp41 Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(7):3279-3295, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15016849.
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McCann2005
C. M. Mc Cann, R. J. Song, and R. M. Ruprecht. Antibodies: Can They Protect Against HIV Infection? Curr. Drug Targets Infect. Disord., 5(2):95-111, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15975016.
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McCoy2015
Laura E. McCoy, Emilia Falkowska, Katie J. Doores, Khoa Le, Devin Sok, Marit J. van Gils, Zelda Euler, Judith A. Burger, Michael S. Seaman, Rogier W. Sanders, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Pascal Poignard, Terri Wrin, and Dennis R. Burton. Incomplete Neutralization and Deviation from Sigmoidal Neutralization Curves for HIV Broadly Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 11(8):e1005110, Aug 2015. PubMed ID: 26267277.
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McGaughey2003
G. B. McGaughey, M. Citron, R. C. Danzeisen, R. M. Freidinger, V. M. Garsky, W. M. Hurni, J. G. Joyce, X. Liang, M. Miller, J. Shiver, and M. J. Bogusky. HIV-1 Vaccine Development: Constrained Peptide Immunogens Show Improved Binding to the Anti-HIV-1 gp41 MAb. Biochemistry, 42(11):3214-3223, 25 Mar 2003. PubMed ID: 12641452.
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McGaughey2004
Georgia B. McGaughey, Gaetano Barbato, Elisabetta Bianchi, Roger M. Freidinger, Victor M. Garsky, William M. Hurni, Joseph G. Joyce, Xiaoping Liang, Michael D. Miller, Antonello Pessi, John W. Shiver, and Michael J. Bogusky. Progress Towards the Development of a HIV-1 gp41-Directed Vaccine. Curr. HIV Res., 2(2):193-204, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15078183.
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McKeating1996b
J. A. McKeating, Y. J. Zhang, C. Arnold, R. Frederiksson, E. M. Fenyo, and P. Balfe. Chimeric viruses expressing primary envelope glycoproteins of human immunodeficiency virus type I show increased sensitivity to neutralization by human sera. Virology, 220:450-460, 1996. Chimeric viruses for HXB2 with primary isolate gp120 gave patterns of cell tropism and cytopathicity identical to the original primary viruses. Sera that were unable to neutralize the primary isolates were in some cases able to neutralize chimeric viruses, indicating that some of the neutralizing epitopes were in gp41. PubMed ID: 8661395.
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McKeating1996c
J. A. McKeating. Biological Consequences of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Polymorphism: Does Variation Matter? 1995 Fleming Lecture. J. Gen. Virol., 77:2905-2919, 1996. PubMed ID: 9000081.
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McKnight2007
Aine McKnight and Marlen M. I. Aasa-Chapman. Clade Specific Neutralising Vaccines for HIV: An Appropriate Target? Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):554-560, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045111.
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McLinden2013
Robert J. McLinden, Celia C. LaBranche, Agnès-Laurence Chenine, Victoria R. Polonis, Michael A. Eller, Lindsay Wieczorek, Christina Ochsenbauer, John C. Kappes, Stephen Perfetto, David C. Montefiori, Nelson L. Michael, and Jerome H. Kim. Detection of HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies in a Human CD4+/CXCR4+/CCR5+ T-Lymphoblastoid Cell Assay System. PLoS One, 8(11):e77756, 2013. PubMed ID: 24312168.
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Mehandru2007
Saurabh Mehandru, Brigitta Vcelar, Terri Wrin, Gabriela Stiegler, Beda Joos, Hiroshi Mohri, Daniel Boden, Justin Galovich, Klara Tenner-Racz, Paul Racz, Mary Carrington, Christos Petropoulos, Hermann Katinger, and Martin Markowitz. Adjunctive Passive Immunotherapy in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Individuals Treated with Antiviral Therapy during Acute and Early Infection. J. Virol., 81(20):11016-11031, Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17686878.
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Melchers2012
Mark Melchers, Ilja Bontjer, Tommy Tong, Nancy P. Y. Chung, Per Johan Klasse, Dirk Eggink, David C. Montefiori, Maurizio Gentile, Andrea Cerutti, William C. Olson, Ben Berkhout, James M. Binley, John P. Moore, and Rogier W. Sanders. Targeting HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers to B Cells by Using APRIL Improves Antibody Responses. J. Virol., 86(5):2488-2500, Mar 2012. PubMed ID: 22205734.
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Menendez2004
Alfredo Menendez, Keith C. Chow, Oscar C. C. Pan, and Jamie K. Scott. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5 is Multispecific for Sequences Flanking the DKW Core Epitope. J. Mol. Biol., 338(2):311-327, 23 Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15066434.
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Miglietta2014
Riccardo Miglietta, Claudia Pastori, Assunta Venuti, Christina Ochsenbauer, and Lucia Lopalco. Synergy in Monoclonal Antibody Neutralization of HIV-1 Pseudoviruses and Infectious Molecular Clones. J. Transl. Med., 12:346, 2014. PubMed ID: 25496375.
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Miller2005
Michael D. Miller, Romas Geleziunas, Elisabetta Bianchi, Simon Lennard, Renee Hrin, Hangchun Zhang, Meiqing Lu, Zhiqiang An, Paolo Ingallinella, Marco Finotto, Marco Mattu, Adam C. Finnefrock, David Bramhill, James Cook, Debra M. Eckert, Richard Hampton, Mayuri Patel, Stephen Jarantow, Joseph Joyce, Gennaro Ciliberto, Riccardo Cortese, Ping Lu, William Strohl, William Schleif, Michael McElhaugh, Steven Lane, Christopher Lloyd, David Lowe, Jane Osbourn, Tristan Vaughan, Emilio Emini, Gaetano Barbato, Peter S. Kim, Daria J. Hazuda, John W. Shiver, and Antonello Pessi. A Human Monoclonal Antibody Neutralizes Diverse HIV-1 Isolates By Binding a Critical gp41 Epitope. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 102(41):14759-14764, 11 Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16203977.
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Mishra2020
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Bimal Kumar Das, Sushil Kumar Kabra, Rakesh Lodha, and Kalpana Luthra. A Rare Mutation in an Infant-Derived HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Alters Interprotomer Stability and Susceptibility to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Targeting the Trimer Apex. J. Virol., 94(19), 15 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32669335.
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Mishra2021
Nitesh Mishra, Sanjeev Kumar, Swarandeep Singh, Tanu Bansal, Nishkarsh Jain, Sumedha Saluja, Rajesh Kumar, Sankar Bhattacharyya, Jayanth Kumar Palanichamy, Riyaz Ahmad Mir, Subrata Sinha, and Kalpana Luthra. Cross-Neutralization of SARS-CoV-2 by HIV-1 Specific Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and Polyclonal Plasma. PLoS Pathog., 17(9):e1009958, Sep 2021. PubMed ID: 34559854.
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Mo1997
H. Mo, L. Stamatatos, J. E. Ip, C. F. Barbas, P. W. H. I. Parren, D. R. Burton, J. P. Moore, and D. D. Ho. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Mutants That Escape Neutralization by Human Monoclonal Antibody IgG1b12. J. Virol., 71:6869-6874, 1997. A JRCSF resistant variant was selected by culturing in the presence of IgG1b12. The resistant virus remained sensitive to 2G12 and 2F5 and to CD4-IgG, encouraging for the possibility of combination therapy. PubMed ID: 9261412.
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Mohr2010
Emma L. Mohr, Jinhua Xiang, James H. McLinden, Thomas M. Kaufman, Qing Chang, David C. Montefiori, Donna Klinzman, and Jack T. Stapleton. GB Virus Type C Envelope Protein E2 Elicits Antibodies That React with a Cellular Antigen on HIV-1 Particles and Neutralize Diverse HIV-1 Isolates. J. Immunol., 185(7):4496-4505, 1 Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20826757.
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Molinos-Albert2023
Luis M. Molinos-Albert, Eduard Baquero, Melanie Bouvin-Pley, Valerie Lorin, Caroline Charre, Cyril Planchais, Jordan D. Dimitrov, Valerie Monceaux, Matthijn Vos, Laurent Hocqueloux, Jean-Luc Berger, Michael S. Seaman, Martine Braibant, Veronique Avettand-Fenoel, Asier Saez-Cirion, and Hugo Mouquet. Anti-V1/V3-glycan broadly HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies in a post-treatment controller. Cell Host Microbe, 31(8):1275-1287e8 doi, Aug 2023. PubMed ID: 37433296
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Mondor1998
I. Mondor, S. Ugolini, and Q. J. Sattentau. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Attachment to HeLa CD4 Cells Is CD4 Independent and Gp120 Dependent and Requires Cell Surface Heparans. J. Virol., 72:3623-3634, 1998. PubMed ID: 9557643.
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Montefiori1999
D. Montefiori and T. Evans. Toward an HIV Type 1 Vaccine That Generates Potent Broadly Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 15:689-698, 1999. PubMed ID: 10357464.
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Montefiori2003
David C. Montefiori, Marcus Altfeld, Paul K. Lee, Miroslawa Bilska, Jintao Zhou, Mary N. Johnston, Feng Gao, Bruce D. Walker, and Eric S. Rosenberg. Viremia Control Despite Escape from a Rapid and Potent Autologous Neutralizing Antibody Response after Therapy Cessation in an HIV-1-Infected Individual. J. Immunol., 170(7):3906-3914, Apr 2003. PubMed ID: 12646660.
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Montefiori2005
David C. Montefiori. Neutralizing Antibodies Take a Swipe at HIV In Vivo. Nat. Med., 11(6):593-594, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15937465.
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Montefiori2009
David C. Montefiori and John R. Mascola. Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV-1: Can We Elicit Them with Vaccines and How Much Do We Need? Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):347-351, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048696.
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Montero2012
Marinieve Montero, Naveed Gulzar, Kristina-Ana Klaric, Jason E. Donald, Christa Lepik, Sampson Wu, Sue Tsai, Jean-Philippe Julien, Ann J. Hessell, Shixia Wang, Shan Lu, Dennis R. Burton, Emil F. Pai, William F. DeGrado, and Jamie K. Scott. Neutralizing Epitopes in the Membrane-Proximal External Region of HIV-1 gp41 Are Influenced by the Transmembrane Domain and the Plasma Membrane. J. Virol., 86(6):2930-2941, Mar 2012. PubMed ID: 22238313.
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Moody2010
M. Anthony Moody, Hua-Xin Liao, S. Munir Alam, Richard M. Scearce, M. Kelly Plonk, Daniel M. Kozink, Mark S. Drinker, Ruijun Zhang, Shi-Mao Xia, Laura L. Sutherland, Georgia D. Tomaras, Ian P. Giles, John C. Kappes, Christina Ochsenbauer-Jambor, Tara G. Edmonds, Melina Soares, Gustavo Barbero, Donald N. Forthal, Gary Landucci, Connie Chang, Steven W. King, Anita Kavlie, Thomas N. Denny, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Pojen P. Chen, Philip E. Thorpe, David C. Montefiori, and Barton F. Haynes. Anti-Phospholipid Human Monoclonal Antibodies Inhibit CCR5-Tropic HIV-1 and Induce beta-Chemokines. J. Exp. Med., 207(4):763-776, 12 Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20368576.
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Moog2014
C. Moog, N. Dereuddre-Bosquet, J.-L. Teillaud, M. E. Biedma, V. Holl, G. Van Ham, L. Heyndrickx, A. Van Dorsselaer, D. Katinger, B. Vcelar, S. Zolla-Pazner, I. Mangeot, C. Kelly, R. J. Shattock, and R. Le Grand. Protective Effect of Vaginal Application of Neutralizing and Nonneutralizing Inhibitory Antibodies Against Vaginal SHIV Challenge in Macaques. Mucosal Immunol., 7(1):46-56, Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 23591718.
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Moore1995c
J. P. Moore and D. D. Ho. HIV-1 Neutralization: The Consequences of Adaptation to Growth on Transformed T-Cells. AIDS, 9(suppl A):S117-S136, 1995. This review considers the relative importance of a neutralizing antibody response for the development of a vaccine, and for disease progression during the chronic phase of HIV-1 infection. It suggests that T-cell immunity may be more important. The distinction between MAbs that can neutralize primary isolates, and those that are effective at neutralizing only laboratory adapted strains is discussed in detail. Alternative conformations of envelope and non-contiguous interacting domains in gp120 are discussed. The suggestion that soluble monomeric gp120 may serve as a viral decoy that diverts the humoral immune response it in vivo is put forth. PubMed ID: 8819579.
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Moore1997
J. Moore and A. Trkola. HIV Type 1 Coreceptors, Neutralization Serotypes and Vaccine Development. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:733-736, 1997. PubMed ID: 9171216.
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Moore2001
J. P. Moore, P. W. Parren, and D. R. Burton. Genetic subtypes, humoral immunity, and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 vaccine development. J. Virol., 75(13):5721--9, Jul 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/13/5721. PubMed ID: 11390574.
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Moore2006
Penny L. Moore, Emma T. Crooks, Lauren Porter, Ping Zhu, Charmagne S. Cayanan, Henry Grise, Paul Corcoran, Michael B. Zwick, Michael Franti, Lynn Morris, Kenneth H. Roux, Dennis R. Burton, and James M. Binley. Nature of Nonfunctional Envelope Proteins on the Surface of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 80(5):2515-2528, Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16474158.
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Moore2009
Penny L. Moore, Elin S. Gray, and Lynn Morris. Specificity of the Autologous Neutralizing Antibody Response. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):358-363, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048698.
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Morgand2015
Marion Morgand, Mélanie Bouvin-Pley, Jean-Christophe Plantier, Alain Moreau, Elodie Alessandri, François Simon, Craig S. Pace, Marie Pancera, David D. Ho, Pascal Poignard, Pamela J. Bjorkman, Hugo Mouquet, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Peter D. Kwong, Daniel Baty, Patrick Chames, Martine Braibant, and Francis Barin. A V1V2 Neutralizing Epitope Is Conserved in Divergent Non-M Groups of HIV-1. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 21 Sep 2015. PubMed ID: 26413851.
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Morris2011
Lynn Morris, Xi Chen, Munir Alam, Georgia Tomaras, Ruijun Zhang, Dawn J. Marshall, Bing Chen, Robert Parks, Andrew Foulger, Frederick Jaeger, Michele Donathan, Mira Bilska, Elin S. Gray, Salim S. Abdool Karim, Thomas B. Kepler, John Whitesides, David Montefiori, M. Anthony Moody, Hua-Xin Liao, and Barton F. Haynes. Isolation of a Human Anti-HIV gp41 Membrane Proximal Region Neutralizing Antibody by Antigen-Specific Single B Cell Sorting. PLoS One, 6(9):e23532, 2011. PubMed ID: 21980336.
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Mouquet2012a
Hugo Mouquet, Louise Scharf, Zelda Euler, Yan Liu, Caroline Eden, Johannes F. Scheid, Ariel Halper-Stromberg, Priyanthi N. P. Gnanapragasam, Daniel I. R. Spencer, Michael S. Seaman, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Ten Feizi, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Complex-Type N-Glycan Recognition by Potent Broadly Neutralizing HIV Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A, 109(47):E3268-E3277, 20 Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 23115339.
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Moyo2018
Thandeka Moyo, June Ereño-Orbea, Rajesh Abraham Jacob, Clara E. Pavillet, Samuel Mundia Kariuki, Emily N. Tangie, Jean-Philippe Julien, and Jeffrey R. Dorfman. Molecular Basis of Unusually High Neutralization Resistance in Tier 3 HIV-1 Strain 253-11. J. Virol., 92(14), 15 Jul 2018. PubMed ID: 29618644.
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Muhlbacher1999
M. Muhlbacher, M. Spruth, F. Siegel, R. Zangerle, and M. P. Dierich. Longitudinal Study of Antibody Reactivity against HIV-1 Envelope and a Peptide Representing a Conserved Site on Gp41 in HIV-1-Infected Patients. Immunobiology, 200:295-305, 1999. PubMed ID: 10416136.
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Muhle2013
Michael Mühle, Kerstin Hoffmann, Martin Löchelt, and Joachim Denner. Construction and Characterisation of Replicating Foamy Viral Vectors Expressing HIV-1 Epitopes Recognised by Broadly Neutralising Antibodies. Antiviral Res., 100(2):314-320, Nov 2013. PubMed ID: 24055836.
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Muster1994
T. Muster, R. Guinea, A. Trkola, M. Purtscher, A. Klima, F. Steindl, P. Palese, and H. Katinger. Cross-Neutralization Activity against Divergent Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates Induced by the gp41 Sequence ELDKWAS. J. Virol., 68:4031-4034, 1994. PubMed ID: 7514684.
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Gary J. Nabel. Close to the Edge: Neutralizing the HIV-1 Envelope. Science, 308(5730):1878-1879, 24 Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15976295.
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Nakowitsch2005
Sabine Nakowitsch, Heribert Quendler, Helga Fekete, Renate Kunert, Hermann Katinger, and Gabriela Stiegler. HIV-1 Mutants Escaping Neutralization by the Human Antibodies 2F5, 2G12, and 4E10: In Vitro Experiments Versus Clinical Studies. AIDS, 19(17):1957-1966, 18 Nov 2005. PubMed ID: 16260901.
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Nandi2010
Avishek Nandi, Christine L. Lavine, Pengcheng Wang, Inna Lipchina, Paul A. Goepfert, George M. Shaw, Georgia D. Tomaras, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Philippa Easterbrook, James E. Robinson, Joseph G. Sodroski, Xinzhen Yang, and NIAID Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology. Epitopes for Broad and Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses during Chronic Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. Virology, 396(2):339-348, 20 Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 19922969.
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Narayan2013
Kristin M. Narayan, Nitish Agrawal, Sean X. Du, Janelle E. Muranaka, Katherine Bauer, Daniel P. Leaman, Pham Phung, Kay Limoli, Helen Chen, Rebecca I. Boenig, Terri Wrin, Michael B. Zwick, and Robert G. Whalen. Prime-Boost Immunization of Rabbits with HIV-1 gp120 Elicits Potent Neutralization Activity against a Primary Viral Isolate. PLoS One, 8(1):e52732, 9 Jan 2013. PubMed ID: 23326351.
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Nelson2007
Josh D. Nelson, Florence M. Brunel, Richard Jensen, Emma T. Crooks, Rosa M. F. Cardoso, Meng Wang, Ann Hessell, Ian A. Wilson, James M. Binley, Philip E. Dawson, Dennis R. Burton, and Michael B. Zwick. An Affinity-Enhanced Neutralizing Antibody against the Membrane-Proximal External Region of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41 Recognizes an Epitope between Those of 2F5 and 4E10. J. Virol., 81(8):4033-4043, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17287272.
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Josh D. Nelson, Heather Kinkead, Florence M. Brunel, Dan Leaman, Richard Jensen, John M. Louis, Toshiaki Maruyama, Carole A. Bewley, Katherine Bowdish, G. Marius Clore, Philip E. Dawson, Shana Frederickson, Rose G. Mage, Douglas D. Richman, Dennis R. Burton, and Michael B. Zwick. Antibody Elicited against the gp41 N-Heptad Repeat (NHR) Coiled-Coil Can Neutralize HIV-1 with Modest Potency but Non-Neutralizing Antibodies Also Bind to NHR Mimetics. Virology, 377(1):170-183, 20 Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18499210.
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Nathan I. Nicely, S. Moses Dennison, Leonard Spicer, Richard M. Scearce, Garnett Kelsoe, Yoshihiro Ueda, Haiyan Chen, Hua-Xin Liao, S. Munir Alam, and Barton F. Haynes. Crystal Structure of a Non-Neutralizing Antibody to the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane-Proximal External Region. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(12):1492-1494, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21076400.
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Jianhui Nie, Chuntao Zhang, Wei Liu, Xueling Wu, Feng Li, Suting Wang, Fuxiong Liang, Aijing Song, and Youchun Wang. Genotypic and Phenotypic Characterization of HIV-1 CRF01\_AE env Molecular Clones from Infections in China. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 53(4):440-450, 1 Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20090544.
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Nie2020
Jianhui Nie, Weijin Huang, Qiang Liu, and Youchun Wang. HIV-1 Pseudoviruses Constructed in China Regulatory Laboratory. Emerg. Microbes Infect., 9(1):32-41, 2020. PubMed ID: 31859609.
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Tamara Nora, Francine Bouchonnet, Béatrice Labrosse, Charlotte Charpentier, Fabrizio Mammano, François Clavel, and Allan J. Hance. Functional Diversity of HIV-1 Envelope Proteins Expressed by Contemporaneous Plasma Viruses. Retrovirology, 5:23, 2008. PubMed ID: 18312646.
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Ofek2004
Gilad Ofek, Min Tang, Anna Sambor, Hermann Katinger, John R. Mascola, Richard Wyatt, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure and Mechanistic Analysis of the Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibody 2F5 in Complex with Its gp41 Epitope. J. Virol., 78(19):10724-10737, Oct 2004. PubMed ID: 15367639.
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Ofek2010
Gilad Ofek, Krisha McKee, Yongping Yang, Zhi-Yong Yang, Jeff Skinner, F. Javier Guenaga, Richard Wyatt, Michael B. Zwick, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Relationship between Antibody 2F5 Neutralization of HIV-1 and Hydrophobicity of Its Heavy Chain Third Complementarity-Determining Region. J Virol, 84(6):2955-2962, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20042512.
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Gilad Ofek, F. Javier Guenaga, William R. Schief, Jeff Skinner, David Baker, Richard Wyatt, and Peter D. Kwong. Elicitation of Structure-Specific Antibodies by Epitope Scaffolds. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(42):17880-17887, 19 Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20876137.
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Ofek2014
Gilad Ofek, Brett Zirkle, Yongping Yang, Zhongyu Zhu, Krisha McKee, Baoshan Zhang, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Sijy O'Dell, Nicole Doria-Rose, John R. Mascola, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for HIV-1 neutralization By 2F5-Like Antibodies m66 and m66.6. J. Virol., 88(5):2426-2441, Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24335316.
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Ohagen2003
Asa Ohagen, Amy Devitt, Kevin J. Kunstman, Paul R. Gorry, Patrick P. Rose, Bette Korber, Joann Taylor, Robert Levy, Robert L. Murphy, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Genetic and Functional Analysis of Full-Length Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 env Genes Derived from Brain and Blood of Patients with AIDS. J. Virol., 77(22):12336-12345, Nov 2003. PubMed ID: 14581570.
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Opalka2004
David Opalka, Antonello Pessi, Elisabetta Bianchi, Gennaro Ciliberto, William Schleif, Michael McElhaugh, Renee Danzeisen, Romas Geleziunas, Michael Miller, Debra M. Eckert, David Bramhill, Joseph Joyce, James Cook, William Magilton, John Shiver, Emilio Emini, and Mark T. Esser. Analysis of the HIV-1 gp41 Specific Immune Response Using a Multiplexed Antibody Detection Assay. J. Immunol. Methods, 287(1-2):49-65, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15099755.
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Sara M. O'Rourke, Becky Schweighardt, William G. Scott, Terri Wrin, Dora P. A. J. Fonseca, Faruk Sinangil, and Phillip W. Berman. Novel Ring Structure in the gp41 Trimer of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 That Modulates Sensitivity and Resistance to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 83(15):7728-7738, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19474108.
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ORourke2010
Sara M. O'Rourke, Becky Schweighardt, Pham Phung, Dora P. A. J. Fonseca, Karianne Terry, Terri Wrin, Faruk Sinangil, and Phillip W. Berman. Mutation at a Single Position in the V2 Domain of the HIV-1 Envelope Protein Confers Neutralization Sensitivity to a Highly Neutralization-Resistant Virus. J. Virol., 84(21):11200-11209, Nov 2010. PubMed ID: 20702624.
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Wu Ou, Ning Lu, Sloane S. Yu, and Jonathan Silver. Effect of Epitope Position on Neutralization by Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Monoclonal Antibody 2F5. J. Virol., 80(5):2539-2547, Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16474160.
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Julie Overbaugh and Lynn Morris. The Antibody Response against HIV-1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Med., 2(1):a007039, Jan 2012. PubMed ID: 22315717.
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Beatriz Pacheco, Stephane Basmaciogullari, Jason A. Labonte, Shi-Hua Xiang, and Joseph Sodroski. Adaptation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins to New World Monkey Receptors. J. Virol., 82(1):346-357, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17959679.
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Bapi Pahar, Mayra A. Cantu, Wei Zhao, Marcelo J. Kuroda, Ronald S. Veazey, David C. Montefiori, John D. Clements, Pyone P. Aye, Andrew A. Lackner, Karin Lovgren-Bengtsson, and Karol Sestak. Single Epitope Mucosal Vaccine Delivered via Immuno-Stimulating Complexes Induces Low Level of Immunity Against Simian-HIV. Vaccine, 24(47-48):6839-6849, 17 Nov 2006. PubMed ID: 17050045.
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Yadira Palacios-Rodríguez, Tatiana Gazarian, Leonor Huerta, and Karlen Gazarian. Constrained Peptide Models from Phage Display Libraries Highlighting the Cognate Epitope-Specific Potential of the Anti-HIV-1 mAb 2F5. Immunol. Lett., 136(1):80-89, 30 Apr 2011. PubMed ID: 21237206.
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Marie Pancera, Syed Shahzad-ul-Hussan, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Jason S. McLellan, Robert T. Bailer, Kaifan Dai, Sandra Loesgen, Mark K. Louder, Ryan P. Staupe, Yongping Yang, Baoshan Zhang, Robert Parks, Joshua Eudailey, Krissey E. Lloyd, Julie Blinn, S. Munir Alam, Barton F. Haynes, Mohammed N. Amin, Lai-Xi Wang, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, Carole A. Bewley, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for Diverse N-Glycan Recognition by HIV-1-Neutralizing V1-V2-Directed Antibody PG16. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 20(7):804-813, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 23708607.
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Ralph Pantophlet. Antibody Epitope Exposure and Neutralization of HIV-1. Curr. Pharm. Des., 16(33):3729-3743, 2010. PubMed ID: 21128886.
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C. E. Parker, L. J. Deterding, C. Hager-Braun, J. M. Binley, N. Schulke, H. Katinger, J. P. Moore, and K. B. Tomer. Fine definition of the epitope on the gp41 glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 for the neutralizing monoclonal antibody 2F5. J. Virol., 75(22):10906--11, Nov 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/22/10906. PubMed ID: 11602730.
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P. W. Parren, I. Mondor, D. Naniche, H. J. Ditzel, P. J. Klasse, D. R. Burton, and Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralization of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by antibody to gp120 is determined primarily by occupancy of sites on the virion irrespective of epitope specificity. J. Virol., 72:3512-9, 1998. The authors propose that the occupancy of binding sites on HIV-1 virions is the major factor in determining neutralization, irrespective of epitope specificity. Neutralization was assayed T-cell-line-adapted HIV-1 isolates. Binding of Fabs to monomeric rgp120 was not correlated with binding to functional oligomeric gp120 or neutralization, while binding to functional oligomeric gp120 was highly correlated with neutralization. The ratios of oligomer binding/neutralization were similar for antibodies to different neutralization epitopes, with a few exceptions. PubMed ID: 9557629.
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Parren1998a
P. W. Parren, M. Wang, A. Trkola, J. M. Binley, M. Purtscher, H. Katinger, J. P. Moore, and D. R. Burton. Antibody neutralization-resistant primary isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 72:10270-4, 1998. PubMed ID: 9811774.
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P. W. Parren, J. P. Moore, D. R. Burton, and Q. J. Sattentau. The Neutralizing Antibody Response to HIV-1: Viral Evasion and Escape from Humoral Immunity. AIDS, 13(Suppl A):S137-162, 1999. PubMed ID: 10885772.
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Milloni B Patel, Noah G. Hoffman, and Ronald Swanstrom. Subtype-Specific Conformational Differences within the V3 Region of Subtype B and Subtype C Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Env Proteins. J. Virol., 82(2):903-916, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 18003735.
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Peachman2010
Kristina K. Peachman, Lindsay Wieczorek, Gary R. Matyas, Victoria R. Polonis, Carl R. Alving, and Mangala Rao. The Importance of Antibody Isotype in HIV-1 Virus Capture Assay and in TZM-bl Neutralization. Viral Immunol., 23(6):627-632, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21142448.
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Kristina K. Peachman, Lindsay Wieczorek, Victoria R. Polonis, Carl R. Alving, and Mangala Rao. The Effect of sCD4 on the Binding and Accessibility of HIV-1 gp41 MPER Epitopes to Human Monoclonal Antibodies. Virology, 408(2):213-223, 20 Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 20961591.
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Amarendra Pegu, Ann J. Hessell, John R. Mascola, and Nancy L. Haigwood. Use of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies for HIV-1 Prevention. Immunol. Rev., 275(1):296-312, Jan 2017. PubMed ID: 28133803.
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Adam Penn-Nicholson, Dong P. Han, Soon J. Kim, Hanna Park, Rais Ansari, David C. Montefiori, and Michael W. Cho. Assessment of Antibody Responses against gp41 in HIV-1-Infected Patients Using Soluble gp41 Fusion Proteins and Peptides Derived from M Group Consensus Envelope. Virology, 372(2):442-456, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18068750.
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Maria F. Perdomo, Michael Levi, Matti Sällberg, and Anders Vahlne. Neutralization of HIV-1 by Redirection of Natural Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(34):12515-12520, 26 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18719129.
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M. Peressin, V. Holl, S. Schmidt, T. Decoville, D. Mirisky, A. Lederle, M. Delaporte, K. Xu, A. M. Aubertin, and C. Moog. HIV-1 Replication in Langerhans and Interstitial Dendritic Cells Is Inhibited by Neutralizing and Fc-Mediated Inhibitory Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(2):1077-1085, Jan 2011. PubMed ID: 21084491.
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Lautaro G. Perez, Matthew R. Costa, Christopher A. Todd, Barton F. Haynes, and David C. Montefiori. Utilization of Immunoglobulin G Fc Receptors by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: A Specific Role for Antibodies against the Membrane-Proximal External Region of gp41. J. Virol., 83(15):7397-7410, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19458010.
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Lautaro G. Perez, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and David C. Montefiori. Antibody-Dependent, Fc-gamma-RI-Mediated Neutralization of HIV-1 in TZM-bl Cells Occurs Independently of Phagocytosis. J. Virol., 87(9):5287-5290, May 2013. PubMed ID: 23408628.
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Paul J. Peters, Maria J. Duenas-Decamp, W. Matthew Sullivan, Richard Brown, Chiambah Ankghuambom, Katherine Luzuriaga, James Robinson, Dennis R. Burton, Jeanne Bell, Peter Simmonds, Jonathan Ball, and Paul R. Clapham. Variation in HIV-1 R5 Macrophage-Tropism Correlates with Sensitivity to Reagents that Block Envelope: CD4 Interactions But Not with Sensitivity to Other Entry Inhibitors. Retrovirology, 5:5, 2008. PubMed ID: 18205925.
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John Pietzsch, Johannes F. Scheid, Hugo Mouquet, Michael S. Seaman, Christopher C. Broder, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Anti-gp41 Antibodies Cloned from HIV-Infected Patients with Broadly Neutralizing Serologic Activity. J. Virol., 84(10):5032-5042, May 2010. PubMed ID: 20219932.
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Pilewski2023
Kelsey A. Pilewski, Steven Wall, Simone I. Richardson, Nelia P. Manamela, Kaitlyn Clark, Tandile Hermanus, Elad Binshtein, Rohit Venkat, Giuseppe A. Sautto, Kevin J. Kramer, Andrea R. Shiakolas, Ian Setliff, Jordan Salas, Rutendo E. Mapengo, Naveen Suryadevara, John R. Brannon, Connor J. Beebout, Rob Parks, Nagarajan Raju, Nicole Frumento, Lauren M. Walker, Emilee Friedman Fechter, Juliana S. Qin, Amyn A. Murji, Katarzyna Janowska, Bhishem Thakur, Jared Lindenberger, Aaron J. May, Xiao Huang, Salam Sammour, Priyamvada Acharya, Robert H. Carnahan, Ted M. Ross, Barton F. Haynes, Maria Hadjifrangiskou, James E. Crowe, Jr., Justin R. Bailey, Spyros Kalams, Lynn Morris, and Ivelin S. Georgiev. Functional HIV-1/HCV Cross-Reactive Antibodies Isolated from a Chronically Co-Infected Donor. Cell Rep., 42(2):112044, 27 Jan 2023. PubMed ID: 36708513.
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Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Yuxian He, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The V1/V2 Domain of gp120 Is a Global Regulator of the Sensitivity of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates to Neutralization by Antibodies Commonly Induced upon Infection. J. Virol., 78(10):5205-5215, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113902.
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Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Paul D'Agostino, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The C108g Epitope in the V2 Domain of gp120 Functions as a Potent Neutralization Target When Introduced into Envelope Proteins Derived from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates. J. Virol., 79(11):6909-6917, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890930.
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Emily J. Platt, Michelle M. Gomes, and David Kabat. Kinetic Mechanism for HIV-1 Neutralization by Antibody 2G12 Entails Reversible Glycan Binding That Slows Cell Entry. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 109(20):7829-7834, 15 May 2012. PubMed ID: 22547820.
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P. Poignard, P. J. Klasse, and Q. J. Sattentau. Antibody Neutralization of HIV-1. Immunol. Today, 17:239-246, 1996. Comprehensive review of HIV envelope gp120 and gp41 antibody binding domains, and different cross-reactivity groups of MAbs ability to neutralize primary isolates. The distinction between neutralization of laboratory strains and primary isolates is discussed. The only three epitopes that have confirmed broad neutralization against a spectrum of isolates are gp120 epitopes for IgG1b12 and 2G12, and the gp41 epitope of 2F5. PubMed ID: 8991386.
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Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Victoria R. Polonis, Bruce K. Brown, Andrew Rosa Borges, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Mei-Yun Zhang, Susan W. Barnett, Ruth M. Ruprecht, Gabriella Scarlatti, Eva-Maria Fenyö, David C. Montefiori, Francine E. McCutchan, and Nelson L. Michael. Recent Advances in the Characterization of HIV-1 Neutralization Assays for Standardized Evaluation of the Antibody Response to Infection and Vaccination. Virology, 375(2):315-320, 5 Jun 2008. PubMed ID: 18367229.
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Julie Prigent, Annaëlle Jarossay, Cyril Planchais, Caroline Eden, Jérémy Dufloo, Ayrin Kök, Valérie Lorin, Oxana Vratskikh, Thérèse Couderc, Timothée Bruel, Olivier Schwartz, Michael S. Seaman, Ohlenschläger, Jordan D. Dimitrov, and Hugo Mouquet. Conformational Plasticity in Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies Triggers Polyreactivity. Cell Rep., 23(9):2568-2581, 29 May 2018. PubMed ID: 29847789.
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Nicholas M. Provine, Valerie Cortez, Vrasha Chohan, and Julie Overbaugh. The Neutralization Sensitivity of Viruses Representing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants of Diverse Subtypes from Early in Infection Is Dependent on Producer Cell, as Well as Characteristics of the Specific Antibody and Envelope Variant. Virology, 427(1):25-33, 25 May 2012. PubMed ID: 22369748.
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Pavel Pugach, Shawn E. Kuhmann, Joann Taylor, Andre J. Marozsan, Amy Snyder, Thomas Ketas, Steven M. Wolinsky, Bette T. Korber, and John P. Moore. The Prolonged Culture of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Primary Lymphocytes Increases its Sensitivity to Neutralization by Soluble CD4. Virology, 321(1):8-22, 30 Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 15033560.
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Pavel Pugach, Thomas J. Ketas, Elizabeth Michael, and John P. Moore. Neutralizing Antibody and Anti-Retroviral Drug Sensitivities of HIV-1 Isolates Resistant to Small Molecule CCR5 Inhibitors. Virology, 377(2):401-407, 1 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18519143.
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M. Purtscher, A. Trkola, G. Gruber, A. Buchacher, R. Predl, F. Steindl, C. Tauer, R. Berger, N. Barrett, A. Jungbauer, and H. Katinger. A broadly neutralizing human monoclonal antibody against gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 10:1651-1658, 1994. PubMed ID: 7888224.
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M. Purtscher, A. Trkola, A. Grassauer, P. M. Schulz, A. Klima, S. Dopper, G. Gruber, A. Buchacher, T. Muster, and H. Katinger. Restricted Antigenic Variability of the Epitope Recognized by the Neutralizing gp41 Antibody 2F5. AIDS, 10:587-593, 1996. Binding and neutralization to gp41 ELDKWA variants by anti-gp41 MAb 2F5 were studied. LDKW is the core binding motif. PubMed ID: 8780812.
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Quakkelaar2007
Esther D. Quakkelaar, Evelien M. Bunnik, Floris P. J. van Alphen, Brigitte D. M. Boeser-Nunnink, Ad C. van Nuenen, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Escape of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 from Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Is Not Associated with a Reduction of Viral Replicative Capacity In Vitro. Virology, 363(2):447-453, 5 Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17355886.
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Quakkelaar2007a
Esther D. Quakkelaar, Floris P. J. van Alphen, Brigitte D. M. Boeser-Nunnink, Ad C. van Nuenen, Ralph Pantophlet, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Susceptibility of Recently Transmitted Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 81(16):8533-8542, Aug 2007. PubMed ID: 17522228.
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Ramesh Rathinakumar, Moumita Dutta, Ping Zhu, Welkin E. Johnson, and Kenneth H. Roux. Binding of Anti-Membrane-Proximal gp41 Monoclonal Antibodies to CD4-Liganded and -Unliganded Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 and Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Virions. J. Virol., 86(3):1820-1831, Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22090143.
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Reardon2014
Patrick N. Reardon, Harvey Sage, S. Moses Dennison, Jeffrey W. Martin, Bruce R. Donald, S. Munir Alam, Barton F. Haynes, and Leonard D. Spicer. Structure of an HIV-1-Neutralizing Antibody Target, the Lipid-Bound gp41 Envelope Membrane Proximal Region Trimer. Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. U.S.A., 111(4):1391-1396, 28 Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 24474763.
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Jacqueline D. Reeves, Fang-Hua Lee, John L. Miamidian, Cassandra B. Jabara, Marisa M. Juntilla, and Robert W. Doms. Enfuvirtide Resistance Mutations: Impact on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Function, Entry Inhibitor Sensitivity, and Virus Neutralization. J. Virol., 79(8):4991-4999, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15795284.
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Xinping Ren, Joseph Sodroski, and Xinzhen Yang. An Unrelated Monoclonal Antibody Neutralizes Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Binding to an Artificial Epitope Engineered in a Functionally Neutral Region of the Viral Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 79(9):5616-5624, May 2005. PubMed ID: 15827176.
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Ren2018
Yanqin Ren, Maria Korom, Ronald Truong, Dora Chan, Szu-Han Huang, Colin C. Kovacs, Erika Benko, Jeffrey T. Safrit, John Lee, Hermes Garbán, Richard Apps, Harris Goldstein, Rebecca M. Lynch, and R. Brad Jones. Susceptibility to Neutralization by Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Generally Correlates with Infected Cell Binding for a Panel of Clade B HIV Reactivated from Latent Reservoirs. J. Virol., 92(23), 1 Dec 2018. PubMed ID: 30209173.
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Revilla2011
Ana Revilla, Elena Delgado, Elizabeth C. Christian, Justin Dalrymple, Yolanda Vega, Cristina Carrera, Maria González-Galeano, Antonio Ocampo, Rafael Ojea de Castro, Maria J. Lezaún, Raúl Rodriguez, Ana Mariño, Patricia Ordóñez, Gustavo Cilla, Ramón Cisterna, Juan M. Santamaria, Santiago Prieto, Aza Rakhmanova, Anna Vinogradova, Maritza Ríos, Lucía Pérez-Álvarez, Rafael Nájera, David C. Montefiori, Michael S. Seaman, and Michael M. Thomson. Construction and Phenotypic Characterization of HIV Type 1 Functional Envelope Clones of subtypes G and F. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 27(8):889-901, Aug 2011. PubMed ID: 21226626.
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Douglas D. Richman, Terri Wrin, Susan J. Little, and Christos J. Petropoulos. Rapid Evolution of the Neutralizing Antibody Response to HIV Type 1 Infection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 100(7):4144-4149, 1 Apr 2003. PubMed ID: 12644702.
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Ringe2010
Rajesh Ringe, Madhuri Thakar, and Jayanta Bhattacharya. Variations in Autologous Neutralization and CD4 Dependence of b12 Resistant HIV-1 Clade C env Clones Obtained at Different Time Points from Antiretroviral Naïve Indian Patients with Recent Infection. Retrovirology, 7:76, 2010. PubMed ID: 20860805.
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Marjorie Robert-Guroff. IgG Surfaces as an Important Component in Mucosal Protection. Nat. Med., 6(2):129-130, Feb 2000. PubMed ID: 10655090.
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M. J. Root, M. S. Kay, and P. S. Kim. Protein design of an HIV-1 entry inhibitor. Science, 291(5505):884--8, 2 Feb 2001. PubMed ID: 11229405.
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Ruprecht2011
Claudia R. Ruprecht, Anders Krarup, Lucy Reynell, Axel M. Mann, Oliver F. Brandenberg, Livia Berlinger, Irene A. Abela, Roland R. Regoes, Huldrych F. Günthard, Peter Rusert, and Alexandra Trkola. MPER-Specific Antibodies Induce gp120 Shedding and Irreversibly Neutralize HIV-1. J. Exp. Med., 208(3):439-454, 14 Mar 2011. PubMed ID: 21357743.
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Rusert2005
Peter Rusert, Herbert Kuster, Beda Joos, Benjamin Misselwitz, Cornelia Gujer, Christine Leemann, Marek Fischer, Gabriela Stiegler, Hermann Katinger, William C Olson, Rainer Weber, Leonardo Aceto, Huldrych F Günthard, and Alexandra Trkola. Virus Isolates during Acute and Chronic Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection Show Distinct Patterns of Sensitivity to Entry Inhibitors. J. Virol., 79(13):8454-8469, Jul 2005. PubMed ID: 15956589.
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Rusert2009
Peter Rusert, Axel Mann, Michael Huber, Viktor von Wyl, Huldrych F. Günthar, and Alexandra Trkola. Divergent Effects of Cell Environment on HIV Entry Inhibitor Activity. AIDS, 23(11):1319-1327, 17 Jul 2009. PubMed ID: 19579289.
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Rusert2016
Peter Rusert, Roger D. Kouyos, Claus Kadelka, Hanna Ebner, Merle Schanz, Michael Huber, Dominique L. Braun, Nathanael Hozé, Alexandra Scherrer, Carsten Magnus, Jacqueline Weber, Therese Uhr, Valentina Cippa, Christian W. Thorball, Herbert Kuster, Matthias Cavassini, Enos Bernasconi, Matthias Hoffmann, Alexandra Calmy, Manuel Battegay, Andri Rauch, Sabine Yerly, Vincent Aubert, Thomas Klimkait, Jürg Böni, Jacques Fellay, Roland R. Regoes, Huldrych F. Günthard, Alexandra Trkola, and Swiss HIV Cohort Study. Determinants of HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Induction. Nat. Med., 22(11):1260-1267, Nov 2016. PubMed ID: 27668936.
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Russell2011
Elizabeth S. Russell, Jesse J. Kwiek, Jessica Keys, Kirston Barton, Victor Mwapasa, David C. Montefiori, Steven R. Meshnick, and Ronald Swanstrom. The Genetic Bottleneck in Vertical Transmission of Subtype C HIV-1 Is Not Driven by Selection of Especially Neutralization-Resistant Virus from the Maternal Viral Population. J Virol, 85(16):8253-8262, Aug 2011. PubMed ID: 21593171.
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Sabalza2012
M. Sabalza, L. Madeira, C. van Dolleweerd, J. K. Ma, T. Capell, and P. Christou. Functional Characterization of the Recombinant HIV-Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5 Produced in Maize Seeds. Plant. Mol. Biol., 80(4-5):477-488, Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 22965278.
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Sabin2010
Charles Sabin, Davide Corti, Victor Buzon, Mike S. Seaman, David Lutje Hulsik, Andreas Hinz, Fabrizia Vanzetta, Gloria Agatic, Chiara Silacci, Lara Mainetti, Gabriella Scarlatti, Federica Sallusto, Robin Weiss, Antonio Lanzavecchia, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Crystal Structure and Size-Dependent Neutralization Properties of HK20, a Human Monoclonal Antibody Binding to the Highly Conserved Heptad Repeat 1 of gp41. PLoS Pathog., 6(11):e1001195, 2010. PubMed ID: 21124990.
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Sack2007
Markus Sack, Antje Paetz, Renate Kunert, Michael Bomble, Friedemann Hesse, Gabriela Stiegler, Rainer Fischer, Hermann Katinger, Eva Stoeger, and Thomas Rademacher. Functional Analysis of the Broadly Neutralizing Human Anti-HIV-1 Antibody 2F5 Produced in Transgenic BY-2 Suspension Cultures. FASEB J., 21(8):1655-1664, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17327362.
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Kristen Sadler, Ying Zhang, Jiaxi Xu, Qitao Yu, and James P. Tam. Quaternary Protein Mimetics of gp41 Elicit Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV Fusion-Active Intermediate State. Biopolymers, 90(3):320-329, 2008. PubMed ID: 18338371.
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Safrit2004
Jeffrey T. Safrit, Ruth Ruprecht, Flavia Ferrantelli, Weidong Xu, Moiz Kitabwalla, Koen Van Rompay, Marta Marthas, Nancy Haigwood, John R. Mascola, Katherine Luzuriaga, Samuel Adeniyi Jones, Bonnie J. Mathieson, Marie-Louise Newell, and Ghent IAS Working Group on HIV in Women Children. Immunoprophylaxis to Prevent Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV-1. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 35(2):169-177, 1 Feb 2004. PubMed ID: 14722451.
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Sagar2012
Manish Sagar, Hisashi Akiyama, Behzad Etemad, Nora Ramirez, Ines Freitas, and Suryaram Gummuluru. Transmembrane Domain Membrane Proximal External Region but Not Surface Unit-Directed Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies Can Restrict Dendritic Cell-Mediated HIV-1 Trans-Infection. J. Infect. Dis., 205(8):1248-1257, 15 Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22396600.
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Sanchez-Martinez2006
Silvia Sánchez-Martínez, Maier Lorizate, Hermann Katinger, Renate Kunert, and José L. Nieva. Membrane Association and Epitope Recognition by HIV-1 Neutralizing Anti-gp41 2F5 and 4E10 Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 22(10):998-1006, Oct 2006. PubMed ID: 17067270.
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Sanchez-Martinez2006a
Silvia Sánchez-Martínez, Maier Lorizate, Hermann Katinger, Renate Kunert, Gorka Basañez, and José L. Nieva. Specific Phospholipid Recognition by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1 Neutralizing Anti-gp41 2F5 Antibody. FEBS Lett., 580(9):2395-2399, 17 Apr 2006. PubMed ID: 16616522.
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Sanchez-Merino2016
V. Sanchez-Merino, A. Fabra-Garcia, N. Gonzalez, D. Nicolas, A. Merino-Mansilla, C. Manzardo, J. Ambrosioni, A. Schultz, A. Meyerhans, J. R. Mascola, J. M. Gatell, J. Alcami, J. M. Miro, and E. Yuste. Detection of Broadly Neutralizing Activity within the First Months of HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 90(11):5231-5245, 1 Jun 2016. PubMed ID: 26984721.
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Rogier W. Sanders, Mika Vesanen, Norbert Schuelke, Aditi Master, Linnea Schiffner, Roopa Kalyanaraman, Maciej Paluch, Ben Berkhout, Paul J. Maddon, William C. Olson, Min Lu, and John P. Moore. Stabilization of the Soluble, Cleaved, Trimeric Form of the Envelope Glycoprotein Complex of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 76(17):8875-8889, Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12163607.
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K. Sanhadji, L. Grave, J. L. Touraine, P. Leissner, C. Rouzioux, R. Firouzi, L. Kehrli, J. C. Tardy, and M. Mehtali. Gene transfer of anti-gp41 antibody and CD4 immunoadhesin strongly reduces the HIV-1 load in humanized severe combined immunodeficient mice. AIDS, 14(18):2813--22, 22 Dec 2000. PubMed ID: 11153662.
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D. Noah Sather and Leonidas Stamatatos. Epitope Specificities of Broadly Neutralizing Plasmas from HIV-1 Infected Subjects. Vaccine, 28 Suppl 2:B8-B12, 26 May 2010. PubMed ID: 20510750.
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D. Noah Sather, Sara Carbonetti, Delphine C. Malherbe, Franco Pissani, Andrew B. Stuart, Ann J. Hessell, Mathew D. Gray, Iliyana Mikell, Spyros A. Kalams, Nancy L. Haigwood, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Emergence of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and Viral Coevolution in Two Subjects during the Early Stages of Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 88(22):12968-12981, Nov 2014. PubMed ID: 25122781.
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Q. J. Sattentau, S. Zolla-Pazner, and P. Poignard. Epitope Exposure on Functional, Oligomeric HIV-1 gp41 Molecules. Virology, 206:713-717, 1995. Most gp41 epitopes are masked when associated with gp120 on the cell surface. Weak binding of anti-gp41 MAbs can be enhanced by treatment with sCD4. MAb 2F5 binds to a membrane proximal epitope which binds in the presence of gp120 without sCD4. PubMed ID: 7530400.
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Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody. Curr. Opin. Immunol., 8:540-545, 1996. Review. PubMed ID: 8794008.
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Quentin J. Sattentau and Andrew J. McMichael. New Templates for HIV-1 Antibody-Based Vaccine Design. F1000 Biol. Rep., 2:60, 2010. PubMed ID: 21173880.
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Scheid2009
Johannes F. Scheid, Hugo Mouquet, Niklas Feldhahn, Michael S. Seaman, Klara Velinzon, John Pietzsch, Rene G. Ott, Robert M. Anthony, Henry Zebroski, Arlene Hurley, Adhuna Phogat, Bimal Chakrabarti, Yuxing Li, Mark Connors, Florencia Pereyra, Bruce D. Walker, Hedda Wardemann, David Ho, Richard T. Wyatt, John R. Mascola, Jeffrey V. Ravetch, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Broad Diversity of Neutralizing Antibodies Isolated from Memory B Cells in HIV-Infected Individuals. Nature, 458(7238):636-640, 2 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19287373.
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Scherer2010
Erin M. Scherer, Daniel P. Leaman, Michael B. Zwick, Andrew J. McMichael, and Dennis R. Burton. Aromatic Residues at the Edge of the Antibody Combining Site Facilitate Viral Glycoprotein Recognition through Membrane Interactions. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(4):1529-1534, 26 Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 20080706.
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William R. Schief, Yih-En Andrew Ban, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Challenges for Structure-Based HIV Vaccine Design. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(5):431-440, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 20048708.
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Schorcht2020
Anna Schorcht, Tom L. G. M. van den Kerkhof, Christopher A. Cottrell, Joel D. Allen, Jonathan L. Torres, Anna-Janina Behrens, Edith E. Schermer, Judith A. Burger, Steven W. de Taeye, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Ilja Bontjer, Stephanie Gumbs, Gabriel Ozorowski, Celia C. LaBranche, Natalia de Val, Anila Yasmeen, Per Johan Klasse, David C. Montefiori, John P. Moore, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Max Crispin, Marit J. van Gils, Andrew B. Ward, and Rogier W. Sanders. Neutralizing Antibody Responses Induced by HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein SOSIP Trimers Derived from Elite Neutralizers. J. Virol., 94(24), 23 Nov 2020. PubMed ID: 32999024.
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Schulke2002
Norbert Schulke, Mika S. Vesanen, Rogier W. Sanders, Ping Zhu, Min Lu, Deborah J. Anselma, Anthony R. Villa, Paul W. H. I. Parren, James M. Binley, Kenneth H. Roux, Paul J. Maddon, John P. Moore, and William C. Olson. Oligomeric and Conformational Properties of a Proteolytically Mature, Disulfide-Stabilized Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp140 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 76(15):7760-76, Aug 2002. PubMed ID: 12097589.
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Schultz2018
Anke Schultz, Anja Germann, Martina Fuss, Marcella Sarzotti-Kelsoe, Daniel A. Ozaki, David C. Montefiori, Heiko Zimmermann, and Hagen von Briesen. Validation of an Automated System for Aliquoting of HIV-1 Env-Pseudotyped Virus Stocks. PLoS One, 13(1):1-20, Jan 2018. PubMed ID: 29300769.
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M. Schutten, A. C. Andeweg, G. F. Rimmelzwaan, and A. D. Osterhaus. Modulation of primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein-mediated entry by human antibodies. J. Gen. Virol., 78:999-1006, 1997. A series of HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins from related primary virus isolates of different SI phenotypes, together with chimeras of these proteins, were tested in an envelope trans-complementation assay for their sensitivity to either antibody mediated inhibition or enhancement of HIV-1 entry. In contrast to the inhibition of HIV-1 entry, antibody mediated enhancement was not temperature dependent and could not be mediated by F(ab) fragments, implicating cross-linking as an important step. Enhancement or inhibition seemed to be determined by virus isolate rather than by the specificity of the antiserum used. 2F5 was the only MAb that inhibited the entry of all viruses. PubMed ID: 9152416.
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Schweighardt2007
Becky Schweighardt, Yang Liu, Wei Huang, Colombe Chappey, Yolanda S. Lie, Christos J. Petropoulos, and Terri Wrin. Development of an HIV-1 Reference Panel of Subtype B Envelope Clones Isolated from the Plasma of Recently Infected Individuals. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 46(1):1-11, 1 Sep 2007. PubMed ID: 17514017.
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George Sellhorn, Zane Kraft, Zachary Caldwell, Katharine Ellingson, Christine Mineart, Michael S. Seaman, David C. Montefiori, Eliza Lagerquist, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Engineering, Expression, Purification, and Characterization of Stable Clade A/B Recombinant Soluble Heterotrimeric gp140 Proteins. J. Virol., 86(1):128-142, Jan 2012. PubMed ID: 22031951.
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Serrano2014
Soraya Serrano, Aitziber Araujo, Beatriz Apellániz, Steve Bryson, Pablo Carravilla, Igor de la Arada, Nerea Huarte, Edurne Rujas, Emil F. Pai, José L. R. Arrondo, Carmen Domene, María Angeles Jiménez, and José L. Nieva. Structure and Immunogenicity of a Peptide Vaccine, Including the Complete HIV-1 gp41 2F5 Epitope: Implications for Antibody Recognition Mechanism and Immunogen Design. J. Biol. Chem., 289(10):6565-6580, 7 Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24429284.
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Shang2011
Hong Shang, Xiaoxu Han, Xuanling Shi, Teng Zuo, Mark Goldin, Dan Chen, Bing Han, Wei Sun, Hao Wu, Xinquan Wang, and Linqi Zhang. Genetic and Neutralization Sensitivity of Diverse HIV-1 env Clones from Chronically Infected Patients in China. J. Biol. Chem., 286(16):14531-14541, 22 Apr 2011. PubMed ID: 21325278.
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Shen2009
Xiaoying Shen, Robert J. Parks, David C. Montefiori, Jennifer L. Kirchherr, Brandon F. Keele, Julie M. Decker, William A. Blattner, Feng Gao, Kent J. Weinhold, Charles B. Hicks, Michael L. Greenberg, Beatrice H. Hahn, George M. Shaw, Barton F. Haynes, and Georgia D. Tomaras. In Vivo gp41 Antibodies Targeting the 2F5 Monoclonal Antibody Epitope Mediate Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Neutralization Breadth. J. Virol., 83(8):3617-3625, Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19193787.
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Shen2010
Xiaoying Shen, S. Moses Dennison, Pinghuang Liu, Feng Gao, Frederick Jaeger, David C. Montefiori, Laurent Verkoczy, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, and Georgia D. Tomaras. Prolonged Exposure of the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane Proximal Region with L669S Substitution. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(13):5972-5977, 30 Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20231447.
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Shen2010a
Ruizhong Shen, Ernesto R. Drelichman, Diane Bimczok, Christina Ochsenbauer, John C. Kappes, Jamie A. Cannon, Daniela Tudor, Morgane Bomsel, Lesley E. Smythies, and Phillip D. Smith. GP41-Specific Antibody Blocks Cell-Free HIV Type 1 Transcytosis through Human Rectal Mucosa and Model Colonic Epithelium. J. Immunol., 184(7):3648-3655, 1 Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20208001.
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Shi2010
Wuxian Shi, Jen Bohon, Dong P. Han, Habtom Habte, Yali Qin, Michael W. Cho, and Mark R. Chance. Structural Characterization of HIV gp41 with the Membrane-Proximal External Region. J. Biol. Chem., 285(31):24290-24298, 30 Jul 2010. PubMed ID: 20525690.
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Si2001
Zhihai Si, Mark Cayabyab, and Joseph Sodroski. Envelope Glycoprotein Determinants of nEutralization Resistance in a Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV-HXBc2P 3.2) Derived by Passage in Monkeys. J. Virol., 75(9):4208-4218, May 2001. PubMed ID: 11287570.
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Siddappa2010
Nagadenahalli B. Siddappa, Jennifer D. Watkins, Klemens J. Wassermann, Ruijiang Song, Wendy Wang, Victor G. Kramer, Samir Lakhashe, Michael Santosuosso, Mark C. Poznansky, Francis J. Novembre, François Villinger, James G. Else, David C. Montefiori, Robert A. Rasmussen, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. R5 Clade C SHIV Strains with Tier 1 or 2 Neutralization Sensitivity: Tools to Dissect Env Evolution and to Develop AIDS Vaccines in Primate Models. PLoS One, 5(7):e11689, 2010. PubMed ID: 20657739.
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Simek2009
Melissa D. Simek, Wasima Rida, Frances H. Priddy, Pham Pung, Emily Carrow, Dagna S. Laufer, Jennifer K. Lehrman, Mark Boaz, Tony Tarragona-Fiol, George Miiro, Josephine Birungi, Anton Pozniak, Dale A. McPhee, Olivier Manigart, Etienne Karita, André Inwoley, Walter Jaoko, Jack DeHovitz, Linda-Gail Bekker, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Robert Paris, Laura M. Walker, Pascal Poignard, Terri Wrin, Patricia E. Fast, Dennis R. Burton, and Wayne C. Koff. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Elite Neutralizers: Individuals with Broad and Potent Neutralizing Activity Identified by Using a High-Throughput Neutralization Assay together with an Analytical Selection Algorithm. J. Virol., 83(14):7337-7348, Jul 2009. PubMed ID: 19439467.
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Simonich2016
Cassandra A. Simonich, Katherine L. Williams, Hans P. Verkerke, James A. Williams, Ruth Nduati, Kelly K. Lee, and Julie Overbaugh. HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies with Limited Hypermutation from an Infant. Cell, 166(1):77-87, 30 Jun 2016. PubMed ID: 27345369.
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Singh2011
Harvir Singh, Kevin A. Henry, Sampson S. T. Wu, Andrzej Chruscinski, Paul J. Utz, and Jamie K. Scott. Reactivity Profiles of Broadly Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Antibodies Are Distinct from Those of Pathogenic Autoantibodies. AIDS, 25(10):1247-1257, 19 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21508803.
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Smalls-Mantey2012
Adjoa Smalls-Mantey, Nicole Doria-Rose, Rachel Klein, Andy Patamawenu, Stephen A. Migueles, Sung-Youl Ko, Claire W. Hallahan, Hing Wong, Bai Liu, Lijing You, Johannes Scheid, John C. Kappes, Christina Ochsenbauer, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity against Primary HIV-Infected CD4+ T Cells Is Directly Associated with the Magnitude of Surface IgG Binding. J. Virol., 86(16):8672-8680, Aug 2012. PubMed ID: 22674985.
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Likai Song, Zhen-Yu J. Sun, Kate E. Coleman, Michael B. Zwick, Johannes S. Gach, Jia-huai Wang, Ellis L. Reinherz, Gerhard Wagner, and Mikyung Kim. Broadly Neutralizing Anti-HIV-1 Antibodies Disrupt a Hinge-Related Function of gp41 at the Membrane Interface. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 106(22):9057-9062, 2 Jun 2009. PubMed ID: 19458040.
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Spencer2021
David A. Spencer, Delphine C. Malherbe, Nestor Vazquez Bernat, Monika Adori, Benjamin Goldberg, Nicholas Dambrauskas, Heidi Henderson, Shilpi Pandey, Tracy Cheever, Philip Barnette, William F. Sutton, Margaret E. Ackerman, James J. Kobie, D. Noah Sather, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, Nancy L. Haigwood, and Ann J. Hessell. Polyfunctional Tier 2-Neutralizing Antibodies Cloned following HIV-1 Env Macaque Immunization Mirror Native Antibodies in a Human Donor. J Immunol, 206(5):999-1012 doi, Mar 2021. PubMed ID: 33472907
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C. Spenlehauer, C. A. Gordon, A. Trkola, and J. P. Moore. A luciferase-reporter gene-expressing T-cell line facilitates neutralization and drug-sensitivity assays that use either R5 or X4 strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Virology, 280(2):292--300, 15 Feb 2001. PubMed ID: 11162843.
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Srisurapanon2005
Surangrat Srisurapanon, Suda Louisirirotchanakul, Kwonchit Sumransurp, Monthaswad Ratanasrithong, Thippawan Chuenchitra, Siriporn Jintakatkorn, and Chantapong Wasi. Binding Antibody to Neutralizing Epitope gp41 in HIV-1 Subtype CRF 01\_AE Infection Related to Stage of Disease. Southeast Asian J. Trop. Med. Public Health, 36(1):221-227, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15906673.
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Indresh K. Srivastava, Leonidas Stamatatos, Harold Legg, Elaine Kan, Anne Fong, Stephen R. Coates, Louisa Leung, Mark Wininger, John J. Donnelly, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Purification and Characterization of Oligomeric Envelope Glycoprotein from a Primary R5 Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus. J. Virol., 76(6):2835-2847, Mar 2002. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/76/6/2835. PubMed ID: 11861851.
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Indresh K. Srivastava, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Role of Neutralizing Antibodies in Protective Immunity Against HIV. Hum. Vaccin., 1(2):45-60, Mar-Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 17038830.
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Srivastava2008
Indresh K. Srivastava, Elaine Kan, Yide Sun, Victoria A. Sharma, Jimna Cisto, Brian Burke, Ying Lian, Susan Hilt, Zohar Biron, Karin Hartog, Leonidas Stamatatos, Ruben Diaz-Avalos, R Holland Cheng, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Comparative Evaluation of Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins Derived from Subtype C and B HIV-1 R5 Isolates. Virology, 372(2):273-290, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18061231.
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Stamatatos1997
L. Stamatatos, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, and C. Cheng-Mayer. Binding of Antibodies to Virion-Associated gp120 Molecules of Primary-Like Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Isolates: Effect on HIV-1 Infection of Macrophages and Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells. Virology, 229:360-369, 1997. PubMed ID: 9126249.
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Stamatatos2009
Leonidas Stamatatos, Lynn Morris, Dennis R. Burton, and John R. Mascola. Neutralizing Antibodies Generated during Natural HIV-1 Infection: Good News for an HIV-1 Vaccine? Nat. Med., 15(8):866-870, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19525964.
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Robyn L. Stanfield and Ian A. Wilson. Structural Studies of Human HIV-1 V3 Antibodies. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):73-80, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720977.
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Jonathan D. Steckbeck, Chengqun Sun, Timothy J. Sturgeon, and Ronald C. Montelaro. Topology of the C-Terminal Tail of HIV-1 gp41: Differential Exposure of the Kennedy Epitope on Cell and Viral Membranes. PLoS One, 5(12):e15261, 2010. PubMed ID: 21151874.
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Stephenson2016
Kathryn E. Stephenson and Dan H. Barouch. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies for HIV Eradication. Curr. HIV/AIDS Rep., 13(1):31-37, Feb 2016. PubMed ID: 26841901.
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G. Stiegler, R. Kunert, M. Purtscher, S. Wolbank, R. Voglauer, F. Steindl, and H. Katinger. A potent cross-clade neutralizing human monoclonal antibody against a novel epitope on gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 17(18):1757--65, 10 Dec 2001. PubMed ID: 11788027.
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Stiegler2002
Gabriela Stiegler, Christine Armbruster, Brigitta Vcelar, Heribert Stoiber, Renate Kunert, Nelson L. Michael, Linda L. Jagodzinski, Christoph Ammann, Walter Jäger, Jeffrey Jacobson, Norbert Vetter, and Hermann Katinger. Antiviral Activity of the Neutralizing Antibodies 2F5 and 2G12 in Asymptomatic HIV-1-Infected Humans: A Phase I Evaluation. AIDS, 16(15):2019-2025, 18 Oct 2002. PubMed ID: 12370500.
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H. Stoiber, C. Pinter, A. G. Siccardi, A. Clivio, and M. P. Dierich. Efficient Destruction of Human Immunodeficiency Virus in Human Serum by Inhibiting the Protective Action of Complement Factor H and Decay Accelerating Factor (DAF, CD55). J. Exp. Med., 183:307-310, 1996. HIV and HIV-infected cells are not subject to efficient complement-mediated lysis, even in the presence of HIV-specific antibodies. HIV is intrinsically resistant to human complement. Decay accelerating factor (DAF) and human complement factor H (CFH), a humoral negative regulator of complement which binds to gp41 are critical for this resistance. MAb 2F5 can inhibit CHF binding and facilitate complement mediated lysis. PubMed ID: 8551237.
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Zhen-Yu J. Sun, Kyoung Joon Oh, Mikyung Kim, Jessica Yu, Vladimir Brusic, Likai Song, Zhisong Qiao, Jia-huai Wang, Gerhard Wagner, and Ellis L. Reinherz. HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Extracts Its Epitope from a Kinked gp41 Ectodomain Region on the Viral Membrane. Immunity, 28(1):52-63, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 18191596.
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D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, B. E. Sha, and G. T. Spear. Mechanisms of Resistance of HIV-1 Primary Isolates to Complement-Mediated Lysis. Virology, 246:370-378, 1998. PubMed ID: 9657955.
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Tang2023
Wenqi Tang, Zhenzhen Yuan, Zheng Wang, Li Ren, Dan Li, Shuhui Wang, Yanling Hao, Jing Li, Xiuli Shen, Yuhua Ruan, Yiming Shao, and Ying Liu. Neutralization Sensitivity and Evolution of Virus in a Chronic HIV-1 Clade B Infected Patient with Neutralizing Activity against Membrane-Proximal External Region. Pathogens, 12(3), 22 Mar 2023. PubMed ID: 36986419.
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Tasca2008
Silvana Tasca, Siu-Hong Ho, and Cecilia Cheng-Mayer. R5X4 Viruses Are Evolutionary, Functional, and Antigenic Intermediates in the Pathway of a Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Coreceptor Switch. J. Virol., 82(14):7089-7099, Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18480460.
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M. Thali, M. Charles, C. Furman, L. Cavacini, M. Posner, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Resistance to Neutralization by Broadly Reactive Antibodies to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Glycoprotein Conferred by a gp41 Amino Acid Change. J. Virol., 68:674-680, 1994. A T->A amino acid substitution at position 582 of gp41 conferred resistance to neutralization to 30\% of HIV positive sera (Wilson et al. J Virol 64:3240-48 (1990)). Monoclonal antibodies that bound to the CD4 binding site were unable to neutralize this virus, but the mutation did not reduce the neutralizing capacity of a V2 region MAb G3-4, V3 region MAbs, or gp41 neutralizing MAb 2F5. PubMed ID: 7507184.
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Thenin2012a
Suzie Thenin, Emmanuelle Roch, Tanawan Samleerat, Thierry Moreau, Antoine Chaillon, Alain Moreau, Francis Barin, and Martine Braibant. Naturally Occurring Substitutions of Conserved Residues in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants of Different Clades Are Involved in PG9 and PG16 Resistance to Neutralization. J. Gen. Virol., 93(7):1495-1505, Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22492917.
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Y. Tian, C. V. Ramesh, X. Ma, S. Naqvi, T. Patel, T. Cenizal, M. Tiscione, K. Diaz, T. Crea, E. Arnold, G. F. Arnold, and J. W. Taylor. Structure-Affinity Relationships in the gp41 ELDKWA Epitope for the HIV-1 Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5: Effects of Side-Chain and Backbone Modifications and Conformational Constraints. J Pept Res, 59(6):264-276, Jun 2002. PubMed ID: 12010517.
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Todd2012
Christopher A. Todd, Kelli M. Greene, Xuesong Yu, Daniel A. Ozaki, Hongmei Gao, Yunda Huang, Maggie Wang, Gary Li, Ronald Brown, Blake Wood, M. Patricia D'Souza, Peter Gilbert, David C. Montefiori, and Marcella Sarzotti-Kelsoe. Development and Implementation of an International Proficiency Testing Program for a Neutralizing Antibody Assay for HIV-1 in TZM-bl Cells. J. Immunol. Methods, 375(1-2):57-67, 31 Jan 2012. PubMed ID: 21968254.
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Tomaras2008
Georgia D. Tomaras, Nicole L. Yates, Pinghuang Liu, Li Qin, Genevieve G. Fouda, Leslie L. Chavez, Allan C. Decamp, Robert J. Parks, Vicki C. Ashley, Judith T. Lucas, Myron Cohen, Joseph Eron, Charles B. Hicks, Hua-Xin Liao, Steven G. Self, Gary Landucci, Donald N. Forthal, Kent J. Weinhold, Brandon F. Keele, Beatrice H. Hahn, Michael L. Greenberg, Lynn Morris, Salim S. Abdool Karim, William A. Blattner, David C. Montefiori, George M. Shaw, Alan S. Perelson, and Barton F. Haynes. Initial B-Cell Responses to Transmitted Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: Virion-Binding Immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG Antibodies Followed by Plasma Anti-gp41 Antibodies with Ineffective Control of Initial Viremia. J. Virol., 82(24):12449-12463, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18842730.
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Georgia D. Tomaras and Barton F. Haynes. Strategies for Eliciting HIV-1 Inhibitory Antibodies. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 5(5):421-427, Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20978384.
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Tomaras2011
Georgia D. Tomaras, James M. Binley, Elin S. Gray, Emma T. Crooks, Keiko Osawa, Penny L. Moore, Nancy Tumba, Tommy Tong, Xiaoying Shen, Nicole L. Yates, Julie Decker, Constantinos Kurt Wibmer, Feng Gao, S. Munir Alam, Philippa Easterbrook, Salim Abdool Karim, Gift Kamanga, John A. Crump, Myron Cohen, George M. Shaw, John R. Mascola, Barton F. Haynes, David C. Montefiori, and Lynn Morris. Polyclonal B Cell Responses to Conserved Neutralization Epitopes in a Subset of HIV-1-Infected Individuals. J. Virol., 85(21):11502-11519, Nov 2011. PubMed ID: 21849452.
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Tommy Tong, Ema T. Crooks, Keiko Osawa, and James M. Binley. HIV-1 Virus-Like Particles Bearing Pure Env Trimers Expose Neutralizing Epitopes but Occlude Nonneutralizing Epitopes. J. Virol., 86(7):3574-3587, Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22301141.
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A. Trkola, A. B. Pomales, H. Yuan, B. Korber, P. J. Maddon, G. P. Allaway, H. Katinger, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, D. D. Ho, and J. P. Moore. Cross-Clade Neutralization of Primary Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Human Monoclonal Antibodies and Tetrameric CD4-IgG. J. Virol., 69:6609-6617, 1995. Three MAbs, IgG1b12, 2G12, and 2F5 tetrameric CD4-IgG2 were tested for their ability to neutralize primary isolates from clades A-F. 2F5 and CD4-IgG2 were able to neutralize within and outside clade B with a high potency. IgG1b12 and 2G12 could potently neutralize isolates from within clade B, but showed a reduction in efficacy outside of clade B. 2F5 neutralization was dependent on the presence of the sequence: LDKW. PubMed ID: 7474069.
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A. Trkola, T. Ketas, V. N. Kewalramani, F. Endorf, J. M. Binley, H. Katinger, J. Robinson, D. R. Littman, and J. P. Moore. Neutralization Sensitivity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolates to Antibodies and CD4-Based Reagents Is Independent of Coreceptor Usage. J. Virol., 72:1876-1885, 1998. PubMed ID: 9499039.
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Trkola2005
Alexandra Trkola, Herbert Kuster, Peter Rusert, Beda Joos, Marek Fischer, Christine Leemann, Amapola Manrique, Michael Huber, Manuela Rehr, Annette Oxenius, Rainer Weber, Gabriela Stiegler, Brigitta Vcelar, Hermann Katinger, Leonardo Aceto, and Huldrych F. Günthard. Delay of HIV-1 Rebound after Cessation of Antiretroviral Therapy through Passive Transfer of Human Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Med., 11(6):615-622, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15880120.
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D. Tudor, M. Derrien, L. Diomede, A.-S. Drillet, M. Houimel, C. Moog, J.-M. Reynes, L. Lopalco, and M. Bomsel. HIV-1 gp41-Specific Monoclonal Mucosal IgAs Derived from Highly Exposed but IgG-Seronegative Individuals Block HIV-1 Epithelial Transcytosis and Neutralize CD4+ Cell Infection: An IgA Gene and Functional Analysis. Mucosal Immunol., 2(5):412-426, Sep 2009. PubMed ID: 19587640.
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Tudor2011
Daniela Tudor and Morgane Bomsel. The Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 IgG 2F5 Elicits gp41-Specific Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity in a FcgammaRI-Dependent Manner. AIDS, 25(6):751-759, 27 Mar 2011. PubMed ID: 21330910.
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Tudor2012
Daniela Tudor, Huifeng Yu, Julien Maupetit, Anne-Sophie Drillet, Tahar Bouceba, Isabelle Schwartz-Cornil, Lucia Lopalco, Pierre Tuffery, and Morgane Bomsel. Isotype Modulates Epitope Specificity, Affinity, and Antiviral Activities of Anti-HIV-1 Human Broadly Neutralizing 2F5 Antibody. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 109(31):12680-12685, 31 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22723360.
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P. R. Tulip, C. R. Gregor, R. Z. Troitzsch, G. J. Martyna, E. Cerasoli, G. Tranter, and J. Crain. Conformational Plasticity in an HIV-1 Antibody Epitope. J. Phys. Chem. B, 114(23):7942-7950, 17 Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20491462.
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O. Iu. Tumanova, V. N. Kuvshinov, M. Sh. Azaev, A. E. Masharskii, N. A. Klimov, A. P. Kozlov, A. A. Il'ichev, and L. S. Sandakhchiev. [Construction of peptide mimetics of an epitope of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) gp41 protein, recognized by virus-neutralizing antibodies 2F5]. Mol Biol (Mosk), 35(1):146--51, Jan-Feb 2001. Article in Russian. PubMed ID: 11234374.
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I. Turbica, F. Simon, J. M. Besnier, B. LeJeune, P. Choutet, A Goudeau, and F. Barin. Temporal Development and Prognostic Value of Antibody Response to the Major Neutralizing Epitopes of gp120 during HIV-1 Infection. J. Med. Virol., 52:309-315, 1997. PubMed ID: 9210041.
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S. Ugolini, I. Mondor, P. W. H. I Parren, D. R. Burton, S. A. Tilley, P. J. Klasse, and Q. J. Sattentau. Inhibition of Virus Attachment to CD4+ Target Cells Is a Major Mechanism of T Cell Line-Adapted HIV-1 Neutralization. J. Exp. Med., 186:1287-1298, 1997. PubMed ID: 9334368.
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Utachee2009
Piraporn Utachee, Piyamat Jinnopat, Panasda Isarangkura-na-ayuthaya, U. Chandimal de Silva, Shota Nakamura, Uamporn Siripanyaphinyo, Nuanjun Wichukchinda, Kenzo Tokunaga, Teruo Yasunaga, Pathom Sawanpanyalert, Kazuyoshi Ikuta, Wattana Auwanit, and Masanori Kameoka. Phenotypic Studies on Recombinant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Containing CRF01\_AE env Gene Derived from HIV-1-Infected Patient, Residing in Central Thailand. Microbes Infect., 11(3):334-343, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19136072.
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vandenKerkhof2013
Tom L. G. M. van den Kerkhof, K. Anton Feenstra, Zelda Euler, Marit J. van Gils, Linda W. E. Rijsdijk, Brigitte D. Boeser-Nunnink, Jaap Heringa, Hanneke Schuitemaker, and Rogier W. Sanders. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Signatures That Correlate with the Development of Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Activity. Retrovirology, 10:102, 23 Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 24059682.
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vanGils2011
Marit J. van Gils, Evelien M. Bunnik, Brigitte D. Boeser-Nunnink, Judith A. Burger, Marijke Terlouw-Klein, Naomi Verwer, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Longer V1V2 Region with Increased Number of Potential N-Linked Glycosylation Sites in the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Protects against HIV-Specific Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(14):6986-6995, Jul 2011. PubMed ID: 21593147.
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vanGils2011a
Marit J. van Gils, Diana Edo-Matas, Emma J. Bowles, Judith A. Burger, Guillaume B. Stewart-Jones, and Hanneke Schuitemaker. Evolution of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in a Patient with Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Activity in Serum. J. Virol., 85(16):8443-8438, Aug 2011. PubMed ID: 21653664.
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Thijs van Montfort, Alexey A. Nabatov, Teunis B. H. Geijtenbeek, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Efficient Capture of Antibody Neutralized HIV-1 by Cells Expressing DC-SIGN and Transfer to CD4+ T Lymphocytes. J. Immunol., 178(5):3177-85, 1 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17312166.
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Thijs van Montfort, Adri A. M. Thomas, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Dendritic Cells Preferentially Transfer CXCR4-Using Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants to CD4+ T Lymphocytes in trans. J. Viro.l, 82(16):7886-7896, Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18524826.
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vanMontfort2011
Thijs van Montfort, Mark Melchers, Gözde Isik, Sergey Menis, Po-Ssu Huang, Katie Matthews, Elizabeth Michael, Ben Berkhout, William R. Schief, John P. Moore, and Rogier W. Sanders. A Chimeric HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimer with an Embedded Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF) Domain Induces Enhanced Antibody and T Cell Responses. J. Biol. Chem., 286(25):22250-22261, 24 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21515681.
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Vcelar2007
Brigitta Vcelar, Gabriela Stiegler, Hermann M. Wolf, Wolfgang Muntean, Bettina Leschnik, Saurabh Mehandru, Martin Markowitz, Christine Armbruster, Renate Kunert, Martha M. Eibl, and Hermann Katinger. Reassessment of Autoreactivity of the Broadly Neutralizing HIV Antibodies 4E10 and 2F5 and Retrospective Analysis of Clinical Safety Data. AIDS, 21(16):2161-2170, 18 Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 18090042.
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Veiga2006
Ana Salomé Veiga and Miguel A. R. B. Castanho. The Membranes' Role in the HIV-1 Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibody 2F5 Mode of Action Needs Re-Evaluation. Antiviral Res., 71(1):69-72, Aug 2006. PubMed ID: 16530275.
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Veiga2009
Ana S. Veiga, Leonard K. Pattenden, Jordan M. Fletcher, Miguel A. R. B. Castanho, and Marie Isabel Aguilar. Interactions of HIV-1 Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10 with a gp41 Epitope Prebound to Host and Viral Membrane Model Systems. ChemBioChem, 10(6):1032-1044, 17 Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19283693.
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Venditto2013
Vincent J. Venditto, Douglas S. Watson, Michael Motion, David Montefiori, and Francis C. Szoka, Jr. Rational Design of Membrane Proximal External Region Lipopeptides Containing Chemical Modifications for HIV-1 Vaccination. Clin Vaccine Immunol, 20(1):39-45, Jan 2013. PubMed ID: 23114698.
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Verkoczy2009
Laurent Verkoczy, M. Anthony Moody, T. Matt Holl, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Richard M. Scearce, Jennifer Hutchinson, S. Munir Alam, Garnett Kelsoe, and Barton F. Haynes. Functional, Non-Clonal IgMa-Restricted B Cell Receptor Interactions with the HIV-1 Envelope gp41 Membrane Proximal External Region. PLoS One, 4(10):e7215, 2009. PubMed ID: 19806186.
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Verkoczy2010
Laurent Verkoczy, Marilyn Diaz, T. Matt Holl, Ying-Bin Ouyang, Hilary Bouton-Verville, S. Munir Alam, Hua-Xin Liao, Garnett Kelsoe, and Barton F. Haynes. Autoreactivity in an HIV-1 Broadly Reactive Neutralizing Antibody Variable Region Heavy Chain Induces Immunologic Tolerance. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(1):181-186, 5 Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 20018688.
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Verkoczy2011
Laurent Verkoczy, Yao Chen, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Jinsong Zhang, Marilyn Diaz, Jennifer Hutchinson, Ying-Bin Ouyang, S. Munir Alam, T. Matt Holl, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Garnett Kelsoe, and Barton F. Haynes. Rescue of HIV-1 Broad Neutralizing Antibody-Expressing B Cells in 2F5 VH x VL Knockin Mice Reveals Multiple Tolerance Controls. J. Immunol., 187(7):3785-3797, 1 Oct 2011. PubMed ID: 21908739.
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Verrier2001
F. Verrier, A. Nadas, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Additive effects characterize the interaction of antibodies involved in neutralization of the primary dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolate 89.6. J. Virol., 75(19):9177--86, Oct 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/19/9177. PubMed ID: 11533181.
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Vincent2005
Nadine Vincent, Jean-Claude Tardy, Jean-Michel Livrozet, Frédéric Lucht, Anne Frésard, Christian Genin, and Etienne Malvoisin. Depletion in Antibodies Targeted to the HR2 Region of HIV-1 Glycoprotein gp41 in Sera of HIV-1-Seropositive Patients Treated with T20. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 38(3):254-262, 1 Mar 2005. PubMed ID: 15735441.
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Vincent2008
Nadine Vincent, Amadou Kone, Blandine Chanut, Frédéric Lucht, Christian Genin, and Etienne Malvoisin. Antibodies Purified from Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients by Affinity on the Heptad Repeat Region 1/Heptad Repeat Region 2 Complex of gp41 Neutralize HIV-1 Primary Isolates. AIDS, 22(16):2075-2085, 18 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18832871.
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Virnik2018
Konstantin Virnik, Edmund Nesti, Cody Dail, Aaron Scanlan, Alexei Medvedev, Russell Vassell, Andrew T. McGuire, Leonidas Stamatatos, and Ira Berkower. Live Rubella Vectors Can Express Native HIV Envelope Glycoproteins Targeted by Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies and Prime the Immune Response to an Envelope Protein Boost. Vaccine, 36(34):5166-5172, 16 Aug 2018. PubMed ID: 30037665.
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vonBredow2016
Benjamin von Bredow, Juan F. Arias, Lisa N. Heyer, Brian Moldt, Khoa Le, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dennis R. Burton, and David T. Evans. Comparison of Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity and Virus Neutralization by HIV-1 Env-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 90(13):6127-6139, 1 Jul 2016. PubMed ID: 27122574.
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Vu2006
John R. Vu, Timothy Fouts, Katherine Bobb, Jennifer Burns, Brenda McDermott, David I. Israel, Karla Godfrey, and Anthony DeVico. An Immunoglobulin Fusion Protein Based on the gp120-CD4 Receptor Complex Potently Inhibits Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 In Vitro. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 22(6):477-490, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16796521.
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Walker2009a
Laura M. Walker, Sanjay K. Phogat, Po-Ying Chan-Hui, Denise Wagner, Pham Phung, Julie L. Goss, Terri Wrin, Melissa D. Simek, Steven Fling, Jennifer L. Mitcham, Jennifer K. Lehrman, Frances H. Priddy, Ole A. Olsen, Steven M. Frey, Phillip W . Hammond, Protocol G Principal Investigators, Stephen Kaminsky, Timothy Zamb, Matthew Moyle, Wayne C. Koff, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. Broad and Potent Neutralizing Antibodies from an African Donor Reveal a new HIV-1 Vaccine Target. Science, 326(5950):285-289, 9 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19729618.
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Walker2010
Laura M. Walker, Melissa D. Simek, Frances Priddy, Johannes S. Gach, Denise Wagner, Michael B. Zwick, Sanjay K. Phogat, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. A Limited Number of Antibody Specificities Mediate Broad and Potent Serum Neutralization in Selected HIV-1 Infected Individuals. PLoS Pathog., 6(8), 2010. PubMed ID: 20700449.
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Walker2010a
Laura M. Walker and Dennis R. Burton. Rational Antibody-Based HIV-1 Vaccine Design: Current Approaches and Future Directions. Curr. Opin. Immunol., 22(3):358-366, Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20299194.
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Wallace2009
Aaron Wallace and Leonidas Stamatatos. Introduction of Exogenous Epitopes in the Variable Regions of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein: Effect on Viral Infectivity and the Neutralization Phenotype. J. Virol., 83(16):7883-7893, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19494007.
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Wang2003
Lai-Xi Wang. Bioorganic Approaches towards HIV Vaccine Design. Curr. Pharm. Des., 9(22):1771-87, 2003. PubMed ID: 12871196.
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Wang2005
Zuguang Wang, Zuqiang Liu, Xiwen Cheng, and Ying-Hua Chen. The Recombinant Immunogen with High-Density Epitopes of ELDKWA and ELDEWA Induced Antibodies Recognizing Both Epitopes on HIV-1 gp41. Microbiol. Immunol., 49(8):703-709, 2005. PubMed ID: 16113499.
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Wang2006
Shixia Wang, Ranajit Pal, John R. Mascola, Te-Hui W. Chou, Innocent Mboudjeka, Siyuan Shen, Qin Liu, Stephen Whitney, Timothy Keen, B. C. Nair, V. S. Kalyanaraman, Philip Markham, and Shan Lu. Polyvalent HIV-1 Env Vaccine Formulations Delivered by the DNA Priming Plus Protein Boosting Approach Are Effective in Generating Neutralizing Antibodies against Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates From Subtypes A, B, C, D and E. Virology, 350(1):34-47, 20 Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16616287.
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Wang2010
Pengcheng Wang and Xinzhen Yang. Neutralization Efficiency Is Greatly Enhanced by Bivalent Binding of an Antibody to Epitopes in the V4 Region and the Membrane-Proximal External Region within One Trimer of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 84(14):7114-7123, Jul 2010. PubMed ID: 20463081.
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Wang2011
Ji Wang, Liling Xu, Pei Tong, and Ying-Hua Chen. Mucosal Antibodies Induced by Tandem Repeat of 2F5 Epitope Block Transcytosis of HIV-1. Vaccine, 29(47):8542-8548, 3 Nov 2011. PubMed ID: 21939723.
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Wang2011a
Ji Wang, Pei Tong, Lu Lu, Leilei Zhou, Liling Xu, Shibo Jiang, and Ying-hua Chen. HIV-1 gp41 Core with Exposed Membrane-Proximal External Region Inducing Broad HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies. PLoS One, 6(3):e18233, 2011. PubMed ID: 21483871.
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Wang2011b
Suting Wang, Jianhui Nie, and Youchun Wang. Comparisons of the Genetic and Neutralization Properties of HIV-1 Subtype C and CRF07/08\_BC env Molecular Clones Isolated from Infections in China. Virus Res., 155(1):137-146, Jan 2011. PubMed ID: 20875470.
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Wang2012
Shixia Wang, Michael Kishko, Shengqin Wan, Yan Wang, Frank Brewster, Glenda E. Gray, Avye Violari, John L. Sullivan, Mohan Somasundaran, Katherine Luzuriaga, and Shan Lu. Pilot Study on the Immunogenicity of Paired Env Immunogens from Mother-to-Child Transmitted HIV-1 Isolates. Hum. Vaccin. Immunother., 8(11):1638-1647, 1 Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 23151449.
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Wang2013
Wenbo Wang, Jianhui Nie, Courtney Prochnow, Carolyn Truong, Zheng Jia, Suting Wang, Xiaojiang S. Chen, and Youchun Wang. A Systematic Study of the N-Glycosylation Sites of HIV-1 Envelope Protein on Infectivity and Antibody-Mediated Neutralization. Retrovirology, 10:14, 2013. PubMed ID: 23384254.
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Wang2018a
Hongye Wang, Ting Yuan, Tingting Li, Yanpeng Li, Feng Qian, Chuanwu Zhu, Shujia Liang, Daniel Hoffmann, Ulf Dittmer, Binlian Sun, and Rongge Yang. Evaluation of Susceptibility of HIV-1 CRF01\_AE Variants to Neutralization by a Panel of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Arch. Virol., 163(12):3303-3315, Dec 2018. PubMed ID: 30196320.
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Webb2015
Nicholas E. Webb, David C. Montefiori, and Benhur Lee. Dose-Response Curve Slope Helps Predict Therapeutic Potency and Breadth of HIV Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Commun., 6:8443, 29 Sep 2015. PubMed ID: 26416571.
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West2012a
Anthony P. West, Jr., Ron Diskin, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Structural Basis for Germ-Line Gene Usage of a Potent Class of Antibodies Targeting the CD4-Binding Site of HIV-1 gp120. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 109(30):E2083-E2090, 24 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22745174.
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West2013
Anthony P. West, Jr., Louise Scharf, Joshua Horwitz, Florian Klein, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Computational Analysis of Anti-HIV-1 Antibody Neutralization Panel Data to Identify Potential Functional Epitope Residues. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 110(26):10598-10603, 25 Jun 2013. PubMed ID: 23754383.
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Wiehe2018
Kevin Wiehe, Todd Bradley, R. Ryan Meyerhoff, Connor Hart, Wilton B. Williams, David Easterhoff, William J. Faison, Thomas B. Kepler, Kevin O. Saunders, S. Munir Alam, Mattia Bonsignori, and Barton F. Haynes. Functional Relevance of Improbable Antibody Mutations for HIV Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Development. Cell Host Microbe, 23(6):759-765.e6, 13 Jun 2018. PubMed ID: 29861171.
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Willey2008
Suzanne Willey and Marlén M. I. Aasa-Chapman. Humoral Immunity to HIV-1: Neutralisation and Antibody Effector Functions. Trends Microbiol., 16(12):596-604, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18964020.
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Wolbank2003
Susanne Wolbank, Renate Kunert, Gabriela Stiegler, and Hermann Katinger. Characterization of Human Class-Switched Polymeric (Immunoglobulin M [IgM] and IgA) Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibodies 2F5 and 2G12. J. Virol., 77(7):4095-4103, Apr 2003. PubMed ID: 12634368.
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Wu2010
Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Yuxing Li, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, William R. Schief, Michael S. Seaman, Tongqing Zhou, Stephen D. Schmidt, Lan Wu, Ling Xu, Nancy S. Longo, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Diane L. Wycuff, Yu Feng, Martha Nason, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, Peter D. Kwong, Mario Roederer, Richard T. Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Rational Design of Envelope Identifies Broadly Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies to HIV-1. Science, 329(5993):856-861, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616233.
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Xiang2002
Shi-Hua. Xiang, Peter D. Kwong, Rishi Gupta, Carlo D. Rizzuto, David J. Casper, Richard Wyatt, Liping Wang, Wayne A. Hendrickson, Michael L. Doyle, and Joseph Sodroski. Mutagenic Stabilization and/or Disruption of a CD4-Bound State Reveals Distinct Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 76(19):9888-9899, Oct 2002. PubMed ID: 12208966.
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Xiao2000a
Y. Xiao, Y. Zhao, Y. Lu, and Y. H. Chen. Epitope-Vaccine Induces High Levels of ELDKWA-Epitope-Specific Neutralizing Antibody. Immunol. Invest., 29:41-50, 2000. PubMed ID: 10709845.
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Xiao2009
Xiaodong Xiao, Weizao Chen, Yang Feng, Zhongyu Zhu, Ponraj Prabakaran, Yanping Wang, Mei-Yun Zhang, Nancy S. Longo, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Germline-Like Predecessors of Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Lack Measurable Binding to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins: Implications for Evasion of Immune Responses and Design of Vaccine Immunogens. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 390(3):404-409, 18 Dec 2009. PubMed ID: 19748484.
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Xu2001
W. Xu, B. A. Smith-Franklin, P. L. Li, C. Wood, J. He, Q. Du, G. J. Bhat, C. Kankasa, H. Katinger, L. A. Cavacini, M. R. Posner, D. R. Burton, T. C. Chou, and R. M. Ruprecht. Potent neutralization of primary human immunodeficiency virus clade C isolates with a synergistic combination of human monoclonal antibodies raised against clade B. J Hum Virol, 4(2):55--61, Mar-Apr 2001. PubMed ID: 11437315.
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Xu2002
Weidong Xu, Regina Hofmann-Lehmann, Harold M. McClure, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Passive Immunization with Human Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies: Correlates of Protective Immunity against HIV. Vaccine, 20(15):1956-1960, 6 May 2002. PubMed ID: 11983253.
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Yamamoto2008
Hiroyuki Yamamoto and Tetsuro Matano. Anti-HIV Adaptive Immunity: Determinants for Viral Persistence. Rev. Med. Virol., 18(5):293-303, Sep-Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18416450.
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Yang1998
G. Yang, M. P. D'Souza, and G. N. Vyas. Neutralizing Antibodies against HIV Determined by Amplification of Viral Long Terminal Repeat Sequences from Cells Infected In Vitro by Nonneutralized Virions. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. Hum. Retrovirol., 17:27-34, 1998. A neutralization assay was developed based on heminested PCR amplification of the LTR (HNPCR) -- LTR-HNPCR consistently revealed HIV DNA and was shown to be a rapid, specific and reliable neutralization assay based on tests with 6 MAbs and 5 HIV isolates. PubMed ID: 9436755.
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Yang2000
Xinzhen Yang, Michael Farzan, Richard Wyatt, and Joseph Sodroski. Characterization of Stable, Soluble Trimers Containing Complete Ectodomains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 74(12):5716-5725, Jun 2000. PubMed ID: 10823881.
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Yang2005b
Xinzhen Yang, Svetla Kurteva, Sandra Lee, and Joseph Sodroski. Stoichiometry of Antibody Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 79(6):3500-3508, Mar 2005. PubMed ID: 15731244.
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Yang2006
Xinzhen Yang, Inna Lipchina, Simon Cocklin, Irwin Chaiken, and Joseph Sodroski. Antibody Binding Is a Dominant Determinant of the Efficiency of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Neutralization. J. Virol., 80(22):11404-11408, Nov 2006. PubMed ID: 16956933.
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Yang2013
Guang Yang, T. Matt Holl, Yang Liu, Yi Li, Xiaozhi Lu, Nathan I. Nicely, Thomas B. Kepler, S. Munir Alam, Hua-Xin Liao, Derek W. Cain, Leonard Spicer, John L. VandeBerg, Barton F. Haynes, and Garnett Kelsoe. Identification of Autoantigens Recognized by the 2F5 and 4E10 Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies. J. Exp. Med., 210(2):241-256, 11 Feb 2013. PubMed ID: 23359068.
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Yang2014
Lili Yang and Pin Wang. Passive Immunization against HIV/AIDS by Antibody Gene Transfer. Viruses, 6(2):428-447, Feb 2014. PubMed ID: 24473340.
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Yang2018
Zheng Yang, Xi Liu, Zehua Sun, Jingjing Li, Weiguo Tan, Weiye Yu, and Meiyun Zhang. Identification of a HIV gp41-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibody with Potent Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity. Front. Immunol., 9:2613, 2018. PubMed ID: 30519238.
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Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
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Ye2006
Ling Ye, Yuliang Sun, Jianguo Lin, Zhigao Bu, Qingyang Wu, Shibo Jiang, David A. Steinhauer, Richard W. Compans, and Chinglai Yang. Antigenic Properties of a Transport-Competent Influenza HA/HIV Env Chimeric Protein. Virology, 352(1):74-85, 15 Aug 2006. PubMed ID: 16725170.
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Yee2011
Michael Yee, Krystyna Konopka, Jan Balzarini, and Nejat Düzgüneş. Inhibition of HIV-1 Env-Mediated Cell-Cell Fusion by Lectins, Peptide T-20, and Neutralizing Antibodies. Open Virol. J., 5:44-51, 2011. PubMed ID: 21660189.
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York2001
J. York, K. E. Follis, M. Trahey, P. N. Nyambi, S. Zolla-Pazner, and J. H. Nunberg. Antibody binding and neutralization of primary and T-cell line-adapted isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 75(6):2741--52, Mar 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/6/2741. PubMed ID: 11222697.
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Yuan2005
Wen Yuan, Stewart Craig, Xinzhen Yang, and Joseph Sodroski. Inter-Subunit Disulfide Bonds in Soluble HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. Virology, 332(1):369-383, 5 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15661168.
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Yuan2009
Wen Yuan, Xing Li, Marta Kasterka, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Joseph Sodroski. Oligomer-Specific Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) gp41 Envelope Glycoprotein Ectodomain Recognized by Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 25(3):319-328, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19292593.
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Yuste2006
Eloisa Yuste, Hannah B. Sanford, Jill Carmody, Jacqueline Bixby, Susan Little, Michael B. Zwick, Tom Greenough, Dennis R. Burton, Douglas D. Richman, Ronald C. Desrosiers, and Welkin E. Johnson. Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Engrafted with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Epitopes: Replication, Neutralization, and Survey of HIV-1-Positive Plasma. J. Virol., 80(6):3030-3041, Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16501112.
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ZederLutz2001
G. Zeder-Lutz, J. Hoebeke, and M. H. Van Regenmortel. Differential recognition of epitopes present on monomeric and oligomeric forms of gp160 glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by human monoclonal antibodies. Eur. J. Biochem., 268(10):2856--66, May 2001. PubMed ID: 11358501.
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Zhang2002
Peng Fei Zhang, Peter Bouma, Eun Ju Park, Joseph B. Margolick, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Michael N. Flora, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. A Variable Region 3 (V3) Mutation Determines a Global Neutralization Phenotype and CD4-Independent Infectivity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Associated with a Broadly Cross-Reactive, Primary Virus-Neutralizing Antibody Response. J. Virol., 76(2):644-655, Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11752155.
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Zhang2005
Geng Zhang, Hong Lu, Yun Lu, ShiBo Jiang, and Ying-Hua Chen. Neutralization of HIV-1 Primary Isolate by ELDKWA-Specific Murine Monoclonal Antibodies. Immunobiology, 210(9):639-645, 2005. PubMed ID: 16323702.
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Zhang2006a
Mei-Yun Zhang, Vidita Choudhry, Igor A. Sidorov, Vladimir Tenev, Bang K Vu, Anil Choudhary, Hong Lu, Gabriela M. Stiegler, Hermann W. D. Katinger, Shibo Jiang, Christopher C. Broder, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Selection of a Novel gp41-Specific HIV-1 Neutralizing Human Antibody by Competitive Antigen Panning. J. Immunol. Methods, 317(1-2):21-30, 20 Dec 2006. PubMed ID: 17078964.
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Zhang2007
Mei-Yun Zhang and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Novel Approaches for Identification of Broadly Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies and Improvement of Their Potency. Curr. Pharm. Des., 13(2):203-212, 2007. PubMed ID: 17269928.
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Zhang2008
Mei-Yun Zhang, Bang K. Vu, Anil Choudhary, Hong Lu, Michael Humbert, Helena Ong, Munir Alam, Ruth M. Ruprecht, Gerald Quinnan, Shibo Jiang, David C. Montefiori, John R. Mascola, Christopher C. Broder, Barton F. Haynes, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Cross-Reactive Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibody That Recognizes a Novel Conformational Epitope on gp41 and Lacks Reactivity against Self-Antigens. J. Virol., 82(14):6869-6879, Jul 2008. PubMed ID: 18480433.
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Zhang2010
Mei-Yun Zhang, Andrew Rosa Borges, Roger G. Ptak, Yanping Wang, Antony S. Dimitrov, S. Munir Alam, Lindsay Wieczorek, Peter Bouma, Timothy Fouts, Shibo Jiang, Victoria R. Polonis, Barton F. Haynes, Gerald V. Quinnan, David C. Montefiori, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Potent and Broad Neutralizing Activity of a Single Chain Antibody Fragment against Cell-Free and Cell-Associated HIV-1. mAbs, 2(3):266-274, May-Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20305395.
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Zhang2010a
Hong Zhang, Marzena Rola, John T. West, Damien C. Tully, Piotr Kubis, Jun He, Chipepo Kankasa, and Charles Wood. Functional Properties of the HIV-1 Subtype C Envelope Glycoprotein Associated with Mother-to-Child Transmission. Virology, 400(2):164-174, 10 May 2010. PubMed ID: 20096914.
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Zhang2014
Jinsong Zhang, S. Munir Alam, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Yao Chen, Amanda Newman, Shelley Stewart, Frederick H. Jaeger, David C. Montefiori, S. Moses Dennison, Barton F. Haynes, and Laurent Verkoczy. Modulation of Nonneutralizing HIV-1 gp41 Responses by an MHC-Restricted TH Epitope Overlapping Those of Membrane Proximal External Region Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Immunol., 192(4):1693-1706, 15 Feb 2014. PubMed ID: 24465011.
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Zhang2014a
Yuan Zhang and Celeste Sagui. The gp41(659-671) HIV-1 Antibody Epitope: A Structurally Challenging Small Peptide. J. Phys. Chem. B, 118(1):69-80, 9 Jan 2014. PubMed ID: 24359409.
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Zhang2016
Ruijun Zhang, Laurent Verkoczy, Kevin Wiehe, S. Munir Alam, Nathan I. Nicely, Sampa Santra, Todd Bradley, Charles W. Pemble, 4th, Jinsong Zhang, Feng Gao, David C. Montefiori, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Garnett Kelsoe, Kevin Larimore, Phillip D. Greenberg, Robert Parks, Andrew Foulger, Jessica N. Peel, Kan Luo, Xiaozhi Lu, Ashley M. Trama, Nathan Vandergrift, Georgia D. Tomaras, Thomas B. Kepler, M. Anthony Moody, Hua-Xin Liao, and Barton F. Haynes. Initiation of Immune Tolerance-Controlled HIV gp41 Neutralizing B Cell Lineages. Sci. Transl. Med., 8(336):336ra62, 27 Apr 2016. PubMed ID: 27122615.
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Zhang2019a
Lei Zhang, Adriana Irimia, Lingling He, Elise Landais, Kimmo Rantalainen, Daniel P. Leaman, Thomas Vollbrecht, Armando Stano, Daniel I. Sands, Arthur S. Kim, IAVI Protocol G Investigators, Pascal Poignard, Dennis R. Burton, Ben Murrell, Andrew B. Ward, Jiang Zhu, Ian A. Wilson, and Michael B. Zwick. An MPER Antibody Neutralizes HIV-1 Using Germline Features Shared Among Donors. Nat. Commun., 10(1):5389, 26 Nov 2019. PubMed ID: 31772165.
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Zhou2010
Tongqing Zhou, Ivelin Georgiev, Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Kaifan Dai, Andrés Finzi, Young Do Kwon, Johannes F. Scheid, Wei Shi, Ling Xu, Yongping Yang, Jiang Zhu, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Joseph Sodroski, Lawrence Shapiro, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody VRC01. Science, 329(5993):811-817, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616231.
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Zhu2011
Zhongyu Zhu, Haiyan Rebekah Qin, Weizao Chen, Qi Zhao, Xiaoying Shen, Robert Schutte, Yanping Wang, Gilad Ofek, Emily Streaker, Ponraj Prabakaran, Genevieve G. Fouda, Hua-Xin Liao, John Owens, Mark Louder, Yongping Yang, Kristina-Ana Klaric, M. Anthony Moody, John R. Mascola, Jamie K. Scott, Peter D. Kwong, David Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Georgia D. Tomaras, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Cross-Reactive HIV-1-Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies Identified from a Patient with 2F5-Like Antibodies. J. Virol., 85(21):11401-11408, Nov 2011. PubMed ID: 21880764.
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Zwick2001b
M. B. Zwick, A. F. Labrijn, M. Wang, C. Spenlehauer, E. O. Saphire, J. M. Binley, J. P. Moore, G. Stiegler, H. Katinger, D. R. Burton, and P. W. Parren. Broadly neutralizing antibodies targeted to the membrane-proximal external region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 glycoprotein gp41. J. Virol., 75(22):10892--905, Nov 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/22/10892. PubMed ID: 11602729.
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Zwick2001c
M. B. Zwick, M. Wang, P. Poignard, G. Stiegler, H. Katinger, D. R. Burton, and P. W. Parren. Neutralization synergy of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 primary isolates by cocktails of broadly neutralizing antibodies. J. Virol., 75(24):12198--208, Dec 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/24/12198. PubMed ID: 11711611.
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Zwick2004a
Michael B. Zwick, H. Kiyomi Komori, Robyn L. Stanfield, Sarah Church, Meng Wang, Paul W. H. I. Parren, Renate Kunert, Hermann Katinger, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. The Long Third Complementarity-Determining Region of the Heavy Chain is Important in the Activity of the Broadly Neutralizing Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibody 2F5. J. Virol., 78(6):3155-3161, Mar 2004. PubMed ID: 14990736.
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Zwick2005
Michael B. Zwick, Richard Jensen, Sarah Church, Meng Wang, Gabriela Stiegler, Renate Kunert, Hermann Katinger, and Dennis R. Burton. Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Antibodies 2F5 and 4E10 Require Surprisingly Few Crucial Residues in the Membrane-Proximal External Region of Glycoprotein gp41 to Neutralize HIV-1. J. Virol., 79(2):1252-1261, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15613352.
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Wieczorek2023
Lindsay Wieczorek, Eric Sanders-Buell, Michelle Zemil, Eric Lewitus, Erin Kavusak, Jonah Heller, Sebastian Molnar, Mekhala Rao, Gabriel Smith, Meera Bose, Amy Nguyen, Adwitiya Dhungana, Katherine Okada, Kelly Parisi, Daniel Silas, Bonnie Slike, Anuradha Ganesan, Jason Okulicz, Tahaniyat Lalani, Brian K. Agan, Trevor A. Crowell, Janice Darden, Morgane Rolland, Sandhya Vasan, Julie Ake, Shelly J. Krebs, Sheila Peel, Sodsai Tovanabutra, and Victoria R. Polonis. Evolution of HIV-1 envelope towards reduced neutralization sensitivity, as demonstrated by contemporary HIV-1 subtype B from the United States. PLoS Pathog, 19(12):e1011780 doi, Dec 2023. PubMed ID: 38055771
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Wang2019
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Sliepen2019
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Displaying record number 631
Download this epitope
record as JSON.
MAb ID |
F105 (F-105) |
HXB2 Location |
Env |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp120 |
Research Contact |
Marshall Posner, Boston MA |
Epitope |
(Discontinuous epitope)
|
Ab Type |
gp120 CD4bs |
Neutralizing |
L View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG1κ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
adjuvant comparison, antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, assay or method development, autologous responses, binding affinity, brain/CSF, chimeric antibody, co-receptor, complement, computational prediction, dendritic cells, effector function, enhancing activity, escape, genital and mucosal immunity, glycosylation, HAART, ART, immunoprophylaxis, immunotherapy, immunotoxin, isotype switch, kinetics, mimics, mother-to-infant transmission, neutralization, polyclonal antibodies, rate of progression, review, SIV, structure, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity |
Notes
Showing 181 of
181 notes.
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F105: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
F105: Membrane-bound mRNA-encoded BG505-based Apex GT Env trimer vaccine candidates, which bind to inferred germline variants of bnAbs PCT64 and PG9, were developed through directed evolution and characterized. All assessed ApexGT constructs, as well as BG505 SOSIP.MD39 (background for Apex constructs), in soluble or membrane-bound forms (encoded by DNA or RNA), had generally similar antigenic profiles and had absent to low binding to mAb F105.
Willis2022
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: This study explored the basis of the neutralization resistance of tier 3 virus 253-11 (subtype CRF02_AG). Virus 253-11 was resistant to neutralization by 17b, b12, VRC03, F105, SCD4, CH12, Z13e1, PG16, PGT145, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 39F, F240, and 35O22; the virus was sensitive to 3BNC117, NIH45-46G54W, VRC01, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10, PG9, VRC26.26, 10-1074, and PGT151. Virus 253-11 was strikingly resistant to most tested antibodies that target V3/glycans, despite possessing key potential N-linked glycosylation sites, especially N301 and N332, needed for the recognition of this class of antibodies. The resistance of 253-11 was not associated with an unusually long V1/V2 loop, nor with polymorphisms in the V3 loop and N-linked glycosylation sites. The 253-11 MPER was rarely recognized by sera, but was more often recognized in a chimera consisting of a HIV-2 backbone with the 253-11 MPER, suggesting steric or kinetic hindrance of the MPER. Mutations in the 253-11 MPER previously reported to increase the lifetime of the prefusion Env conformation (Y681H, L669S), decreased the resistance of 253-11 to several mAbs, presumably destabilizing its otherwise stable, closed trimer structure. A crystal structure of a recombinant 253-11 SOSIP trimer revealed that the heptad repeat helices in gp41 are drawn in close proximity to the trimer axis and that gp120 protomers also showed a relatively compact form around the trimer axis.
Moyo2018
(neutralization, structure)
-
F105: Reduction in exposure of non-neutralizing Ab (nnAb) epitopes on native-like Env trimer immunogens results in bnAbs being elicited that have autologous tier 2 neutralization instead of tier 1. The design of trimer modifications to silence nnAb reactivity were directed towards (1) the V3 loop (2) epitopes exposed through CD4-induced conformational changes (CD4i epitopes) and (3) the exposed SOSIP trimer base that is usually buried within virus membrane. (1) In Steichen2016 2 Env variants of BG505 SOSIP.664 with reduced V3 nnAb-generating activity were created, one using mammalian display screens, BG505 MD39, and the other with an engineered disulfide bond, BG505 SOSIP.DS21. MD39's trimer design was improved by using the Rosetta Design platform and inserting 6 buried mutations to form BG505 Olio6, and both this trimer as well as the DS21 were shown to have reduced antigenicity for nnAb generation in a rabbit vaccine model. (2) To reduce CD4i epitope elicitation of nnAbs, saturation mutagenesis of Olio6 was performed, in search of the trimer that binds VRC01-class bnAbs but not CD4. BG505 Olio6.CD4KO containing the G473T mutation was identified. In addition, for the purposes of nucleic acid-based vaccine platform designs, the natural furin cleavage site between gp120 and gp41 was removed to abolish protease cleavage, by swapping the order of gp14 and gp120 in the gp160 gene, giving the trimer BG505 MD39.CP (circular permutation). (3) The exposed trimer base was masked with glycan in 3 under-glycosylated regions in order to direct bnAb responses to the distal regions (CD4bs, V2 apex, N332 superset) of the trimer instead, generating the GRSF (glycan resurfaced) MD39 and GRSF MD39.CP variants. Furthermore, variants with improved thermostability over MD39 were created, MD37 and MD64. All of these stabilizing mutations were transferred to diverse HIV isolates from different subtypes. Finally 3 subtype C (isolate 327c) trimers were assessed for binding to bnAbs, VRC01, PGT121, PGT151, PGT145, PG9 and to nnAbs, F105 and 17b - F105 did not bind to any of these. nnAb F105 discriminates between non-native and native trimers by binding non-native subtype B Env immunogens like AD8 SOSIP and not native AD8 MD64.
Kulp2017
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, assay or method development, autologous responses, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
F105: DS-SOSIP.4mut (4mut) was identified as the most immunogenic and stable of 4 engineered, soluble, closed prefusion HIV-1 Env trimers. 4mut contained 4 mutations (M154, M300, M302 and L320) designed to form hydrophobic interactions between V1V1 and V3 loops. Before V3-negative selection, mAb F105 recognized DS-SOSIP and BG505 SOSIP.664 but failed to recognize 4mut or the other 3 designed trimers (DS-SOSIP.6mut containing 4mut mutations, Y177W and I420M, DS-SOSIP.I423F and DS-SOSIP.A316W). After V3-negative selection, F105 also failed to recognize DS-SOSIP and BG505 SOSIP.664. Each DS-SOSIP variant was able to elicit trimer-specific responses, comparable to BG505 SOSIP.664, in guinea pigs after 4 immunizations, but none elicited heterologous neutralizing activity. Crystal structures were generated for 4mut and 6mut.
Chuang2017
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
F105: Using subtype A BG505 Env structural information, improved variants of subtype B JRFL and subtype C 16055 Env native flexibly linked (NFL) trimers were generated. The trimer-derived (TD) residues that increased well-ordered, homogeneous, stable, and soluble trimers did not require positive or negative selection as previously needed [Guenaga2015, PLoS Pathos. 11(1):e1004570]. ELISA binding to the two CD4bs-targeting nnAbs, F105 and b6 was inefficient as desired, for the NFL TD as well as NFL TD CC (disulfide link stabilized) trimers, indicating that these trimers were probably in the desired, closed conformation.
Guenaga2015a
(antibody interactions, assay or method development, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
F105: Most published structures of bnAbs, yet none of non- or poorly-neutralizing mAbs, were structurally compatible with a newly generated crystal structure of a mature ligand-free endoglycosidase H-treated BG505 SOSIP.664 Env trimer. Robust binding of the structurally incompatible V3- and CD4-bs targeting nAbs could be induced with CD4. A “DS” variant of BG505 SOSIP.664, containing a stabilizing disulfide bond between 201C and 433C mutations, was developed and appeared to represent an obligate intermediate in that it only bound a single CD4 and remained in a prefusion closed conformation. CD4bs-targeting mAb F105 was author-defined as ineffective due to its neutralization breadth of 7.65% on a panel of 170 diverse HIV-1 pseudoviruses. This was consistent with structural modeling which suggested that F105 was incompatible with BG505 SOSIP.664 when considering antibody-antigen-volume overlap yet compatible when considering epitope r.m.s deviation. Some mutations that stabilized the closed prefusion state of BG505 SOSIP.664 increased F105 binding modestly to moderately, compared to the lack of binding seen with wildtype SOSIP.664. Soluble CD4 did not have an effect on F105 binding of Env trimers.
Kwon2015
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
F105: Cryo-electron microscopy (EM) of the cleaved, soluble SOSIP gp140 trimer complexed with CD4bs-binding bnAb PGV04 was studied at 5.8Å, facilitating study of Env V1/V2, V3, HR1 and HR2 domains and some shielding glycans. This provides further information on trimer assembly, gp120-gp41 interactions and the three-dimensional CD4bs epitope cluster. For instance, bnAb F105, like b13, does not neutralize the BG505 virus or bind trimer BG505 SOSIP.664 - it has extensive clashes with V1/V2 (same protomer), glycans, and V3 from the adjacent protomer, which differs from another CD4bs bnAbs that also does not neutralize BG505, b12, but which has minimal clashing with these regions of the Env trimer.
Lyumkis2013
(vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
F105: Native, well-ordered, soluble mimetics of the Env trimer from subtypes B (JRFL) and C (16055) were obtained from genetically identical samples of heterogeneous mixture of disordered Env SOSIPs. Negative selection by non-nAbs was used to remove disordered oligomers, leaving well-ordered trimers that were able to bind sCD4, a panel of bnAbs that bind CD4bs, and PGT15 which is a bnAb that binds only cleavage-dependent, well-ordered, Env trimer. Several biophysical techniques were used to interrogate the structure of the purified subtype B and C trimers. Trimer antigenicity was assessed by bio-layer interferometry against F105-like non-neutralizing Abs, and some bnAbs in solution. CD4bs-binding, non-nAb F105 inefficiently recognized the negatively selected trimers.
Guenaga2015
(vaccine antigen design, subtype comparisons, structure)
-
F105: REVIEW: This review discusses isotype switching. Several anti-HIV mAbs are mentioned as having isotype switch variants: F105, F425 B4e8, F240, 2F5, and PGT121.
Janda2016
(isotype switch, review)
-
F105: This study examined whether HIV-1-specific bnAbs are capable of cross-neutralizing simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) from chimpanzees (n=11) or western gorillas (n=1). BnAbs directed against the epitopes at the CD4 binding site (VRC01, VRC03, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH03, VRC-CH31, F105, b13, NIH45-46G54W, 45-46m2, 45-46m7), V3 (10-1074, PGT121, PGT128, PGT135, and 2G12), and gp41-gp120 interface (8ANC195, 35O22, PGT151, PGT152, PGT158) failed to neutralize SIVcpz and SIVgor strains. V2-directed bNabs (PG9, PG16, PGT145) as well as llama-derived heavy-chain only antibodies recognizing the CD4 binding site or gp41 epitopes (JM4, J3, 3E3, 2E7, 11F1F, Bi-2H10) were either completely inactive or neutralized only a fraction of SIVcpz strains. In contrast, neutralization of SIVcpz and SIVgor strains was achieved with low-nanomolar potency by one antibody targeting the MPER region of gp41 (10E8), as well as functional CD4 and CCR5 receptor mimetics (eCD4-Ig, eCD4-Igmim2, CD4-218.3-E51, CD4-218.3-E51-mim2), mono- and bispecific anti-human CD4 mAbs (iMab, PG9-iMab, PG16-iMab, LM52, LM52-PGT128), and CCR5 receptor mAbs (PRO140, PRO140-10E8). Importantly, the latter antibodies blocked virus entry not only in TZM-bl cells but also in Cf2Th cells expressing chimpanzee CD4 and CCR5, and neutralized SIVcpz in chimpanzee CD4+ T cells. These findings provide new insight into the protective capacity of anti-HIV-1 bnAbs and identify candidates for further development to combat SIV infection.
Barbian2015
(neutralization, SIV, binding affinity)
-
F105: To understand early bnAb responses, 51 HIV-1 clade C infected infants were assayed for neutralization of a 12-virus multi-clade panel. Plasma bnAbs targeting V2-apex on Env were predominant in infant elite and broad neutralizers. In infant elite neutralizers, multi-variant infection was associated with plasma bnAbs targeting diverse autologous viruses. A panel of mAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, VRC26.25, 10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, PGT135, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, PGT151, 35O22, 10E8, 4E10, F105, 17b, A32, 48d, b6, 447-52d) was assayed for their ability to neutralize Env clones from infant elite neutralizers; circulating viral variants in infant elite neutralizers were most susceptible to V2-apex bnAbs.
Mishra2020a
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
F105: Soluble versions of HIV-1 Env trimers (sgp140 SOSIP.664) stabilized by a gp120-gp41 disulfide bond and a change (I559P) in gp41 have been structurally characterized. Cross-linking/mass spectrometry to evaluate the conformations of functional membrane Env and sgp140 SOSIP.664 has been reported. Differences were detected in the gp120 trimer association domain and C terminus and in the gp41 HR1 region which can guide the improvement of Env glycoprotein preparations and potentially increase their effectiveness as a vaccine. The CD4bs Ab F105 exhibited poor neutralization against HIV-1AD8 full-length and cytoplasmic tail-deleted Envs.
Castillo-Menendez2019
(vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
F105: Two conserved tyrosine (Y) residues within the V2 loop of gp120, Y173 and Y177, were mutated individually or in combination, to either phenylalanine (F) or alanine (A) in several strains of diverse subtypes. In general, these mutations increased neutralization sensitivity, with a greater impact of Y177 over Y173 single mutations, of double over single mutations, and of A over F substitutions. The Y173A Y177A double mutation in HIV-1 BaL increased sensitivity to most of the weakly neutralizing MAbs tested (2158, 447-D, 268-D, B4e8, D19, 17b, 48d, 412d) and even rendered the virus sensitive to non-neutralizing antibodies against the CD4 binding site (F105, 654-30D, and b13). In the case of V2 mAb 697-30D, residue Y173 is part of its epitope, and thus abrogates its binding and has no effect on neutralization; the Y177A mutant alone did increase neutralization sensitivity to this mAb. When the double mutant was tested against bnAbs, there was a large decrease in neutralization sensitivity compared to WT for many bnAbs that target V1, V2, or V3 (PG9, PG16, VRC26.08, VRC38, PGT121, PGT122, PGT123, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, PGT135, VRC24, CH103). The double mutation had lesser or no effect on neutralization by one V3 bnAb (2G12) and by most bnAbs targeting the CD4 binding site (VRC01, VRC07, VRC03, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH31, 12A12, 3BNC117, N6), the gp120-gp41 interface (35O22, PGT151), or the MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8).
Guzzo2018
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
F105: The influence of a V2 State 2/3-stabilizing Env mutation, L193A, on ADCC responses mediated by sera from HIV-1-infected individuals was evaluated. Conformations spontaneously sampled by the Env trimer at the surface of infected cells had a significant impact on ADCC. State 2/3 preferring ligand F105 recognized L193A variants of CH58 and CH77 IMCs with a significant increase compared to the WT.
Prevost2018
(effector function)
-
F105: A systems glycobiology approach was applied to reverse engineer the relationship between bNAb binding and glycan effects on Env proteins. Glycan occupancy was interrogated across every potential N-glycan site in 94 recombinant gp120 antigens. Using a Bayesian machine learning algorithm, bNAb-specific glycan footprints were identified and used to design antigens that selectively alter bNAb antigenicity. The novel synthesized antigens unsuccessfully bound to target bNAbs with enhanced and selective antigenicity.
Yu2018
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: The first cryo-EM structure of a cross-linked vaccine antigen was solved. The 4.2 Å structure of HIV-1 BG505 SOSIP soluble recombinant Env in complex with a bNAb PGV04 Fab fragment revealed how cross-linking affects key properties of the trimer. SOSIP and GLA-SOSIP trimers were compared for antigenicity by ELISA, using a large panel of mAbs previously determined to react with BG505 Env. Non-NAbs globally lost reactivity (7-fold median loss of binding), likely because of covalent stabilization of the cross-linked ‘closed’ form of the GLA-SOSIP trimer that binds non-nAbs weakly or not at all. V3-specific non-NAbs showed 2.1–3.3-fold reduced binding. Three autologous rabbit monoclonal NAbs to the N241/N289 ‘glycan-hole’ surface, showed a median ˜1.5-fold reduction in binding. V3 non-nAb 4025 showed residual binding to the GLA-SOSIP trimer. By contrast, bNAbs like F105 broadly retained reactivity significantly better than non-NAbs, with exception of PGT145 (3.3-5.3 fold loss of binding in ELISA and SPR).
Schiffner2018
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, structure)
-
F105: This study reports host tolerance mechanisms that limit the development of CD4bs and HCDR3-binder bNAbs via sequential HIV-1 Env vaccination. Vaccine-induced macaque CD4bs bNAbs recognize open Env trimers, and accumulate relatively modest somatic mutations. In naive CD4bs, unmutated common ancestor knock-in mice Env + B cell clones develop anergy and partial deletion at the transitional to mature B cell stage, but become Env- upon receptor editing. Stepwise immunization initiates CD4bs-bNAb responses, but immune tolerance mechanisms restrict their development. The Val-Phe-Tyr hydrophobic tip of the F105 HCDR3 was reported to interact with the same hydrophobic pocket on gp120 (PDB: 3HI1).
Williams2017a
(glycosylation, structure, antibody lineage, chimeric antibody)
-
F105: To understand HIV neutralization mediated by the MPER, antibodies and viruses were studied from CAP206, a patient known to produce MPER-targeted neutralizing mAbs. 41 human mAbs were isolated from CAP206 at various timepoints after infection, and 4 macaque mAbs were isolated from animals immunized with CAP206 Env proteins. Two rare, naturally-occuring single-residue changes in Env were identified in transmitted/founder viruses (W680G in CAP206 T/F and Y681D in CH505 T/F) that made the viruses less resistant to neutralization. The results point to the role of the MPER in mediating the closed trimer state, and hence the neutralization resistance of HIV. CH58 was one of several mAbs tested for neutralization of transmitted founder viruses isolated from clade C infected individuals CAP206 and CH505, compared to T/F viruses containing MPER mutations that confer enhanced neutralization sensitivity.
Bradley2016a
(neutralization)
-
F105: This study performed cyclical permutation of the V1 loop of JRFL in order to develop better gp120 trimers to elicit neutralizing antibodies. Some mutated trimers showed improved binding to several mAbs, including VRC01, VRC03, VRC-PG04, PGT128, PGT145, PGDM1400, b6, and F105. Guinea pigs immunized with prospective trimers showed improved neutralization of a panel of HIV-1 pseudoviruses.
Kesavardhana2017
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
F105: This study investigated the ability of native, membrane-expressed JR-FL Env trimers to elicit NAbs. Rabbits were immunized with virus-like particles (VLPs) expressing trimers (trimer VLP sera) and DNA expressing native Env trimer, followed by a protein boost (DNA trimer sera). N197 glycan- and residue 230- removal conferred sensitivity to Trimer VLP sera and DNA trimer sera respectively, showing for the first time that strain-specific holes in the "glycan fence" can allow the development of tier 2 NAbs to native spikes. All 3 sera neutralized via quaternary epitopes and exploited natural gaps in the glycan defenses of the second conserved region of JR-FL gp120. N197 glycan mutants were tested against F105 showing a loss of tier 2 phenotype. The results are in Table S5.
Crooks2015
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
F105: Env residue N197 on the BG505-SOSIP trimer was mutated to test the effect of its glycosylation on the binding kinetics of CD4BS and other mAbs. Removal of the glycan had little effect on the overall structure of the molecule. Its removal resulted in increased binding of CD4 and CD4BS antibodies (VRC01, VRC03, V3-3074), but little effect on bNAbs targeting other epitopes (PG9, PG16, PGT145, 17b, A32, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126). Two CD4BS-binding antibodies tested (b12, F105) had insufficient breadth to bind the BG505-SOSIP trimer. Removal of the N197 glycan may allow for the development of better SOSIP immunogens, particularly to elicit CD4BS-specific Abs.
Liang2016
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: PGT145 was used to positively isolate a subtype B Env trimer immunogen, B41 SOSIP.664, that exists in two conformations, closed and partially open. bNAbs tested against the trimer were able to neutralize the B41 pseudovirus with a wide range of potencies. Among non-nAbs to CD4bs (b6, F91, F105); to CD4i (17b); to gp41ECTO (F240); and to V3 (447-52D, 39F, CO11, 19b and 14e), none neutralized B41 (IC50 >50µg/ml).
Pugach2015
-
F105: Two clade C recombinant Env glycoprotein trimers, DU422 and ZM197M, with native-like structural and antigenic properties involving epitopes against all known classes of bNAbs, were produced and characterized. These Clade C trimers (10-15% of which are in a partially open form) were more like B41 Clade B trimers which have 50-75% trimers in the partially open configuration than like B505 Clade B trimers, almost 100% in the closed, prefusion state. The Clade C trimers have no affinity for the CD4bs non-nAb, F105, and F105 was unable to neutralize the equivalent pseudotyped viruses for either trimer.
Julien2015
(assay or method development, structure)
-
F105: Env trimer BG505 SOSIP.664 as well as the clade B trimer B41 SOSIP.664 were stabilized using a bifunctional aldehyde (glutaraldehye, GLA) or a heterobifunctional cross-linker, EDC/NHS with modest effects on antigenicity and barely any on biochemistry or structural morphology. ELISA, DSC and SPR were used to test recognition of the trimers by bNAbs, which was preserved and by weakly NAbs or non-NAbs, which was reduced. Cross-linking partially preserves quaternary morphology so that affinity chromatography by positive selection using quaternary epitope-specific bNAabs, and negative selection using non-nAbs, enriched antigenic characteristics of the trimers. Anti-CD4bs epitope, non-nAb F105 showed reduced binding to cross-linked trimers.
Schiffner2016
(assay or method development, binding affinity, structure)
-
F105: A new trimeric immunogen, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, was developed that bound and activated most known neutralizing antibodies but generally did not bind antibodies lacking neuralizing activity. This highly stable immunogen mimics the Env spike of subtype A transmitted/founder (T/F) HIV-1 strain, BG505. Anti-CD4bs non-nAb F105 did not neutralize BG505.T332N, the pseudoviral equivalent of the immunogen BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, and did not recognize or bind the immunogen either.
Sanders2013
(assay or method development, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
F105: This study examined the development and co-evolution of autologous antibodies and viruses in two patients. Antibodies with limited heterologous breadth were able to potently neutralize autologous viruses, and such antibodies could select for neutralization-resistant autologous viruses implicated in transmission. Viruses from subject CH0457 were largely susceptible to neutralization by CD4bs-binding heterologous nAbs CH31 and CH106. The CD4bs CH27 lineage mAbs from subject CH0457 were similar to HJ16, which neutralizes multiple tier 2 but not tier 1 viruses. Narrow neutralizing CD4bs mAb F105 weakly neturalized 2.8% of an 84-psuedoviral panel amplified from CH0457.
Moody2015
(neutralization)
-
F105: CD4-binding site Abs are reviewed. New insights from donor-serum responses, atomic-level structures of antibody-Env complexes, and next-generation sequencing of B-cell transcripts are invigorating vaccine-design efforts to elicit effective CD4-binding site Abs. Analysis of the epitopes recognized by CD4-binding Abs reveals substantial similarity in the recognized region of gp120. The non-potent F105 induces conformations of the bridging sheet which is incompatible with the functional viral spike.
Georgiev2013a
(review)
-
F105: A computational method to predict Ab epitopes at the residue level, based on structure and neutralization panels of diverse viral strains has been described. This method was evaluated using 19 Env-Abs, including F105, against 181 diverse HIV-1 strains with available Ab-Ag complex structures
Chuang2013
(computational prediction)
-
F105: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. F105 is discussed as the CD4bs-targeting, neutralizing anti-gp120 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a discontinuous epitope.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
F105: Systematic computational analyses of gp120 plasticity and conformational transition in complexes with CD4 binding fragments, mimetic proteins and Ab fragments are described to explain the molecular mechanisms by which gp120 interacts with the CD4bs at local and subdomain levels. An isotopic elastic network analysis, a full atomic normal mode analysis and simulation of conformational transitions were used to compare the gp120 structures in CD4 bound and F105 Ab-bound states.
Korkut2012
(structure)
-
F105: Isolation of VRC06 and VRC06b mAbs from a slow progressor donor 45 is reported. This is the same donor from whom bNmAbs VRC01, VRC03 and NIH 45-46 were isolated and the new mAbs are clonal variants of VRC03. F105 was used as a CD4bs mAb to compare neutralizing specificity of VRC06.
Li2012
-
F105: Somatic hypermutations are preferably found in CDR loops, which alter the Ab combining sites, but not the overall structure of the variable domain. FWR of CDR are usually resistant to and less tolerant of mutations. This study reports that most bnAbs require somatic mutations in the FWRs which provide flexibility, increasing Ab breadth and potency. To determine the consequence of FWR mutations the framework residues were reverted to the Ab's germline counterpart (FWR-GL) and binding and neutralizing properties were then evaluated. Fig S4C described the comparison of Ab framework amino acid replacement vs. interactive surface area on F105.
Klein2013
(neutralization, structure, antibody lineage)
-
F105: Intrinsic reactivity of HIV-1, a new property regulating the level of both entry and sensitivity to Abs has been reported. This activity dictates the level of responsiveness of Env protein to co-receptor, CD4 engagement and Abs. HIV-1 has developed steric constraints on the Abs binding to CD4BS. Role of F105 has been discussed as a CD4BS binding Ab. The sensitivity of HIV-1 to F105 was enhanced by the altered gp41, J1Hx(66, 197).
Haim2011
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: This study reports the isolation of a panel of Env vaccine elicited CD4bs-directed macaque mAbs and genetic and functional features that distinguish these Abs from CD4bs mAbs produced during chronic HIV-1 infection. F105 was used as a Non-bNAb which was similar in function to non human primates mAbs.
Sundling2012
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
F105: Crystal structures of unliganded core gp120 from HIV-1 clade B, C, and E were determined to understand the mechanism of CD4 binding capacity of unliganded HIV-1. The results suggest that the CD4 bound conformation represents "a ground state" for the gp120 core with variable loop. F105 was used as a control to prove whether the purified and crystallized gp120 is in the CD4 bound conformational state or not.
Kwon2012
(structure)
-
F105:The rational design of vaccines to elicit broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV-1 is discussed in relation to understanding of vaccine recognition sites, the structural basis of interaction with HIV-1 env and vaccine developmental pathways. F105 has been mentioned to describe the sites of HIV-1 vulnerability to neutralizing antibody.
Kwong2011
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, review)
-
F105: A panel of glycan deletion mutants was created by point mutation into HIV gp160, showing that glycans are important targets on HIV-1 glycoproteins for broad neutralizing responses in vivo. Enrichment of high mannose N-linked glycan(HM-glycan) of HIV-1 glycoprotein enhanced neutralizing activity of sera from 8/9 patients. F105 was used as a control to compare the neutralizing activity of patients' sera.
Lavine2012
(neutralization)
-
F105: In order to increase recognition of CD4 by Env and to elicit stronger neutralizing antibodies against it, two Env probes were produced and tested - monomeric Env was stabilized by pocket filling mutations in the CD4bs (PF2) and trimeric Env was formed by appending trimerization motifs to soluble gp120/gp14. PF2-containing proteins were better recognized by bNMAb against CD4bs and more rapidly elicited neutralizing antibodies against the CD4bs. Trimeric Env, however, elicited a higher neutralization potency that mapped to the V3 region of gp120.
Feng2012
(neutralization)
-
F105: The sera of 113 HIV-1 seroconverters from three cohorts were analyzed for binding to a set of well-characterized gp120 core and resurfaced stabilized core (RSC3) protein probes, and their cognate CD4bs knockout mutants. F105 bound very strongly to the gp120 core but did not bind to the gp120 core D368R, RSC3, RSC3/G367R, RSC3 Δ3711, and RSC3 Δ3711/P363N.
Lynch2012
(binding affinity)
-
F105: The strategy of incorporating extra glycans onto gp120 was explored, with the goal to occlude the epitopes of non-neutralizing mAbs while maintaining exposure of the b12 site. The focus was on the head-to-head comparison of the ability of 2 adjuvants, monophosphoryl lipid A (MPL) and Quil A, to promote CD4-specific Ab responses in mice immunized with the engineered mutant Q105N compared to gp120wt. Neutralizing and non-neutralizing antibodies targeting three areas on gp120 – the CD4bs (F105, b6, b12, b13, VRC01, VRC03 and CD4- IgG2), the glycosylated ‘silent face’ (2G12) and the V3 loop (B4e8) – were assessed for binding. The antibodies b6, b12, b13, VRC01 and 2G12 bound best to mutant Q105N, albeit with lower affinities than to gp120wt. Retention of b6 and b13 binding was not expected, but can be explained by their very similar mode of interaction with the CD4bs compared to b12. Abs F105 and VRC03 did not bind Q105N at all. The V3-specific antibody B4e8 did not bind to Q105N.
Ahmed2012
(adjuvant comparison, antibody binding site, glycosylation, neutralization, escape)
-
F105: gp120 was cyclically permuted and new N- and C-termini were created within the V1, V3, and V4 loop regions to reduce the length of the linker joining gp120 and M9. The cyclic permutant V1cyc were used to incorporate the trimerization domains. In contrast to monomeric gp120, h-CMP-V1cyc (a covalently linked trimer) interacted with similar affinities to both b12 and F105. SUMO2a-V1cyc (a mixture of a trimer, a dimer, and a monomer) binds approximately 5-10-fold weaker than gp120 to b12 and F105. Monomeric and both trimeric versions of V1cyc bound less well to F105 than wt-gp120. It has been shown that V1 cyclic permutants of gp120 with an appropriate trimerization domain can fold into a conformation that shows poorer affinity for F105 relative to gp120.
Saha2012
(binding affinity)
-
F105: Broadly neutralizing HIV-1 immunity associated with VRC01-like antibodies was studied by isolation of VRC01-like neutralizers with CD4bs probe; structural definition of gp120 recognition by RSC3-identified antibodies from different donors; functional complementation of heavy and light chains among VRC01-like antibodies; identification of VRC01 antibodies by 454 pyrosequencing; and cross-donor phylogenetic analysis of sequences derived from the same precursor germline gene. F105 had 37-69% sequence identity of its heavy and light chains to respective chains of VRC-PG04 and VRC-CH31.
Wu2011
(structure)
-
F105: A strategy is described for eliciting antibodies in mice against selected cryptic, conformationally dependent conserved epitopes of gp120 by immunizing with multiple identical copies of covalently linked multiple copy peptides (MCPs) representing 3 different domains of gp120. MAb F105 bound to oligomeric gp120 on cells infected with viruses from clade B with similar affinity as mAb 11A8 but with a very low affinity from clade A and D.
Kelker2010
(binding affinity)
-
F105: Crystal structures of gp120 and gp41 in complex with CD4 and/or mAbs 17b, 48d, b12, b13, 412d, X5, 211C, C11, 15e, m6, m9 and F105 were used to determine the structure and the mobility of the gp41-interactive region of gp120. Elements determined to maintain the gp120-gp41 interaction were the gp120 termini and a newly described invariant 7-stranded β-sandwich. Structurally plastic elements of gp120 responsible for the various gp120 conformation changes due to receptor- or Ab-binding were structured into 3 layers, with the V1/V2 loops emanating from layer 2 and the highly glycosylated outer domain from layer 3.
Pancera2010a
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: A mathematical framework is designed to determine the number of Abs required to neutralize a single trimer called the stoichiometry of trimer neutralization (N). 15 different virus antibody combinations divided into five groups based on antibody binding sites were used in the designed model. F105 was classified into CD4BS group as it interferes with CD4 binding site. The number of F105 Abs needed to neutralize a single trimer was determined to equal 1.
Magnus2010
-
F105: Unlike the MPER mAbs tested, F105 did not show any Env-independent virus capture. MAb competition assays revealed that F105 did not compete with b12 or b6 for virion capture.
Leaman2010
-
F105: Impact of in vivo Env-CD4 interactions was studied during vaccinations of Rhesus macaques with two Env trimer variants rendered CD4 binding defective (368D/R and 423/425/431 trimers) and wild-type (WT) trimers. Ab binding profiles of the three trimer variants were assessed by binding analyses to different MAbs. CD4bs-directed mAb F105 bound similarly to WT and 423/425/431 trimers but did not bind to 368D/R trimers.
Douagi2010
(binding affinity)
-
F105: Expression of gp120 was shown to lead to the accumulation of both monomeric gp120 and aberrant dimeric gp120 forms. Dimeric forms of gp120 were recognized by CD4BS mAbs, such as F105, but were not recognized by CD4i MAbs or MAbs to the gp120 inner domain. It is suggested that gp120 dimerization occludes or disrupts the inner domain and/or the co-receptor binding site. Formation of gp120 dimers was reduced by removal of the V1/V2 loops or the N and C termini.
Finzi2010
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Crystal structure of the D7 llama heavy chain antibody fragment V(HH) was resolved and compared to other CD4bs Abs (b12, b13, F105 and m18). Unlike for F105, CDR2 of D7 did not have aromatic residues at the tip and does not play a prominent role in gp120 interactions. As F105 and the other CD4bs Abs, D7 had aromatic residues at the tip of its CDR3. Other than that, there was no significant structural homology between D7 and other CD4bs Ab loops, underlining the differences in mode of gp120 interaction.
Hinz2010
(structure)
-
F105: A set of Env variants with deletions in V1/V2 was constructed. Replication competent Env variants with V1/V2 deletions were obtained using virus evolution of V1/V2 deleted variants. Sensitivity of the evolved ΔV1V2 viruses was evaluated to study accessibility of their neutralization epitopes. F105 bound better to the ΔV1V2 variants than to the full-length trimer, indicating better exposure of F105 epitope when the V1V2 domain is removed.
Bontjer2010
(binding affinity)
-
F105: An outer domain (ODec) based immunogen including the whole outer domain and most of the CD4 binding residues was designed and expressed in E-coli bacterial cells. The ODec lacked V1V2 and V3, incorporated 11 designed mutations at the interface of the inner and outer domains of gp120, and was unglycosylated. F105 bound to monomeric gp120 but did not bind to ODec. Structural analyses showed that 5/10 residues required for F105 binding were absent in the ODec construct. Sera from rabbits immunized with ODec neutralized 4/5 clade B and 1/2 clade C viruses.
Bhattacharyya2010
(kinetics, binding affinity)
-
F105: The crystal structure for VRC01 in complex with an HIV-1 gp120 core from a clade A/E recombinant strain was analyzed to understand the structural basis for its neutralization breadth and potency. F105 bound with high affinity to non-CD4-bound gp120 but not to CD4-bound conformation. F105 covered 79% of the contact site for CD4 receptor on gp120, its heavy chain contacting CDR1, CDR2 and CDR3 regions. The number of mutations from the germline and the number of mutated contact residues for F105 were smaller than those for VRC01. Unlike VRC01, variation of V5 conformation of gp120 with F105 spanned over the whole range of V5.
Zhou2010
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity, structure)
-
F105: Resurfaced stabilized core 3 (RSC3) protein was designed to preserve the antigenic structure of the gp120 CD4bs neutralizing surface but eliminate other antigenic regions of HIV-1. RSC3 did not show binding to F105. Memory B cells were selected that bound to RSC3 and full IgG mAbs were expressed. Three newly detected mAbs (VRC1, VRC2 and VRC3) competed with F105 for binding to gp120. Addition of RSC3 had no effect on F105 neutralization of HXB2.
Wu2010
(antibody interactions, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
F105: OD (GSL)(δβ20-21)(hCD4-TM) glycoprotein variant was constructed by eliminating V1 and V2 regions, truncating V3, and deleting cleavage, fusion, and interhelical domains from Env derivatives from R3A TA1 virus. In addition, the variant was membrane-anchored, the β20-β21 hairpin was truncated, and the central 20 amino acids of the V3 loop were replaced with a basic hexapeptide. Although this variant showed increased binding to b12 and 2G12, it did not bind to F105.
Wu2009a
(binding affinity)
-
F105: A panel of clade B and C viruses from early infections was used to analyze F105 neutralization resistance. Removal of a glycan at position 301 at the base of the V3 loop rendered PVO.4 strain sensitive to neutralization by F105. In addition, point mutations T569A and I675V in the gp41 region increased viral neutralization sensitivity to F105, indicating their effect on viral spike accessibility.
Wu2009
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
F105: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:4-59*01, IGHD:4-17, D-RF:2, IGHJ:5. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
F105: The Fab' fragment of F105 was linked to sterically stabilized pegylated liposomes containing a protease inhibitor. The complex was specifically taken up by HIV-1 infected cells, indicating preservation of F105 specific binding after conjugation and incorporation into liposomes. The inhibitor that was derived intracellularly by F105-liposome complex showed greater and longer antiviral activity than the free drug, indicating that F105 can be used in targeted delivery of antiretroviral compounds.
Clayton2009
(HAART, ART)
-
F105: IgG and Fab F105 neutralized Tier 1 viruses but not Tier 2 viruses. Crystal structure of F105 in complex with gp120 revealed small differences in recognition of gp120 by F105 compared to CD4, where all four strands of the bridging sheet were displaced to uncover a hydrophobic region which served for F105 binding. A monomeric disulfide gp120 variant was not bound by F105, suggesting that F105 relies on access to the hydrophobic surface for binding. Structure analyses revealed that F105, and other CD4BS Abs that access this hydrophobic region, induce conformation changes in gp120 that are poorly compatible with functional viral spike. F105 was not able to bind to cleavage-defective envelope glycoproteins.
Chen2009
(antibody binding site, neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity, structure)
-
F105: F105 neutralized infection of PBLs with various HIV-1 strains. However, F105 did not inhibit transcytosis of cell-free or cell-associated virus across a monolayer of epithelial cells, in contrast, it somewhat increased the passage of cell-free HIV-1 through the epithelial cells. A mixture of 13 mAbs directed to well-defined epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope, including F105, did not inhibit HIV-1 transcytosis, indicating that envelope epitopes involved in neutralization are not involved in mediating HIV-1 transcytosis. When the mixture of 13 mAbs and HIV-1 was incubated with polyclonal anti-human γ chain, the transcytosis was partially inhibited, indicating that agglutination of viral particles at the apical surface of cells may be critical for HIV transcytosis inhibition by HIV-specific Abs.
Chomont2008
(enhancing activity, neutralization)
-
F105: 5 loop structures surrounding the CD4 binding site in the gp120 liganded conformation were identified that may protect gp120 from Abs. Loops A, B, C and E were located in the C2, C3, C4 and C5 regions respectively, and loop D was situated in the V5 region. F105 MAb bound gp120 of the IIIB wild type virus 8- to 16-fold better than gp120 of the 89.6 wild type. Deletion of loop C resulted in greater than 100-fold increase in F105 binding to 89.6 gp120. Deletions of loops A, D or three amino acids in loop E resulted in gp120 mutants that failed to bind F105.
Berkower2008
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
F105: A chimeric protein entry inhibitor, L5, was designed consisting of an allosteric peptide inhibitor 12p1 and a carbohydrate-binding protein cyanovirin (CNV) connected via a flexible linker. The L5 chimera inhibited F105-gp120 interaction, but the CNV alone did not, indicating that the chimera has the high affinity binding property of the CNV molecule and the inhibitory property of the 12p1 peptide.
McFadden2007
-
F105: This review provides information on the HIV-1 glycoprotein properties that make it challenging to target with neutralizing Abs. F105 neutralization properties and binding to HIV-1 envelope, and current strategies to develop versions of the Env spike with functional trimer properties for elicitation of broadly neutralizing Abs, are discussed. In addition, approaches to target cellular molecules, such as CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, and MHC molecules, with therapeutic Abs are reviewed.
Phogat2007
(review)
-
F105: F105 structure, binding and neutralization are reviewed in detail. Molecules designed to eliminate binding by F105 while preserving epitopes of other neutralizing Abs are discussed.
Lin2007
(review, structure)
-
F105: This review summarizes F105 Ab epitope, properties and neutralization activity. F105 use in passive immunization studies in primates and possible mechanisms explaining protection against infection are discussed.
Kramer2007
(immunotherapy, review)
-
F105: gp120 proteins with double mutation T257S+S375W, which alters the cavity at the epicenter of the CD4 binding region, decreased F105 recognition to an undetectable level. The S375W single mutation also disrupted the binding surface of the F105 Ab.
Dey2007a
(binding affinity)
-
F105: A significantly higher level of anti-V3 Ab (694/98D) and anti-C1 mAb (EH21) bound to gp120 complexed with F105 mAb than to gp120 alone or in complex with other non-CD4bs Abs, indicating that binding of F105 to gp120 increases exposure of specific V3 and C1 mAb epitopes.
Visciano2008
-
F105: A series of peptide conjugates were constructed via click reaction of both aryl and alkyl acetylenes with an internally incorporated azidoproline 6 derived from parent peptide RINNIPWSEAMM. Many of these conjugates exhibited increase in both affinity for gp120 and inhibition potencies at both the CD4 and coreceptor binding sites. All high affinity peptides inhibited the interactions of YU2 gp120 with F105 Ab. The aromatic, hydrophobic, and steric features in the residue 6 side-chain were found important for the increased affinity and inhibition of the high-affinity peptides.
Gopi2008
-
F105: F105 was tested for its ability to induce conformational changes similar to those induced by CD4. Although presence of sCD4 increased neutralization of JRFL by 447-52D and immune sera rich in V3-Abs from guinea pigs, the presence of F105 did not, indicating that F105 does not induce a conformation alternation in Env that exposes the V3 loop to neutralizing Abs.
Wu2008
-
F105: Neutralization of HIV-1 IIIB LAV isolate by F105 was within the same range as the neutralization of the virus by natural antibodies from human sera against the gal(α1,3)gal disaccaride linked to CD4 gp120-binding peptides, indicating that the activity of natural antibodies can be re-directed to neutralize HIV-1.
Perdomo2008
(neutralization)
-
F105: Two HIV-1 isolates, NL4-3 and KB9, were adapted to replicate in cells using the common marmoset receptors CD4 and CXCR4. The adaptation resulted in a small number of changes of env sequences in both isolates. The adapted NL4-3 variants were generally more sensitive to neutralization by F105 than the adapted KB9 variants. All of the NL4-3 exhibited similar sensitivity to neutralization by F105 except for the viruses containing the V242I change, which exhibited a slight increase in neutralization sensitivity to F105. Wildtype KB9 is resistant to neutralization by F105 but the changes associated with adaptation to marmoset receptors resulted in variants with increased sensitivity to neutralization by F105. Thus, adaptation to marmoset receptors resulted in an increase in sensitivity to neutralization by F105 for KB9 but not for NL4-3.
Pacheco2008
(neutralization)
-
F105: A new purification method was developed using a high affinity peptide mimicking CD4 as a ligand in affinity chromatography. This allowed the separation in one step of HIV envelope monomer from cell supernatant and capture of pre-purified trimer. Binding of F105 to gp120SF162 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the miniCD4 allows the separation of HIV-1 envelope with an intact F105 epitope. gp140DF162ΔV2 was purified by the miniCD4 method to assess its ability to capture gp140 trimers. Binding of F105 to gp140DF162ΔV2 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the SF162 trimer antigenicity was preserved.
Martin2008
(assay or method development, binding affinity)
-
F105: 32 human HIV-1 positive sera neutralized most viruses from clades A, B, and C. Two of the sera stood out as particularly potent and broadly reactive. IgG eluted from gp120 wildtype and core protein from the sera were reabsorbed with the gp120-D368R mutant protein to remove non-CD4-binding site Abs. Binding of the resulting flow-through core eluate/368ft IgG to gp120 was completely blocked by Fab F105. Fab F105 also blocked most of the binding of the gp120WT eluate/368ft IgG, indicating that these Ab fractions were highly enriched with CD4-binding site Abs.
Li2007a
(neutralization)
-
F105: A recombinant gp120-Fc, used in an assay to determine 2G12 epitope contribution to DC-SIGN binding to gp120, bound to F105, indicating it was conformationally intact.
Hong2007
(binding affinity)
-
F105: A D386N change in the V4 region, which results in restoration of N-glycosylation at this site, did not have any impact on the neutralization of a mutant virus by F105 compared to wildtype. Also, there was no association between increased sensitivity to F105 neutralization and enhanced macrophage tropism.
Dunfee2007
(neutralization)
-
F105: The crystal structure of this Ab was compared to the high resolution crystal structure of Fab m18. Although the variable domains of m18 and F105 showed sequence similarity, the H3s of these Abs showed distinct conformations. Similarly, the H2s conformations of these Abs differed.
Prabakaran2006
(antibody binding site, mimics, antibody sequence, structure)
-
F105: This Ab was used to determine the degree to which fixation of gp120 in its CD4-bound conformation restricts antigenic recognition. F105 was not able to bind well to the stabilized gp120.
Zhou2007
-
F105: F105 bound exclusively to cells expressing gp120 in a co-receptor-independent manner. Although binding and uptake of F105 was increased with increased expression of gp120 on the cell surface, efficient internalization in short amount of time was possible even in cells expressing low levels of gp120. Internalized F105 was localized to the Golgi compartment. Kinetic analyses of F105 binding to gp120 demonstrated a heterogeneous mode of binding that did not trigger a conformational change in the formed complex. Compared to sCD4, F105 had a higher gp120 affinity, due to slower dissociation.
Clayton2007
(co-receptor, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
F105: Compared to the full-length Con-S gp160, chimeric VLPs containing Con-S ΔCFI gp145 with transmembrane (TM) and cytoplasmic tail (CT) sequences derived from the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), showed higher binding capacity to F105. Chimeric VLPs with only CT derived from MMTV also showed higher binding capacity to F105 than the full-length Con-S gp160, however, not as high as the chimeric CT-TM VLPs.
Wang2007a
(binding affinity)
-
F105: This Ab was used to select phages from two different peptide libraries. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the selected phage sequences showed slight inhibition of F105 binding to gp120. F105 did not bind to synthetic peptides to 5145A MAb fused to phage pIII protein. Sera from rabbits immunized with 5145A peptide-phage pIII protein did not inhibit binding of F105 to gp120.
Wilkinson2007
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
F105: The major infectivity and neutralization differences between a PBMC-derived HIV-1 W61D strain and its T-cell line adapted counterpart were conferred by the interactions of three Env amino acid substitutions, E440G, D457G and H564N. Chimeric Env-pseudotyped virus Ch5, containing all three of the mutations, was more neutralization sensitive to F105 than Ch2, which did not contain any of these mutations. Neutralization sensitivity to F105 by Env-pseudotyped viruses containing D457G mutation alone, or in combination with E440G or H564N, was unaffected compared to mutants lacking this mutation. Binding of F105 to gp120 derived from Env-pseudotyped viruses was unaffected by any of these mutations.
Beddows2005a
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
F105: All clones derived from biopanning using IgG1b12 bound to this Ab but not to the control Ab F105.
Dorgham2005
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Point mutations in the highly conserved structural motif LLP-2 within the intracytoplasmic tail of gp41 resulted in conformational alternations of both gp41 and gp120. The alternations did not affect virus CD4 binding, coreceptor binding site exposure, or infectivity of the virus, but did result in decreased binding and neutralization by certain mAbs and human sera. F105 exhibited similar levels of binding to both the LLP-2 mutant and wildtype viruses, indicating that its epitope was not altered by the mutation.
Kalia2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
F105: A series of genetically modified Env proteins were generated and expressed in both insect and animal cells to be monitored for their antigenic characteristics. For F105, modified protein 3G (mutations in 3 glycosylation sites) showed the highest binding to this Ab compared to the other Env proteins.
Kang2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
F105: A stable trimerization motif, GCN4, was appended to the C terminus of YU2gp120 to obtain stable gp120 trimers (gp120-GCN4). Each trimer subunit was capable of binding IgG1b12, indicating that they were at least 85% active. D457V mutation in the CD4 binding site resulted in a decreased affinity of the gp120-GCN4 for CD4, but the mutation did not affect binding of F105. F105 was able to bind to both wildtype gp120, gp120-GCN4, and to the respective corresponding mutant molecules D457Vgp120 and D457Vgp120-GCN4.
Pancera2005a
(binding affinity)
-
F105: JR-FL and YU2 HIV-1 strains were not neutralized by F105. F105 and other non-neutralizing Abs only recognized JR-FL cleavage-defective glycoproteins, while the neutralizing Abs (2G12 and IgG1b12) recognized both cleavage competent and cleavage-defective glycoproteins. It is suggested that an inefficient env glycoprotein precursor cleavage exposes non-neutralizing determinants, while only neutralizing regions remain accessible on efficiently cleaved spikes. For YU2, both cleavage-competent and -defective glycoproteins were recognized by both neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs. F105, along with other Abs able to neutralize lab-adapted isolates, displayed enhanced viral entry at higher Ab concentrations, whereas the Abs that cannot neutralize any virus did not display such enhancement.
Pancera2005
(antibody binding site, enhancing activity, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
F105: This review summarizes data on the role of nAb in HIV-1 infection and the mechanisms of Ab protection, data on challenges and strategies to design better immunogens that may induce protective Ab responses, and data on structure and importance of mAb epitopes targeted for immune intervention. The importance of standardized assays and standardized virus panels in neutralization and vaccine studies is also discussed.
Srivastava2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, immunotherapy, mother-to-infant transmission, review)
-
F105: Ab neutralization of viruses with mixtures of neutralization-sensitive and neutralization-resistant envelope glycoproteins was measured. It was concluded that binding of a single Ab molecule is sufficient to inactivate function of an HIV-1 glycoprotein trimer. The inhibitory effect of the Ab was similar for neutralization-resistant and -sensitive viruses indicating that the major determinant of neutralization potency of an Ab is the efficiency with which it binds to the trimer. It was also indicated that each functional trimer on the virus surface supports HIV-1 entry independently, meaning that every trimer on the viral surface must be bound by an Ab for neutralization of the virus to be achieved.
Yang2005b
(neutralization)
-
F105: A substantial fraction of soluble envelope glycoprotein trimers contained inter-subunit disulfide bonds. Reduction of these disulfide bonds had little effect on binding of the F105 to the glycoprotein indicating that the inter-S-S bonds had no impact on the exposure of F105 epitope.
Yuan2005
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: This review focuses on the importance of neutralizing Abs in protecting against HIV-1 infection, including mechanisms of Ab interference with the viral lifecycle, Ab responses elicited during natural HIV infection, and use of monoclonal and polyclonal Abs in passive immunization. In addition, vaccine design strategies for eliciting of protective broadly neutralizing Abs are discussed. MAbs included in this review are: 2F5, Clone 3 (CL3), 4E10, Z13, IgG1b12, 2G12, m14, 447-52D, 17b, X5, m16, 47e, 412d, E51, CM51, F105, F425, 19b, 2182, DO142-10, 697-D, 448D, 15e and Cβ1.
McCann2005
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, immunotherapy, review)
-
F105: A chimeric cell surface receptor (105TCR) was designed consisting of the single chain Fv domain of F105, CD8α hinge and the transmembrane, and the cytoplasmic domains of TCRζ. 105TCR was successfully expressed on the surface of T-cells. It mediated full activation of T-cells leading to cytokine production when bound to gp120 on the surface of an infected cell. It did not bind to soluble gp120. Retrovirally transduced CD8+ cells expressed high levels of 105TCR and were able to lyse HIV-1 envelope expressing cells specifically in an MHC-unrestricted manner.
Masiero2005
(immunotherapy)
-
F105: A T-cell line adapted strain (TCLA) of CRF01_AE primary isolate DA5 (PI) was more neutralization sensitive to F105 than the primary isolate. Mutant virus derived from the CRF01_AE PI strain, that lacked N-linked glycosylation at position 197 in the C2 region of gp120, was significantly more sensitive to neutralization by F105 then the PI strain. Deglycosylated subtype B mutants at positions 197 and 234 were significantly more neutralizable by F105 than the parental strain.
Teeraputon2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
F105: Macaques were immunized with SF162gp140, ΔV2gp140, ΔV2ΔV3gp140 and ΔV3gp140 constructs and their antibody responses were compared to the broadly reactive NAb responses in a macaque infected with SHIV SF162P4, and with pooled sera from humans infected with heterologous HIV-1 isolates (HIVIG). F105 bound to SF162gp140 but a deletion of V2 or V3 loops from the gp140 construct reduced the binding.
Derby2006
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: This Ab did not inhibit HIV-1 BaL replication in macrophages or in PHA-stimulated PBMCs.
Holl2006
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
F105: The ability of F105 to neutralize R5, R5X4 and X4 primary isolates was compared to that of mAbs 17b, E51 and 412d. F105 neutralized the R5 ADA virus more efficiently than 17b, comparable to 412d, however, it neutralized R5X4 isolate 89.6 less efficiently than 412d and E51. F105 was, on the other hand, more efficient in neutralizing the X4 isolate HXBc2 than the other mAbs.
Choe2003
(neutralization)
-
F105: The crystal structure of the Fab fragment from F105 was solved. It has an extended CDR H3 loop, with a Phe at the apex that may recognize the binding pocket of gp120 used by the Phe-42 residue of CD4. The potent nAb IgG1b12 recognizes an overlapping binding site, the main difference is that F105 extends across the interface of the inner and outer domains of gp120 while b12 does not. IgG1b12 also has undergone extensive affinity maturation (45 mutations) while F105 has not (13 mutations) -- an average for gp120 mAbs is 22 mutations.
Wilkinson2005
(antibody sequence, structure)
-
F105: Antigens were designed to attempt to target immune responses toward the IgG1b12 epitope, while minimizing antibody responses to less desirable epitopes. One construct had a series of substitutions near the CD4 binding site (GDMR), the other had 7 additional glycans (mCHO). The 2 constructs did not elicit b12-like neutralizing antibodies, but both antigens successfully dampened other responses that were intended to be dampened while not obscuring b12 binding. CD4BS mAbs except Fab b12 (b6, b3, F105) did not bind to either GDMR or mCHO.
Selvarajah2005
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
F105: The HIV-1 Bori-15 variant was adapted from the Bori isolate for replication microglial cells. Bori-15 had increased replication in microglial cells and a robust syncytium-forming phenotype, ability to use low levels of CD4 for infection, and increased sensitivity to neutralization by sCD4 and 17b. Four amino acid changes in gp120 V1-V2 were responsible for this change. Protein functionality and integrity of soluble, monomeric gp120-molecules derived from parental HIV-1 Bori and microglia-adapted HIV-1 Bori-15 was assessed in ELISA binding assays using CD4BS MAbs F105 and IgG1b12, glycan-specific 2G12, and V3-specific 447-52D, and were unchanged. Association rates of sCD4 and 17b were not changed, but dissociation rates were 3-fold slower for sCD4 and 14-fold slower for 17b.
Martin-Garcia2005
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: By adding N-linked glycosylation sites to gp120, epitope masking of non-neutralizing epitopes can be achieved leaving the IgG1b12 binding site intact. This concept was originally tested with the addition of four glycosylation sites, but binding to b12 was reduced. It was modified here to exclude the C1 N-terminal region, and to include only three additional glycosylation sites. This modified protein retains full b12 binding affinity and it masks other potentially competing epitopes, and does not bind to 21 other mAbs to 7 epitopes on gp120, including F105.
Pantophlet2004
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: NAbs against HIV-1 M group isolates were tested for their ability to neutralize 6 randomly selected HIV-1 O group strains. F105 was not particularly effective at neutralizing HIV-1 group O strains.
Ferrantelli2004a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env mAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of mAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of CD4BS mAb F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: A pseudotyping assay showed that an X4 V3 loop peptide could enhance infectivity of X4 virus, R5 and R5X4 V3 loops peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5 virus, and R5X4 peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5X4 virus. Neither R5 nor R5X4 peptides influenced binding of CD4BS mAbs F105 and Ig1Gb12, but did increase binding of CD4i mAb 17b.
Ling2002
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
F105: The peptide 12p1 (RINNIPWSEAMM) inhibits direct binding of YU2 gp120 or Env trimer to CD4, CCR5 and mAb 17b in a concentration-dependent allosteric manner. 12p1 is thought to bind to unbound gp120 near the CD4 binding site, with a 1:1 stoichiometry. 12p1 also inhibited mAb F105 binding; presumably because F105 favors an unactivated conformation, but not mAbs 2G12 or b12. The 1:1 stoichiometry, the fact that the peptide binding site is accessible on the trimer, the non-CD4 like aspect of the binding, and an ability to inhibit viral infection in cell cultures make 12p1 a promising lead for therapeutic design.
Biorn2004
-
F105: This review summarizes mAbs directed to HIV-1 Env. There are 51 CD4BS MAbs and Fabs in the database; most, like this mAb, neutralize TCLA strains only.
Gorny2003
(review)
-
F105: A gp120 molecule was designed to focus the immune response onto the IgG1b12 epitope. Ala substitutions that enhance the binding of IgG1b12 and reduce the binding of non-neutralizing mAbs were combined with additional N-linked glycosylation site sequons inhibiting binding of non-neutralizing mAbs; b12 bound to the mutated gp120. C1 and C5 were also removed, but this compromised b12 binding.
Pantophlet2003b
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: scFv 4KG5 reacts with a conformational epitope that is formed by the V1V2 and V3 loops and the bridging sheet (C4) region of gp120 and is influenced by carbohydrates. Of a panel of mAbs tested, only nAb b12 enhanced 4KG5 binding to gp120 JRFL. MAbs to the following regions diminished 4KG5 binding: V2 loop, V3 loop, V3-C4 region, CD4BS. MAbs directed against C1, CD4i, C5 regions didn't impact 4KG5 binding. These results suggest that the orientation or dynamics of the V1/V2 and V3 loops restricts CD4BS access on the envelope spike, and IgG1b12 can uniquely remain unaffected by these loops. This was one of the CD4BS MAbs used.
Zwick2003a
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Env genes derived from uncultured brain biopsy samples from four HIV-1 infected patients with late-stage AIDS were compared to env genes from PBMC samples. Brain isolates did not differ in the total number or positions of N-glycosylation sites, patterns of coreceptor usage, or ability to be recognized by gp160 and gp41 MAbs. F105 recognized most variants, some from each of the four individuals by gp120 immunoprecipitation.
Ohagen2003
(brain/CSF, variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Thermodynamics of binding to gp120 was measured using isothermal titration calorimetry for sCD4, 17b, b12, 48d, F105, 2G12 and C11 to intact YU2 and the HXBc2 core. The free energy of binding was similar. Enthalpy and entropy changes were divergent, but compensated. Not only CD4 but mAb ligands induced thermodynamic changes in gp120 that were independent of whether the core or the full gp120 protein was used. Non-neutralizing CD4BS and CD4i mAbs (17b, 48d, 1.5e, b6, F105 and F91) had large entropy contributions to free energy (mean: 26.1 kcal/mol) of binding to the gp120 monomer, but the potent CD4BS neutralizing MAb b6 had a much smaller value of 5.7 kcal/mol. The high values suggest surface burial or protein folding and ordering of amino acids. These results suggest that while the trimeric Env complex has four surfaces, a non-neutralizing face (occluded on the oligomer), a variable face, a neutralizing face and a silent face (protected by carbohydrate masking), gp120 monomers further protect receptor binding sites by conformational or entropic masking, requiring a large energy handicap for Ab binding not faced by other anti-gp120 Abs.
Kwong2002
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: This paper shows that binding of CD4BS mAbs to Env blocks the conformational shift that allows co-receptor CCR5 binding and CD4-independent mediated cell fusion. CD4BS MAbs F105, 15e, and IgG1b12 as well as their Fab fragments inhibited CD4-independent binding of the V1/V2 loop-deleted gp120 glycoproteins of R5 HIV-1 isolates ADA, YU2 and JR-FL and to CCR5 in a concentration dependent manner. CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12, F91 and F105 and their Fab counterparts (except for C11, used as a negative control) inhibited CD4-independent JR-FL and YU-2 gp120-CCR5 binding to CCR5-expressing Cf2Th cells and syncytium formation.
Raja2003
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
F105: 17b: This paper describes the generation of CD4i MAb E51, that like CD4i mAb 17b, blocks CCR5 binding to sCD4-bound gp120. The substitutions E381R, F383S, R419D I420R, K421D, Q422L, I423S, and Y435S (HXB2 numbering) all severely reduce 17b and E51 binding. All but I423S also diminish CCR5 binding by more than 50%. The mutation F383S also inhibits sCD4 binding and F105 binding, and K421D inhibits F105 binding, but not sCD4.
Xiang2003
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: This study examined Ab interactions, binding and neutralization with a B clade R5 isolate (92US660) and R5X4 isolate (92HT593). Abs generally bound and neutralized the R5X4 isolate better than the R5 isolate. Anti-gp41 mAb F240 enhanced the binding of CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105 to both R5X4 and R5 isolates, but had no effect on neutralization. Anti-V3 MAb B4a1 increased CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105 to R5X4 virions, but only IgG1b12 binding was increased by B4a1 to the R5 isolate, and neutralization was not impacted.
Cavacini2002
(co-receptor)
-
F105: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 857.
-
F105: Alanine scanning mutagenesis was used to compare substitutions that affected anti-CD4BS nAb b12 -- rec gp120s were engineered to contain combinations of Alanine substitutions that enhanced b12 binding, and while binding of b12 to these gp120 monomers was generally maintained or increased, binding by five non-neutralizing anti-CD4bs MAbs (b3, b6, F105, 15e, and F91) was reduced or completely abolished.
Pantophlet2003
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Virion capture assays are not a good predictor of neutralization, and the presentation of epitopes using this assay seems to be different from that of functional Envelope spikes on primary isolates -- F105 and b6 could efficiently block the b12-mediated capture of infectious virions in a virus capture, but did not inhibit b12 neutralization -- while b12 was potent at neutralizing the three primary virions JR-CSF, ADA, and 89.6, the Abs F105, 19b, and Fab b6 were overall very poor neutralizers.
Poignard2003
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Review of nAbs that discusses mechanisms of neutralization, passive transfer of nAbs and protection in animal studies, and vaccine strategies.
Liu2002
(immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
F105: Review of nAbs that notes that F105 binds the CD4BS, in combination with other mAbs it can protect some macaques against SHIV infection, and that it has strong ADCC activity.
Ferrantelli2002
(antibody interactions, effector function, immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
F105: A rare mutation in the neutralization sensitive R2-strain in the proximal limb of the V3 region caused Env to become sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed against the CD4 binding site (CD4BS), CD4-induced (CD4i) epitopes, soluble CD4 (sCD4), and HNS2, a broadly neutralizing sera -- 2/12 anti-V3 mAbs tested (19b and 694/98-D) neutralized R2, as did 2/3 anti-CD4BS MAbs (15e and IgG1b12), 2/2 CD4i mAbs (17b and 4.8D), and 2G12 and 2F5 -- thus multiple epitopes on R2 are functional targets for neutralization and the neutralization sensitivity profile of R2 is intermediate between the highly sensitive MN-TCLA strain and the typically resistant MN-primary strain.
Zhang2002
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: gp120 mutants were used to define the CXCR4 binding site using CXCR4 displayed on paramagnetic proteoliposomes (PMPLs) to reduce non-specific gp120 binding---basic residues in the V3 loop and the β19 strand (RIKQ, positions 419-422) were involved, and deletion of the V1-V2 loops allowed CD4-independent CXCR4 binding---mAbs 17b (CD4i) and F105 (CD4BS) were used to study conformational changes in the mutants---the affinity of ΔV1 and ΔV1-V2 mutants for F105 was comparable to the wildtype---V3 mutants did not affect F105 binding---the K421A mutation in the β19 strand dramatically reduced F105 affinity, consistent with what is known about the F105 epitope.
Basmaciogullar2002
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: HIV-1 gp160δCT (cytoplasmic tail-deleted) proteoliposomes (PLs) containing native, trimeric envelope glycoproteins from R5 strains YU2 and JRFL, and X4 strain HXBc2, were made in a physiologic membrane setting as candidate immunogens for HIV vaccines---2F5 bound to gp160δCT with a reconstituted membrane ten-fold better than the same protein on beads, while such an affinity difference was not seen with F105 and 2G12---anti-CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105, A32 (C1-C4), C11 (C1-C5), and 39F (V3) mAbs bound gp160δCT PLs indistinguishably from gp160δCT expressed on the cell surface.
Grundner2002
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: A series of mutational changes were introduced into the YU2 gp120 that favored different conformations -- 375 S/W seems to favor a conformation of gp120 closer to the CD4-bound state, and is readily bound by sCD4 and CD4i MAbs (17b, 48d, 49e, 21c and 23e) but binding of anti-CD4BS MAbs (F105, 15e, IgG1b12, 21h and F91 was markedly reduced -- IgG1b12 failed to neutralize this mutant, while neutralization by 2G12 was enhanced -- 2F5 did not neutralize either WT or mutant, probably due to polymorphism in the YU2 epitope -- another mutant, 423 I/P, disrupted the gp120 bridging sheet, favored a different conformation and did not bind CD4, CCR5, or CD4i antibodies, but did bind to CD4BS MAbs.
Xiang2002
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: A modified gp140 (gp140deltaCFI), with C-term mutations intended to mimic a fusion intermediate and stabilize trimer formation, retained antigenic conformational determinants as defined by binding to CD4 and to mAbs 2F5, 2G12, F105, and b12, and enhanced humoral immunity without diminishing the CTL response in mice injected with a DNA vaccine.
Chakrabarti2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: Passive immunization of neonate macaques with a combination of F105+2G12+2F5 conferred complete protection against oral challenge with SHIV-vpu+ or -- the combination b12+2G12+2F5 conferred partial protection against SHIV89.6 -- such combinations may be useful for prophylaxis at birth and against milk born transmission -- the synergistic combination of IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10 neutralized a collection of HIV clade C primary isolates.
Xu2002
(immunoprophylaxis, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
F105: Uncleaved soluble gp140 (YU2 strain, R5 primary isolate) can be stabilized in an oligomer by fusion with a C-term trimeric GCN4 motif or using a T4 trimeric motif derived from T4 bacteriophage fibritin---stabilized oligomer gp140δ683(-FT) showed strong preferential recognition by NAbs IgG1b12 and 2G12 relative to the gp120 monomer, in contrast to poorly neutralizing MAbs F105, F91, 17b, 48d, and 39F which showed reduced levels of binding, and C11, A32, and 30D which did not bind the stabilized oligomer.
Yang2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: Abs against the V3 loop (50.1, 58.2, 59.1, 257-D, 268-D, 447-52D), CD4BS (IgG1b12, 559-64D, F105), CD4i (17b), and to gp41 (2F5, F240) each showed similar binding efficiency to Env derived from related pairs of primary and TCLA lines (primary: 168P and 320SI, and TCLA: 168C and 320SI-C3.3), but the TCLA lines were much more susceptible to neutralization suggesting that the change in TCLA lines that make them more susceptible to NAbs alters some step after binding.
York2001
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Mutations in two glycosylation sites in the V2 region of HIV-1 ADA at positions 190 and 197 (187 DNTSYRLINCNTS 199) cause the virus to become CD4-independent and able to enter cells through CCR5 alone -- these same mutations tended to increase the neutralization sensitivity of the virus, including to F105.
Kolchinsky2001
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: SHIV-HXBc2 is a neutralization sensitive non-pathogenic virus, and several in vivo passages through monkeys yielded highly pathogenic SHIV KU-1---HXBc2 and the KU-1 clone HXBc2P3.2 differ in 12 amino acids in gp160---substitutions in both gp120 and gp41 reduced the ability of sCD4, IgG1b12, F105 and AG1121 to Env achieve saturation and full occupancy, and neutralize KU-1---17b and 2F5 also bound less efficiently to HXBc2P3.2, although 2G12 was able to bind both comparably.
Si2001
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: A combination of gp41 fusion with the GNC4 trimeric sequences and disruption of the YU2 gp120-gp41 cleavage site resulted in stable gp140 trimers (gp140-GNC4) that preserve and expose some neutralizing epitopes while occluding some non-neutralizing epitopes -- CD4BS MAbs (F105 and F91) and CD4i (17b and 48d) recognized gp140-GNC4 as well as gp120 or gp140 -- non-neutralizing mAbs C11, A32, 522-149, M90, and #45 bound to the gp140-GNC4 glycoprotein at reduced levels compared to gp120 -- mAbs directed at the extreme termini of gp120 C1 (135/9 and 133/290) and C5 (CRA-1 and M91) bound efficiently to gp140-GNC4.
Yang2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: Six mutations in MN change the virus from a high-infectivity neutralization resistant phenotype to low-infectivity neutralization sensitive -- V3, CD4BS, and CD4i MAbs are 20-100 fold more efficient at neutralizing the sensitive form, although F105 was an exception and cannot neutralize either form of MN -- the mutation L544P reduced binding of all mAbs against gp120 by causing conformational changes.
Park2000
-
F105: Host encoded intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM-1) is incorporated by the HIV-1 virion and enhances viral infectivity -- ICAM-1 does not modify virus sensitivity to antibodies 0.5beta or 4.8D or sCD4, but neutralizing ability of F105 was diminished in ICAM bearing virions in the presence of lymphocyte function-association antigen-1 (LFA-1) Ab.
Fortin2000
-
F105: A triple combination of 2F5, F105 and 2G12 effectively neutralized perinatal infection of macaque infants when challenged with SHIV-vpu+ -- the plasma half-life was 7.2 +/- 2.2 days.
Baba2000
(immunoprophylaxis, mother-to-infant transmission)
-
F105: A mini-review of observations of passive administration of IgG NAbs conferring protection against intervenous or vaginal SHIV challenge, that considers why IgG mAbs might protect against mucosal challenge. Database note: First author "RobertGuroff" is also found as "Robert-Guroff" on annotated papers in this database.
RobertGuroff2000
(genital and mucosal immunity, immunoprophylaxis, review)
-
F105: Anti-C1 region mAb 87-135/9 blocks gp120 interaction with CD4+ cells -- blocking activity is additive when combined with antibodies which bind in the C4 region of gp120 (F105, 388/389, and b12).
Kropelin1998
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: F105 enhances viral entry of viruses carrying the YU2 envelope glycoproteins, but neutralizes HXBc2.
Sullivan1998b
(enhancing activity)
-
F105: A comparison of 25 gp120 specific, conformation dependent mAbs was done and F105 was used for competition studies -- F105 did cross-compete with multiple CD4BS specific MAbs, however most could not neutralize even the autologous NL4-3 strains.
Sugiura1999
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Immunoprecipitation of gp120 and gp160 expressed from a rec Semliki Forest virus by F105 and IgG1b12 indicated that the SFV expressed HIV-1 Env was folded appropriately -- and SVF-HIV-1 Env vaccine gave the strongest anti-HIV-1 Env response in mice, when compared to an HIV-1 Env DNA vaccine and a rgp160 protein.
Brand1998
(vaccine antigen design)
-
F105: The mAb F240 binds to the immunodominant region of gp41 and enhances infection in the presence of complement -- reactivity of F240 is enhanced by preincubation of cells with sCD4 or anti-CD4BS MAb F105.
Cavacini1998a
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Neutralization synergy was observed when the mAbs 694/98-D (V3), 2F5 (gp41), and 2G12 (gp120 discontinuous) were used in combination, and even greater neutralizing potential was seen with the addition of a fourth MAb, F105 (CD4 BS).
Li1998
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Phase I dose escalation study, single dose of 100 or 500 mg/m2 was given to 4 HIV+ patients -- sustained levels, no immune response against F105, no toxicity, infused Ab retained function -- there was no evidence of anti-HIV-1 activity and virus was not diminished at day 1 or 7, by culture or plasma RNA.
Cavacini1998
(kinetics, immunotherapy)
-
F105: Summary of the implications of the crystal structure of the core of gp120 bound to CD4 and 17b with what is known about mutations that reduce nAb binding -- probable mechanism of neutralization by CD4BS Ab is direct interference with CD4 binding.
Wyatt1998
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
F105: Binds both gp120 and soluble gp120+gp41 complex efficiently, suggesting its gp120 epitope is not blocked by gp41 binding -- does not bind to HXBc2 gp120 if the 19 C-term amino acids, in conjunction with C1 positions 31-93, are deleted.
Wyatt1997
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Virus with the V1-V2 loop deleted was viable and more susceptible to neutralization by CD4i MAb 17b, and anti-V3 mAbs 1121, 9284, and 110.4, but not to a CD4BS mAb, F105 or sCD4.
Cao1997
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: One of 14 human mAbs tested for ability to neutralize a chimeric SHIV-vpu+, which expressed HIV-1 IIIB env -- F105 could only achieve 50% neutralization alone -- all Ab combinations tested showed synergistic neutralization -- F105 has synergistic response with mAbs 694/98-D (anti-V3), 48d, 2F5, and 2G12, and also with HIVIG.
Li1997
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: In a multilaboratory blinded study, failed to neutralize any of nine B clade primary isolates.
DSouza1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Neutralizes TCLA strains, but not primary isolates.
Parren1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Intracellular co-expression of heavy and light chains of the Fab105 fragment MAb F105 was enhanced by inclusion of an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) sequence -- the Fab105 IRES expression cassette was cloned into an adeno-associated virus (AAV) shuttle vector, and transduced into human lymphocytes which were able to produce and secrete the Fab105 fragments while maintaining normal growth -- several primary HIV-1 patient isolates were effectively blocked.
Chen1996
(immunotherapy)
-
F105: Binding of F105 to oligomeric gp120 occurs despite the fact it cannot neutralize primary isolates.
Litwin1996
-
F105: A panel of immunotoxins were generated by linking Env MAbs to ricin A -- immunotoxins mediated cell killing, but killing was not directly proportional to binding.
Pincus1996
(immunotoxin)
-
F105: F105 is V H4 -- V-region heavy chain usage was examined and a bias of enhanced V H1 and V H4, and reduced V H3, was noted among HIV infected individuals.
Wisnewski1996
(antibody sequence)
-
F105: Neutralizes HIV-1 LAI less potently than V3 specific mAbs.
McDougal1996
-
F105: Phase I study -- mAb clearance in plasma has a 13 day half-life.
Wolfe1996
(kinetics, immunotherapy)
-
F105: The sulfated polysaccharide curdlan sulfate (CRDS) binds to the Envelope of T-tropic viruses and neutralizes virus -- deletion of the V3 loop results in less potent inhibition of F105 binding by CRDS -- binding site of F105 described as 256-257 ST, 368-370 DPE, 421 K, and 470-484 PGGGDMRDNWRSELY.
Jagodzinski1996
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Changing heavy chain from IgG1 to IgG3 increased neutralization efficiency.
Cavacini1995
-
F105: Biotinylated F105 was used for competition studies with Ab derived from pregnant HIV-1+ women -- a correlation between maternal anti-CD4 BS Abs overlapping the F105 binding site and lack of HIV-1 transmission to infants was noted.
Khouri1995
(mother-to-infant transmission)
-
F105: Efficient neutralization of T-cell adapted lines HXBc2 and MN, no neutralization of primary isolates 89.6, ADA and YU2 -- even some enhancement of infection of ADA and YU2 was observed.
Sullivan1995
(enhancing activity, variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Eight patient phase Ia trial for use as an immunotherapeutic -- no clinical or biochemical side effects observed, plasma levels of 10 ug/ml maintained for 21 days.
Posner1995
(immunotherapy)
-
F105: An immunoassay for titrating CD4BS serum antibody was developed using a gp120-coated solid phase and competition with mAb F105 -- 109/110 French HIV-1+ sera and 51/56 HIV-1+ African sera had detectable CD4BS Abs using this assay, demonstrating CD4 binding site conservation among diverse subtypes -- CD4BS Abs were detected soon after seroconversion and persisted -- 0/21 HIV-2+ sera reacted, indicating that the HIV-1 and HIV-2 CD4BS Abs are not cross-reactive.
Turbica1995
(assay or method development, subtype comparisons)
-
F105: A human CD4+ T lymphocyte line was transduced to express Fab fragments of F105 -- heavy and light chains are joined by an inter-chain linker -- in the transduced cells infected with HIV-1, the Fab binds intracellularly to the envelope protein and inhibits HIV-1 production -- secreted Fab fragments neutralize cell-free HIV-1 -- combined intra- and extracellular binding activities of the expressed Fab make transduced cells resistant to HIV-1 infection and also can protect surrounding lymphocytes by secreting neutralizing antibodies.
Marasco1993,Chen1994a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Used as a positive control for CD4 BS antibodies in a study of the influence of oligomeric structure of Env in determining the repertoire of the Ab response.
Earl1994
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Fab fragments show reduced capacity to neutralize IIIB, MN, and RF compared to intact IgG1, suggesting bivalent interaction may be important in binding and neutralization.
Cavacini1994a
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Administered intravenously to four cynomologus monkeys, plasma pharmacokinetics and biological activity tested.
Cavacini1994
(kinetics)
-
F105: MAbs against the glycosphingolipid GalCer block HIV infection of normally susceptible CD4 negative cells from the brain and colon -- anti-CD4 mAbs moderately inhibit gp120 binding to GalCer, possibly through steric hindrance -- binding of GalCer to gp120 inhibited but did not completely block F105 binding.
Cook1994
(brain/CSF)
-
F105: A mutation in gp41, 582 A/T, confers resistance to neutralization (also confers resistance to mAbs 48d, 21h, 15e and 17b).
Thali1994
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Comparison of mAb F105 sequences with those of mAbs 21h and 15e.
Bagley1994
(antibody sequence)
-
F105: A neutralization escape mutant (HXB2 A281V) was selected by growth of HXB2 in the presence of broadly neutralizing sera -- F105 neutralization was not affected by this mutation.
Watkins1993
(escape)
-
F105: Ab response in IIIB lab workers was compared to gp160 LAI vaccine recipients -- F105 was used as a control -- infected lab workers and some of the gp160 vaccinees had a mAb response that could inhibit gp120-CD4 binding, at lower titers than the infected lab workers.
Pincus1993a
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
F105: The gp41 mutation 582(Ala to Thr) results in conformational changes in gp120 that confer neutralization resistance to a class of conformation sensitive neutralizing mAbs -- required >81 fold higher concentrations to neutralize the mutant than wild type.
Klasse1993b
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Study of synergy of neutralization and binding comparing F105 and sCD4 with the V3 mAbs: 50.1, 59.1, 83.1, and 58.2 -- synergy was observed, and the data suggest that binding of one ligand (F105) can increase the binding of the second (e. g. V3 loop mAbs) due to conformational changes.
Potts1993
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Study of synergy between F105 and sera from vaccinated volunteers with V3-loop specific neutralization activity -- 2/3 sera demonstrated neutralization synergy, and 3/3 binding/fusion-inhibition synergy.
Montefiori1993
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: Binding to Delta V1/2 and Delta V1/2/3 mutant glycoproteins is 2.4- and 13-fold greater, respectively, than binding to wildtype gp120.
Wyatt1993
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: Serum from all asymptomatic HIV-1 positive people tested block F105 binding, but only from 27% of symptomatic individuals.
Cavacini1993a
(rate of progression)
-
F105: Additive MN or SF2 neutralization when combined with anti-V3 mAbs 447-52D and 257-D.
Cavacini1993
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: No neutralization of primary isolates observed (John Moore, pers comm), laboratory strains could be neutralized though.
-
F105: F105 binds to and neutralizes selected lab strains and 3/9 HIV-1 primary isolates -- synergistic enhancement of neutralization by seropositive sera.
Posner1993
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
F105: Called F-105 -- neutralizes IIIB -- strong inhibition of HIV+ human sera binding to IIIB gp120.
Moore1993a
-
F105: Significant enhancement of F105 binding to RF infected cells preincubated with V3-specific mAbs V3-2 and V3-1.
Posner1992a
(antibody interactions)
-
F105: F105 mediates ADCC against SF2 through the CD16+ population of PBMC -- does not mediate complement-dependent cytotoxicity.
Posner1992
(complement, effector function)
-
F105: Precipitation of Delta 297-329 env glycoprotein, which has a deleted V3 loop, is much more efficient than precipitation of wild type.
Wyatt1992
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: MAb cDNA sequence -- V H4 V71-4 rearranged with a D H D-D fusion product of dlr4 and da4, and with J H5 -- V kappa is from the Humvk325 germline gene joined with Jkappa 2.
Marasco1992
(antibody sequence)
-
F105: Amino acid substitutions that impair F105 neutralization inhibit gp120-CD4 interaction.
Thali1992a
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: F105 neutralization escape mutants result from changes in amino acids in discontinuous regions: C2, 256-262 and C3, 386-370.
Thali1991
(antibody binding site)
-
F105: First description of F105, binds topographically near the CD4-binding site -- inhibits binding of free, infectious virions to uninfected HT-H9 cells, but does not react with virus adsorbed to uninfected HT-H9 cells -- soluble rCD4 pre-bound to infected cells inhibits F105 binding -- F105 inhibits infection of HT-H9 cells in standard neutralization assays with HIV-1 and MN strains.
Posner1991
(antibody binding site, antibody generation)
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Cao1997
J. Cao, N. Sullivan, E. Desjardin, C. Parolin, J. Robinson, R. Wyatt, and J. Sodroski. Replication and Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Lacking the V1 and V2 Variable Loops of the gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., :9808-9812, 1997. An HIV-1 mutant lacking the V1-V2 loops can replicate in Jurkat cells and revertants that replicate with wild-type efficiency rapidly evolve in culture. These viruses exhibited increased neutralization susceptibility to V3 loop or CD4i MAbs, but not to sCD4 or anti-CD4BS MAbs. Thus the gp120 V1 and V2 loops protect HIV-1 from some subsets of neutralizing antibodies. PubMed ID: 9371651.
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Castillo-Menendez2019
Luis R. Castillo-Menendez, Hanh T. Nguyen, and Joseph Sodroski. Conformational Differences between Functional Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers and Stabilized Soluble Trimers. J. Virol., 93(3), 1 Feb 2019. PubMed ID: 30429345.
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Cavacini1993
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, A. Buchbinder, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. R. Posner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the V3 Loop of HIV-1 gp120 Mediate Variable and Distinct Effects on Binding and Viral Neutralization by a Human Monoclonal Antibody to the CD4 Binding Site. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 6:353-358, 1993. PubMed ID: 8455141.
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Cavacini1993a
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, J. Underdalh, R. Goldstein, K. Mayer, and M. R. Posner. Loss of Serum Antibodies to a Conformational Epitope of HIV-1/gp120 Identified by a Human Monoclonal Antibody Is Associated with Disease Progression. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 6:1093-1102, 1993. Serum from 100\% of asymptomatic HIV-positive people blocked F105 binding, while serum samples from 27\% of ARC/AIDS patients blocked F105 binding. PubMed ID: 7692037.
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Cavacini1994
L. A. Cavacini, J. Power, C. L. Emes, K. Mace, G. Treacy, and M. R. Posner. Plasma Pharmacokinetics and Biological Activity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibody, F105, in Cynomolgus Monkeys. Tumor Immunol., 15:251-256, 1994. MAb F105 was administered intravenously to four cynomolgus monkeys. At 15 days post-dose, total serum F105 was 230 +/- 79 $\mu$g/ml and F105 was immunoreactive with cells infected with the MN and IIIB strains of HIV-1 as determined by flow cytometry. PubMed ID: 8061897.
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Cavacini1994a
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, M. Duval, and M. R. Posner. Effect of Antibody Valency on Interaction with Cell-Surface Expressed HIV-1 and Viral Neutralization. J. Immunol., 152:2538-2545, 1994. PubMed ID: 7510748.
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Cavacini1995
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, F. D. Desharnais, M. Duval, D. Montefiori, and M. R. Posner. Influence of Heavy Chain Constant Regions on Antigen Binding and HIV-1 Neutralization by a Human Monoclonal Antibody. J. Immunol., 155:3638-3644, 1995. By changing the IgG1 constant region of MAb F105 from IgG$_1\kappa$ to IgG$_3\kappa$, dramatic strain specific increases in neutralization efficiency were obtained. PubMed ID: 7561063.
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Cavacini1998
L. A. Cavacini, M. H. Samore, J. Gambertoglio, B. Jackson, M. Duval, A. Wisnewski, S. Hammer, C. Koziel, C. Trapnell, and M. R. Posner. Phase I Study of a Human Monoclonal Antibody Directed against the CD4-Binding Site of HIV Type 1 Glycoprotein 120. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:545-550, 1998. In an immunotherapeutic study, administration of a single dose of F105 was non-toxic and the Ab persisted, yet no benefit was observed in 4 individuals. The authors suggest it may be more helpful in other settings, for example, patients with no pre-existing anti-CD4 BS Abs, or in combination with other MAbs. PubMed ID: 9591708.
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Cavacini1998a
L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, A. V. Wisnewski, J. Power, G. Lewis, D. Montefiori, and M. R. Posner. Functional and molecular characterization of human monoclonal antibody. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 14:1271-80, 1998. PubMed ID: 9764911.
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Cavacini1999
L. A. Cavacini, A. Wisnewski, J. E. Peterson, D. Montefiori, C. Emes, M. Duval, G. Kingsbury, A. Wang, D. Scadden, and M. R. Posner. A Human Anti-HIV Autoantibody Enhances EBV Transformation and HIV infection. Clin. Immunol., 93:263-273, 1999. PubMed ID: 10600338.
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Cavacini2002
Lisa A. Cavacini, Mark Duval, James Robinson, and Marshall R. Posner. Interactions of Human Antibodies, Epitope Exposure, Antibody Binding and Neutralization of Primary Isolate HIV-1 Virions. AIDS, 16(18):2409-2417, 6 Dec 2002. Erratum in AIDS. 2003 Aug 15;17(12):1863. PubMed ID: 12461414.
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Chakrabarti2002
Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Wing-pui Kong, Bei-yue Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Jacques Friborg, Xu Ling, Steven R. King, David C. Montefiori, and Gary J. Nabel. Modifications of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein Enhance Immunogenicity for Genetic Immunization. J. Virol., 76(11):5357-5368, Jun 2002. PubMed ID: 11991964.
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Chen1994a
S. Y. Chen, Y. Khouri, J. Bagley, and W. A. Marasco. Combined intra- and extracellular immunization against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection with a human anti-gp120 antibody. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 91:5932-5936, 1994. PubMed ID: 8016092.
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Chen1996
J. D. Chen, Q. Yang, W. A. Marasco, and S. Y. Chen. Intra- and Extra-Cellular Immunization against HIV-1 Infection with Lymphocytes Transduced with an AAV Vector Expressing a Human Anti-gp120 Antibody. Hum. Gene Ther., 7:1515-1525, 1996. PubMed ID: 8864752.
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Chen2009
Lei Chen, Young Do Kwon, Tongqing Zhou, Xueling Wu, Sijy O'Dell, Lisa Cavacini, Ann J. Hessell, Marie Pancera, Min Tang, Ling Xu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Mei-Yun Zhang, James Arthos, Dennis R. Burton, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Gary J. Nabel, Marshall R. Posner, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis of Immune Evasion at the Site of CD4 Attachment on HIV-1 gp120. Science, 326(5956):1123-1127, 20 Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19965434.
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Choe2003
Hyeryun Choe, Wenhui Li, Paulette L. Wright, Natalya Vasilieva, Miro Venturi, Chih-Chin Huang, Christoph Grundner, Tatyana Dorfman, Michael B. Zwick, Liping Wang, Eric S. Rosenberg, Peter D. Kwong, Dennis R. Burton, James E. Robinson, Joseph G. Sodroski, and Michael Farzan. Tyrosine Sulfation of Human Antibodies Contributes to Recognition of the CCR5 Binding Region of HIV-1 gp120. Cell, 114(2):161-170, 25 Jul 2003. PubMed ID: 12887918.
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Chomont2008
Nicolas Chomont, Hakim Hocini, Jean-Chrysostome Gody, Hicham Bouhlal, Pierre Becquart, Corinne Krief-Bouillet, Michel Kazatchkine, and Laurent Bélec. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Do Not Inhibit Viral Transcytosis Through Mucosal Epithelial Cells. Virology, 370(2):246-254, 20 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17920650.
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Chuang2013
Gwo-Yu Chuang, Priyamvada Acharya, Stephen D. Schmidt, Yongping Yang, Mark K. Louder, Tongqing Zhou, Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Robert T. Bailer, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Michel C. Nussenzweig, John R. Mascola, Peter D. Kwong, and Ivelin S. Georgiev. Residue-Level Prediction of HIV-1 Antibody Epitopes Based on Neutralization of Diverse Viral Strains. J. Virol., 87(18):10047-10058, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 23843642.
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Chuang2017
Gwo-Yu Chuang, Hui Geng, Marie Pancera, Kai Xu, Cheng Cheng, Priyamvada Acharya, Michael Chambers, Aliaksandr Druz, Yaroslav Tsybovsky, Timothy G. Wanninger, Yongping Yang, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Jason Gorman, M. Gordon Joyce, Sijy O'Dell, Tongqing Zhou, Adrian B. McDermott, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure-Based Design of a Soluble Prefusion-Closed HIV-1 Env Trimer with Reduced CD4 Affinity and Improved Immunogenicity. J. Virol., 91(10), 15 May 2017. PubMed ID: 28275193.
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Clayton2007
Reginald Clayton, Asa Ohagen, Olivia Goethals, Alexandra Smets, Marnix Van Loock, Lieve Michiels, Erin Kennedy-Johnston, Mark Cunningham, Haiyan Jiang, Sharon Bola, Lester Gutshall, George Gunn, Alfred Del Vecchio, Robert Sarisky, Sabine Hallenberger, and Kurt Hertogs. Binding Kinetics, Uptake and Intracellular Accumulation of F105, an Anti-gp120 Human IgG1kappa Monoclonal Antibody, in HIV-1 Infected Cells. J. Virol. Methods, 139(1):17-23, Jan 2007. PubMed ID: 17034868.
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Clayton2009
Reginald Clayton, Asa Ohagen, Francois Nicol, Alfred M. Del Vecchio, Tim H. M. Jonckers, Olivia Goethals, Marnix Van Loock, Lieve Michiels, John Grigsby, Zheng Xu, Yuan Peng Zhang, Lester L. Gutshall, Mark Cunningham, Haiyan Jiang, Sharon Bola, Robert T. Sarisky, and Kurt Hertogs. Sustained and Specific In Vitro Inhibition of HIV-1 Replication by a Protease Inhibitor Encapsulated in gp120-Targeted Liposomes. Antiviral Res., 84(2):142-149, Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19699239.
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Cook1994
D. G. Cook, J. Fantini, S. L. Spitalnik, and F. Gonzalez-Scarano. Binding of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 HIV-1 gp120 to Galactosylceramide (GalCer): Relationship to the V3 Loop. Virol., 201:206-214, 1994. Antibodies against GalCer can block infection of CD4-negative cells from the brain and colon that are susceptible to HIV infection. This paper explores the ability of a panel of MAbs to inhibit binding of gp120 to GalCer, and also of the binding of GalCer to inhibit MAb-gp120 interaction. MAbs to the V3 loop and GalCer showed mutual inhibition of binding to gp120, and anti-CD4 binding site MAbs showed reduced inhibition. N- and C-terminal MAbs didn't influence GalCer binding. PubMed ID: 8184533.
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Crooks2015
Ema T. Crooks, Tommy Tong, Bimal Chakrabarti, Kristin Narayan, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Sergey Menis, Xiaoxing Huang, Daniel Kulp, Keiko Osawa, Janelle Muranaka, Guillaume Stewart-Jones, Joanne Destefano, Sijy O'Dell, Celia LaBranche, James E. Robinson, David C. Montefiori, Krisha McKee, Sean X. Du, Nicole Doria-Rose, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, Ping Zhu, William R. Schief, Richard T. Wyatt, Robert G. Whalen, and James M. Binley. Vaccine-Elicited Tier 2 HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Bind to Quaternary Epitopes Involving Glycan-Deficient Patches Proximal to the CD4 Binding Site. PLoS Pathog, 11(5):e1004932, May 2015. PubMed ID: 26023780.
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Derby2006
Nina R. Derby, Zane Kraft, Elaine Kan, Emma T. Crooks, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, James M. Binley, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Antibody Responses Elicited in Macaques Immunized with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) SF162-Derived gp140 Envelope Immunogens: Comparison with Those Elicited during Homologous Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4 and Heterologous HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 80(17):8745-8762, Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16912322.
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Dey2007a
Barna Dey, Marie Pancera, Krisha Svehla, Yuuei Shu, Shi-Hua Xiang, Jeffrey Vainshtein, Yuxing Li, Joseph Sodroski, Peter D Kwong, John R Mascola, and Richard Wyatt. Characterization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Monomeric and Trimeric gp120 Glycoproteins Stabilized in the CD4-Bound State: Antigenicity, Biophysics, and Immunogenicity. J Virol, 81(11):5579-5593, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17360741.
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Dorgham2005
Karim Dorgham, Ismaïl Dogan, Natacha Bitton, Christophe Parizot, Valerie Cardona, Patrice Debré, Oliver Hartley, and Guy Gorochov. Immunogenicity of HIV Type 1 gp120 CD4 Binding Site Phage Mimotopes. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 21(1):82-92, Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15665647.
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Douagi2010
Iyadh Douagi, Mattias N. E. Forsell, Christopher Sundling, Sijy O'Dell, Yu Feng, Pia Dosenovic, Yuxing Li, Robert Seder, Karin Loré, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam. Influence of Novel CD4 Binding-Defective HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens on Neutralizing Antibody and T-Cell Responses in Nonhuman Primates. J. Virol., 84(4):1683-1695, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19955308.
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DSouza1997
M. P. D'Souza, D. Livnat, J. A. Bradac, S. H. Bridges, the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Antibody Selection Working Group, and Collaborating Investigators. Evaluation of monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 primary isolates by neutralization assays: performance criteria for selecting candidate antibodies for clinical trials. J. Infect. Dis., 175:1056-1062, 1997. Five laboratories evaluated neutralization of nine primary B clade isolates by a coded panel of seven human MAbs to HIV-1 subtype B envelope. IgG1b12, 2G12, 2F5 showed potent and broadly cross-reactive neutralizing ability; F105, 447/52-D, 729-D, 19b did not neutralize the primary isolates. PubMed ID: 9129066.
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Dunfee2007
Rebecca L. Dunfee, Elaine R. Thomas, Jianbin Wang, Kevin Kunstman, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Loss of the N-Linked Glycosylation Site at Position 386 in the HIV Envelope V4 Region Enhances Macrophage Tropism and Is Associated with Dementia. Virology, 367(1):222-234, 10 Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17599380.
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Earl1994
P. L. Earl, C. C. Broder, D. Long, S. A. Lee, J. Peterson, S. Chakrabarti, R. W. Doms, and B. Moss. Native oligomeric human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Envelope glycoprotein elicits diverse monoclonal antibody reactivities. J. Virol., 68:3015-3026, 1994. In a study of the repertoire of response to oligomeric versus monomeric Env protein, 138 murine MAbs were generated in response to an immunogen that was a gp120/bp41 oligomeric molecule that was not cleaved due to a mutation in the cleavage site. The oligomeric molecule was found to elicit a response that was very different than the monomer. Most MAbs were conformational, many were to gp41 or if in gp120, to the CD4 BS. Few MAbs to linear V3 epitopes were produced in response to oligomeric protein, though this was a common specificity in response to immunization with gp120 monomeric protein. PubMed ID: 7512157.
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EdwardsBH2002
Bradley H. Edwards, Anju Bansal, Steffanie Sabbaj, Janna Bakari, Mark J. Mulligan, and Paul A. Goepfert. Magnitude of Functional CD8+ T-Cell Responses to the Gag Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Correlates Inversely with Viral Load in Plasma. J. Virol., 76(5):2298-2305, Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11836408.
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Feng2012
Yu Feng, Krisha McKee, Karen Tran, Sijy O'Dell, Stephen D. Schmidt, Adhuna Phogat, Mattias N. Forsell, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, John R. Mascola, and Richard T. Wyatt. Biochemically Defined HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Variant Immunogens Display Differential Binding and Neutralizing Specificities to the CD4-Binding Site. J. Biol. Chem., 287(8):5673-5686, 17 Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22167180.
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Ferrantelli2002
Flavia Ferrantelli and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Neutralizing Antibodies Against HIV --- Back in the Major Leagues? Curr. Opin. Immunol., 14(4):495-502, Aug 2002. PubMed ID: 12088685.
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Ferrantelli2004a
Flavia Ferrantelli, Moiz Kitabwalla, Robert A. Rasmussen, Chuanhai Cao, Ting-Chao Chou, Hermann Katinger, Gabriela Stiegler, Lisa A. Cavacini, Yun Bai, Joseph Cotropia, Kenneth E. Ugen, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Potent Cross-Group Neutralization of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Isolates with Monoclonal Antibodies--Implications for Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Vaccine. J. Infect. Dis., 189(1):71-74, 1 Jan 2004. PubMed ID: 14702155.
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Finzi2010
Andrés Finzi, Beatriz Pacheco, Xin Zeng, Young Do Kwon, Peter D. Kwong, and Joseph Sodroski. Conformational Characterization of Aberrant Disulfide-Linked HIV-1 gp120 Dimers Secreted from Overexpressing Cells. J Virol Methods, 168(1-2):155-161, Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20471426.
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Fortin2000
J. F. Fortin, R. Cantin, M. G. Bergeron, and M. J. Tremblay. Interaction between Virion-Bound Host Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 and the High-Affinity State of Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1 on Target Cells Renders R5 and X4 Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 More Refractory to Neutralization. Virology, 268:493-503, 2000. PubMed ID: 10704357.
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Georgiev2013a
Ivelin S. Georgiev, M. Gordon Joyce, Tongqing Zhou, and Peter D. Kwong. Elicitation of HIV-1-Neutralizing Antibodies against the CD4-Binding Site. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 8(5):382-392, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 23924998.
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Giraud1999
A. Giraud, Y. Ataman-Onal, N. Battail, N. Piga, D. Brand, B. Mandrand, and B. Verrier. Generation of Monoclonal Antibodies to Native Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein by Immunization of Mice with Naked RNA. J. Virol. Methods, 79:75-84, 1999. PubMed ID: 10328537.
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Gopi2008
Hosahudya Gopi, M. Umashankara, Vanessa Pirrone, Judith LaLonde, Navid Madani, Ferit Tuzer, Sabine Baxter, Isaac Zentner, Simon Cocklin, Navneet Jawanda, Shendra R. Miller, Arne Schön, Jeffrey C. Klein, Ernesto Freire, Fred C. Krebs, Amos B. Smith, Joseph Sodroski, and Irwin Chaiken. Structural Determinants for Affinity Enhancement of a Dual Antagonist Peptide Entry Inhibitor of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1. J. Med. Chem., 51(9):2638-2647, 8 May 2008. PubMed ID: 18402432.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Grundner2002
Christoph Grundner, Tajib Mirzabekov, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Solid-Phase Proteoliposomes Containing Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 76(7):3511-3521, Apr 2002. PubMed ID: 11884575.
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Guenaga2015
Javier Guenaga, Natalia de Val, Karen Tran, Yu Feng, Karen Satchwell, Andrew B. Ward, and Richard T. Wyatt. Well-Ordered Trimeric HIV-1 Subtype B and C Soluble Spike Mimetics Generated by Negative Selection Display Native-Like Properties. PLoS Pathog., 11(1):e1004570, Jan 2015. PubMed ID: 25569572.
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Guenaga2015a
Javier Guenaga, Viktoriya Dubrovskaya, Natalia de Val, Shailendra K. Sharma, Barbara Carrette, Andrew B. Ward, and Richard T. Wyatt. Structure-Guided Redesign Increases the Propensity of HIV Env To Generate Highly Stable Soluble Trimers. J. Virol., 90(6):2806-2817, 30 Dec 2015. PubMed ID: 26719252.
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Guzzo2018
Christina Guzzo, Peng Zhang, Qingbo Liu, Alice L. Kwon, Ferzan Uddin, Alexandra I. Wells, Hana Schmeisser, Raffaello Cimbro, Jinghe Huang, Nicole Doria-Rose, Stephen D. Schmidt, Michael A. Dolan, Mark Connors, John R. Mascola, and Paolo Lusso. Structural Constraints at the Trimer Apex Stabilize the HIV-1 Envelope in a Closed, Antibody-Protected Conformation. mBio, 9(6), 11 Dec 2018. PubMed ID: 30538178.
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Haim2011
Hillel Haim, Bettina Strack, Aemro Kassa, Navid Madani, Liping Wang, Joel R. Courter, Amy Princiotto, Kathleen McGee, Beatriz Pacheco, Michael S. Seaman, Amos B. Smith, 3rd., and Joseph Sodroski. Contribution of Intrinsic Reactivity of the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins to CD4-Independent Infection and Global Inhibitor Sensitivity. PLoS Pathog., 7(6):e1002101, Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21731494.
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Hinz2010
Andreas Hinz, David Lutje Hulsik, Anna Forsman, Willie Wee-Lee Koh, Hassan Belrhali, Andrea Gorlani, Hans de Haard, Robin A. Weiss, Theo Verrips, and Winfried Weissenhorn. Crystal Structure of the Neutralizing Llama V(HH) D7 and Its Mode of HIV-1 gp120 Interaction. PLoS One, 5(5):e10482, 2010. PubMed ID: 20463957.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Hong2007
Patrick W.-P. Hong, Sandra Nguyen, Sophia Young, Stephen V. Su, and Benhur Lee. Identification of the Optimal DC-SIGN Binding Site on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120. J. Virol., 81(15):8325-8336, Aug 2007. PubMed ID: 17522223.
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Jagodzinski1996
P. P. Jagodzinski, J. Wustner, D. Kmieciak, T. J. Wasik, A. Fertala, A. L. Sieron, M. Takahashi, T. Tsuji, T. Mimura, M. S. Fung, M. K. Gorny, M. Kloczewiak, Y. Kaneko, and D. Kozbor. Role of the V2, V3, and CD4-Binding Domains of GP120 in Curdlan Sulfate Neutralization Sensitivity of HIV-1 during Infection of T Lymphocytes. Virology, 226:217-227, 1996. PubMed ID: 8955041.
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Janda2016
Alena Janda, Anthony Bowen, Neil S. Greenspan, and Arturo Casadevall. Ig Constant Region Effects on Variable Region Structure and Function. Front. Microbiol., 7:22, 4 Feb 2016. PubMed ID: 26870003.
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Julien2015
Jean-Philippe Julien, Jeong Hyun Lee, Gabriel Ozorowski, Yuanzi Hua, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Steven W. de Taeye, Travis Nieusma, Albert Cupo, Anila Yasmeen, Michael Golabek, Pavel Pugach, P. J. Klasse, John P. Moore, Rogier W. Sanders, Andrew B. Ward, and Ian A. Wilson. Design and Structure of Two HIV-1 Clade C SOSIP.664 Trimers That Increase the Arsenal of Native-Like Env Immunogens. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 112(38):11947-11952, 22 Sep 2015. PubMed ID: 26372963.
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Kalia2005
Vandana Kalia, Surojit Sarkar, Phalguni Gupta, and Ronald C. Montelaro. Antibody Neutralization Escape Mediated by Point Mutations in the Intracytoplasmic Tail of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 79(4):2097-2107, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15681412.
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Kang2005
Sang-Moo Kang, Fu Shi Quan, Chunzi Huang, Lizheng Guo, Ling Ye, Chinglai Yang, and Richard W. Compans. Modified HIV Envelope Proteins with Enhanced Binding to Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies. Virology, 331(1):20-32, 5 Jan 2005. PubMed ID: 15582650.
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Kelker2010
Hanna C. Kelker, Vincenza R. Itri, and Fred T. Valentine. A Strategy for Eliciting Antibodies against Cryptic, Conserved, Conformationally Dependent Epitopes of HIV Envelope Glycoprotein. PLoS One, 5(1):e8555, 2010. PubMed ID: 20052405.
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Kesavardhana2017
Sannula Kesavardhana, Raksha Das, Michael Citron, Rohini Datta, Linda Ecto, Nonavinakere Seetharam Srilatha, Daniel DiStefano, Ryan Swoyer, Joseph G. Joyce, Somnath Dutta, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Jessica A. Flynn, and Raghavan Varadarajan. Structure-Based Design of Cyclically Permuted HIV-1 gp120 Trimers That Elicit Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Biol. Chem., 292(1):278-291, 6 Jan 2017. PubMed ID: 27879316.
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Khouri1995
Y. F. Khouri, K. McIntosh, L. Cavacini, M. Posner, M. Pagano, R. Tuomala, and W. A. Marasco. Vertical Transmission of HIV-1. Correlation with Maternal Viral Load and Plasma Levels of CD4 Binding Site Anti-gp120 Antibodies. J. Clin. Invest., 95:732-737, 1995. Differences in levels of Abs directed against the monomeric gp120 and against the V3 loop region of gp120 were not significantly different between transmitting and non-transmitting mothers. Differences were observed in the levels of CD4 binding site antibodies, as determined by the ability of diluted maternal plasma to inhibit binding of the CD4 binding site monoclonal antibody F105 (MAb F105) to monomeric gp120. PubMed ID: 7860754.
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Klasse1993b
P. Klasse, J. A. McKeating, M. Schutten, M. S. Reitz, Jr., and M. Robert-Guroff. An Immune-Selected Point Mutation in the Transmembrane Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HXB2-Env:Ala 582(--> Thr)) Decreases Viral Neutralization by Monoclonal Antibodies to the CD4-Binding Site. Virology, 196:332-337, 1993. PubMed ID: 8356803.
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Klein2013
Florian Klein, Ron Diskin, Johannes F. Scheid, Christian Gaebler, Hugo Mouquet, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Marie Pancera, Tongqing Zhou, Reha-Baris Incesu, Brooks Zhongzheng Fu, Priyanthi N. P. Gnanapragasam, Thiago Y. Oliveira, Michael S. Seaman, Peter D. Kwong, Pamela J. Bjorkman, and Michel C. Nussenzweig. Somatic Mutations of the Immunoglobulin Framework Are Generally Required for Broad and Potent HIV-1 Neutralization. Cell, 153(1):126-138, 28 Mar 2013. PubMed ID: 23540694.
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Kolchinsky2001
P. Kolchinsky, E. Kiprilov, P. Bartley, R. Rubinstein, and J. Sodroski. Loss of a single N-linked glycan allows CD4-independent human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection by altering the position of the gp120 V1/V2 variable loops. J. Virol., 75(7):3435--43, Apr 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/7/3435. PubMed ID: 11238869.
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Anil Korkut and Wayne A. Hendrickson. Structural Plasticity and Conformational Transitions of HIV Envelope Glycoprotein gp120. PLoS One, 7(12):e52170, 2012. PubMed ID: 23300605.
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Kramer2007
Victor G. Kramer, Nagadenahalli B. Siddappa, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Passive Immunization as Tool to Identify Protective HIV-1 Env Epitopes. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):642-55, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045119.
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M. Kropelin, C. Susal, V. Daniel, and G. Opelz. Inhibition of HIV-1 rgp120 Binding to CD4+ T Cells by Monoclonal Antibodies Directed against the gp120 C1 or C4 Region. Immunol. Lett., 63:19-25, 1998. PubMed ID: 9719434.
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Kulp2017
Daniel W. Kulp, Jon M. Steichen, Matthias Pauthner, Xiaozhen Hu, Torben Schiffner, Alessia Liguori, Christopher A. Cottrell, Colin Havenar-Daughton, Gabriel Ozorowski, Erik Georgeson, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Jordan R. Willis, Michael Kubitz, Yumiko Adachi, Samantha M. Reiss, Mia Shin, Natalia de Val, Andrew B. Ward, Shane Crotty, Dennis R. Burton, and William R. Schief. Structure-Based Design of Native-Like HIV-1 Envelope Trimers to Silence Non-Neutralizing Epitopes and Eliminate CD4 Binding. Nat. Commun., 8(1):1655, 21 Nov 2017. PubMed ID: 29162799.
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Kwon2012
Young Do Kwon, Andrés Finzi, Xueling Wu, Cajetan Dogo-Isonagie, Lawrence K. Lee, Lucas R. Moore, Stephen D. Schmidt, Jonathan Stuckey, Yongping Yang, Tongqing Zhou, Jiang Zhu, David A. Vicic, Asim K. Debnath, Lawrence Shapiro, Carole A. Bewley, John R. Mascola, Joseph G. Sodroski, and Peter D. Kwong. Unliganded HIV-1 gp120 Core Structures Assume the CD4-Bound Conformation with Regulation by Quaternary Interactions and Variable Loops. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 109(15):5663-5668, 10 Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22451932.
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Kwon2015
Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Priyamvada Acharya, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Emma T. Crooks, Jason Gorman, M. Gordon Joyce, Miklos Guttman, Xiaochu Ma, Sandeep Narpala, Cinque Soto, Daniel S. Terry, Yongping Yang, Tongqing Zhou, Goran Ahlsen, Robert T. Bailer, Michael Chambers, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Aliaksandr Druz, Mark A. Hallen, Adam Harned, Tatsiana Kirys, Mark K. Louder, Sijy O'Dell, Gilad Ofek, Keiko Osawa, Madhu Prabhakaran, Mallika Sastry, Guillaume B. E. Stewart-Jones, Jonathan Stuckey, Paul V. Thomas, Tishina Tittley, Constance Williams, Baoshan Zhang, Hong Zhao, Zhou Zhou, Bruce R. Donald, Lawrence K. Lee, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Ulrich Baxa, Arne Schön, Ernesto Freire, Lawrence Shapiro, Kelly K. Lee, James Arthos, James B. Munro, Scott C. Blanchard, Walther Mothes, James M. Binley, Adrian B. McDermott, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Crystal Structure, Conformational Fixation and Entry-Related Interactions of Mature Ligand-Free HIV-1 Env. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 22(7):522-531, Jul 2015. PubMed ID: 26098315.
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Kwong2002
Peter D. Kwong, Michael L. Doyle, David J. Casper, Claudia Cicala, Stephanie A. Leavitt, Shahzad Majeed, Tavis D. Steenbeke, Miro Venturi, Irwin Chaiken, Michael Fung, Hermann Katinger, Paul W. I. H. Parren, James Robinson, Donald Van Ryk, Liping Wang, Dennis R. Burton, Ernesto Freire, Richard Wyatt, Joseph Sodroski, Wayne A. Hendrickson, and James Arthos. HIV-1 Evades Antibody-Mediated Neutralization through Conformational Masking of Receptor-Binding Sites. Nature, 420(6916):678-682, 12 Dec 2002. Comment in Nature. 2002 Dec 12;420(6916):623-4. PubMed ID: 12478295.
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Kwong2011
Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Gary J. Nabel. Rational Design of Vaccines to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to HIV-1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Med., 1(1):a007278, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 22229123.
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Lavine2012
Christy L. Lavine, Socheata Lao, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Joseph G. Sodroski, Xinzhen Yang, and NIAID Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI). High-Mannose Glycan-Dependent Epitopes Are Frequently Targeted in Broad Neutralizing Antibody Responses during Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection. J. Virol., 86(4):2153-2164, Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22156525.
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Leaman2010
Daniel P. Leaman, Heather Kinkead, and Michael B. Zwick. In-Solution Virus Capture Assay Helps Deconstruct Heterogeneous Antibody Recognition of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 84(7):3382-3395, Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20089658.
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Li1997
A. Li, T. W. Baba, J. Sodroski, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Robinson, M. R. Posner, H. Katinger, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, T.-C. Chou, and R. M Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of a Chimeric SIV/HIV Type 1 Virus with Combinations of Human Anti-HIV Type 1 Envelope Monoclonal Antibodies or Hyperimmune Globulins. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:647-656, 1997. Multiple combinations of MAbs were tested for their ability to synergize neutralization of a SHIV construct containing HIV IIIB env. All of the MAb combinations tried were synergistic, suggesting such combinations may be useful for passive immunotherapy or immunoprophylaxis. Because SHIV can replicate in rhesus macaques, such approaches can potentially be studied in an it in vivo monkey model. PubMed ID: 9168233.
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Li1998
A. Li, H. Katinger, M. R. Posner, L. Cavacini, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Sodroski, T. C. Chou, T. W. Baba, and R. M. Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIV-vpu+ by Triple and Quadruple Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies and High-Titer Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Immunoglobulins. J. Virol., 72:3235-3240, 1998. PubMed ID: 9525650.
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Li2007a
Yuxing Li, Stephen A. Migueles, Brent Welcher, Krisha Svehla, Adhuna Phogat, Mark K. Louder, Xueling Wu, George M. Shaw, Mark Connors, Richard T. Wyatt, and John R. Mascola. Broad HIV-1 Neutralization Mediated by CD4-Binding Site Antibodies. Nat. Med., 13(9):1032-1034, Sep 2007. PubMed ID: 17721546.
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Li2012
Yuxing Li, Sijy O'Dell, Richard Wilson, Xueling Wu, Stephen D. Schmidt, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, Mark K. Louder, Nancy S. Longo, Christian Poulsen, Javier Guenaga, Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mario Roederer, Mark Connors, John R. Mascola, and Richard T. Wyatt. HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Display Dual Recognition of the Primary and Coreceptor Binding Sites and Preferential Binding to Fully Cleaved Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 86(20):11231-11241, Oct 2012. PubMed ID: 22875963.
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Liang2016
Yu Liang, Miklos Guttman, James A. Williams, Hans Verkerke, Daniel Alvarado, Shiu-Lok Hu, and Kelly K. Lee. Changes in Structure and Antigenicity of HIV-1 Env Trimers Resulting from Removal of a Conserved CD4 Binding Site-Proximal Glycan. J. Virol., 90(20):9224-9236, 15 Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27489265.
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George Lin and Peter L. Nara. Designing Immunogens to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):514-541, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045109.
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Hong Ling, Xiao-Yan Zhang, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Activation of gp120 of Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Their V3 Loop-Derived Peptides. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 297(3):625-631, 27 Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12270140.
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Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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V. Litwin, K. A. Nagashima, A. M. Ryder, C. H. Chang, J. M. Carver, W. C. Olson, M. Alizon, K. W. Hasel, P. J. Maddon, and G. P. Allaway. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 membrane fusion mediated by a laboratory-adapted strain and a primary isolate analyzed by resonance energy transfer. J. Virol., 70:6437-6441, 1996. Fusion of primary (JRFL) and TCLA (LAI) strains of the virus were studied. The degree, kinetics, neutral pH and divalent cations requirements were similar for membrane fusion for both viruses. However, the inhibition of fusion by sCD4 and CD4-IgG2 occurred at virus neutralization concentrations for JRFL, but higher concentrations were required to inhibit LAI fusion than to neutralize LAI, suggesting that viral neutralization and fusion-inhibition are distinct. PubMed ID: 8709277.
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Liu2002
Xiao Song Liu, Wen Jun Liu, Kong Nan Zhao, Yue Hua Liu, Graham Leggatt, and Ian H. Frazer. Route of Administration of Chimeric BPV1 VLP Determines the Character of the Induced Immune Responses. Immunol. Cell Biol., 80(1):21-9, Feb 2002. PubMed ID: 11869359.
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Lynch2012
Rebecca M. Lynch, Lillian Tran, Mark K. Louder, Stephen D. Schmidt, Myron Cohen, CHAVI 001 Clinical Team Members, Rebecca DerSimonian, Zelda Euler, Elin S. Gray, Salim Abdool Karim, Jennifer Kirchherr, David C. Montefiori, Sengeziwe Sibeko, Kelly Soderberg, Georgia Tomaras, Zhi-Yong Yang, Gary J. Nabel, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Lynn Morris, Barton F. Haynes, and John R. Mascola. The Development of CD4 Binding Site Antibodies during HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 86(14):7588-7595, Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22573869.
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Lyumkis2013
Dmitry Lyumkis, Jean-Philippe Julien, Natalia de Val, Albert Cupo, Clinton S. Potter, Per-Johan Klasse, Dennis R. Burton, Rogier W. Sanders, John P. Moore, Bridget Carragher, Ian A. Wilson, and Andrew B. Ward. Cryo-EM Structure of a Fully Glycosylated Soluble Cleaved HIV-1 Envelope Trimer. Science, 342(6165):1484-1490, 20 Dec 2013. PubMed ID: 24179160.
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Carsten Magnus and Roland R. Regoes. Estimating the Stoichiometry of HIV Neutralization. PLoS Comput. Biol., 6(3):e1000713, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20333245.
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W. A. Marasco, J. Bagley, C. Zani, M. Posner, L. Cavacini, W. A. Haseltine, and J. Sodroski. Characterization of the cDNA of a Broadly Reactive Neutralizing Human anti-gp120 Monoclonal Antibody. J. Clin. Invest., 90:1467-1478, 1992. PubMed ID: 1401079.
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W. A. Marasco, W. A. Haseltine, and S. Y. Chen SY. Design, intracellular expression, and activity of a human anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120 single-chain antibody. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 90:7889-7893, 1993. Comment in Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1993 90:7427-8. PubMed ID: 8356098.
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Martin2008
Grégoire Martin, Yide Sun, Bernadette Heyd, Olivier Combes, Jeffrey B Ulmer, Anne Descours, Susan W Barnett, Indresh K Srivastava, and Loïc Martin. A Simple One-Step Method for the Preparation of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens Based on a CD4 Mimic Peptide. Virology, 381(2):241-250, 25 Nov 2008. PubMed ID: 18835005.
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Martin-Garcia2005
Julio Martín-García, Simon Cocklin, Irwin M. Chaiken, and Francisco González-Scarano. Interaction with CD4 and Antibodies to CD4-Induced Epitopes of the Envelope gp120 from a Microglial Cell-Adapted Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 79(11):6703-6713, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890908.
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Masiero2005
S. Masiero, C. Del Vecchio, R. Gavioli, G. Mattiuzzo, M. G. Cusi, L. Micheli, F. Gennari, A. Siccardi, W. A. Marasco, G. Palu, and C. Parolin. T-Cell Engineering by a Chimeric T-Cell Receptor with Antibody-Type Specificity for the HIV-1 gp120. Gene Ther., 12(4):299-310, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15496956.
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C. M. Mc Cann, R. J. Song, and R. M. Ruprecht. Antibodies: Can They Protect Against HIV Infection? Curr. Drug Targets Infect. Disord., 5(2):95-111, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15975016.
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J. S. McDougal, M. S. Kennedy, S. L. Orloff, J. K. A. Nicholson, and T. J. Spira. Mechanisms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Neutralization: Irreversible Inactivation of Infectivity by Anti-HIV-1 Antibody. J. Virol., 70:5236-5245, 1996. Studies of polyclonal sera autologous virus inactivation indicates that in individuals over time, viral populations emerge that are resistant to inactivating effects of earlier sera. PubMed ID: 8764033.
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McFadden2007
Karyn McFadden, Simon Cocklin, Hosahudya Gopi, Sabine Baxter, Sandya Ajith, Naheed Mahmood, Robin Shattock, and Irwin Chaiken. A Recombinant Allosteric Lectin Antagonist of HIV-1 Envelope gp120 Interactions. Proteins, 67(3):617-629, 15 May 2007. PubMed ID: 17348010.
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Mishra2020a
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Muzamil Ashraf Makhdoomi, Bimal Kumar Das, Rakesh Lodha, Sushil Kumar Kabra, and Kalpana Luthra. Broadly Neutralizing Plasma Antibodies Effective against Autologous Circulating Viruses in Infants with Multivariant HIV-1 Infection. Nat. Commun., 11(1):4409, 2 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32879304.
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Montefiori1993
D. C. Montefiori, B. S. Graham, J. Zhou, J. Zhou, R. A. Bucco, D. H. Schwartz, L. A. Cavacini, M. R. Posner, and the NIH-NIAID AIDS Vaccine Clinical Trials Network. V3-Specific Neutralizing Antibodies in Sera From HIV-1 gp160-Immunized Volunteers Block Virus Fusion and Act Synergistically with Human Monoclonal Antibody to the Conformation-dependent CD4 Binding Site of gp120. J. Clin. Invest., 92:840-847, 1993. PubMed ID: 8349820.
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Moody2015
M. Anthony Moody, Feng Gao, Thaddeus C. Gurley, Joshua D. Amos, Amit Kumar, Bhavna Hora, Dawn J. Marshall, John F. Whitesides, Shi-Mao Xia, Robert Parks, Krissey E. Lloyd, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Xiaozhi Lu, Mattia Bonsignori, Andrés Finzi, Nathan A. Vandergrift, S. Munir Alam, Guido Ferrari, Xiaoying Shen, Georgia D. Tomaras, Gift Kamanga, Myron S. Cohen, Noel E. Sam, Saidi Kapiga, Elin S. Gray, Nancy L. Tumba, Lynn Morris, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Miroslaw K. Gorny, John R. Mascola, Beatrice H. Hahn, George M. Shaw, Joseph G. Sodroski, Hua-Xin Liao, David C. Montefiori, Peter T. Hraber, Bette T. Korber, and Barton F. Haynes. Strain-Specific V3 and CD4 Binding Site Autologous HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Select Neutralization-Resistant Viruses. Cell Host Microbe., 18(3):354-362, 9 Sep 2015. PubMed ID: 26355218.
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J. P. Moore and D. D. Ho. Antibodies to discontinuous or conformationally sensitive epitopes on the gp120 glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 are highly prevalent in sera of infected humans. J. Virol., 67:863-875, 1993. CD4BS antibodies are prevalent in HIV-1-positive sera, while neutralizing MAbs to C4, V2, and V3 and MAbs to linear epitopes are less common. Most linear epitope MAbs in human sera are directed against the V3 region, and cross-reactive MAbs tend to be directed against discontinuous epitopes. PubMed ID: 7678308.
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Moyo2018
Thandeka Moyo, June Ereño-Orbea, Rajesh Abraham Jacob, Clara E. Pavillet, Samuel Mundia Kariuki, Emily N. Tangie, Jean-Philippe Julien, and Jeffrey R. Dorfman. Molecular Basis of Unusually High Neutralization Resistance in Tier 3 HIV-1 Strain 253-11. J. Virol., 92(14), 15 Jul 2018. PubMed ID: 29618644.
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Ohagen2003
Asa Ohagen, Amy Devitt, Kevin J. Kunstman, Paul R. Gorry, Patrick P. Rose, Bette Korber, Joann Taylor, Robert Levy, Robert L. Murphy, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Genetic and Functional Analysis of Full-Length Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 env Genes Derived from Brain and Blood of Patients with AIDS. J. Virol., 77(22):12336-12345, Nov 2003. PubMed ID: 14581570.
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Oscherwitz1999
J. Oscherwitz, F. M. Gotch, K. B. Cease, and J. A. Berzofsky. New Insights and Approaches Regarding B- and T-Cell Epitopes in HIV Vaccine Design. AIDS, 13(Suppl A):S163-174, 1999. PubMed ID: 10885773.
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Pacheco2008
Beatriz Pacheco, Stephane Basmaciogullari, Jason A. Labonte, Shi-Hua Xiang, and Joseph Sodroski. Adaptation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins to New World Monkey Receptors. J. Virol., 82(1):346-357, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17959679.
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Pancera2005
Marie Pancera and Richard Wyatt. Selective Recognition of Oligomeric HIV-1 Primary Isolate Envelope Glycoproteins by Potently Neutralizing Ligands Requires Efficient Precursor Cleavage. Virology, 332(1):145-156, 5 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15661147.
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Pancera2005a
Marie Pancera, Jacob Lebowitz, Arne Schön, Ping Zhu, Ernesto Freire, Peter D. Kwong, Kenneth H. Roux, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Soluble Mimetics of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Viral Spikes Produced by Replacement of the Native Trimerization Domain with a Heterologous Trimerization Motif: Characterization and Ligand Binding Analysis. J. Virol., 79(15):9954-9969, Aug 2005. PubMed ID: 16014956.
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Pancera2010a
Marie Pancera, Shahzad Majeed, Yih-En Andrew Ban, Lei Chen, Chih-chin Huang, Leopold Kong, Young Do Kwon, Jonathan Stuckey, Tongqing Zhou, James E. Robinson, William R. Schief, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure of HIV-1 gp120 with gp41-Interactive Region Reveals Layered Envelope Architecture and Basis of Conformational Mobility. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(3):1166-1171, 19 Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 20080564.
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Pantophlet2003
Ralph Pantophlet, Erica Ollmann Saphire, Pascal Poignard, Paul W. H. I. Parren, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Fine Mapping of the Interaction of Neutralizing and Nonneutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies with the CD4 Binding Site of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120. J. Virol., 77(1):642-658, Jan 2003. PubMed ID: 12477867.
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Pantophlet2003b
Ralph Pantophlet, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Hyperglycosylated Mutants of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Monomeric gp120 as Novel Antigens for HIV Vaccine Design. J. Virol., 77(10):5889-8901, May 2003. PubMed ID: 12719582.
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Pantophlet2004
R. Pantophlet, I. A. Wilson, and D. R. Burton. Improved Design of an Antigen with Enhanced Specificity for the Broadly HIV-Neutralizing Antibody b12. Protein Eng. Des. Sel., 17(10):749-758, Oct 2004. PubMed ID: 15542540.
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Park2000
E. J. Park, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and G. V. Quinnan. A global neutralization resistance phenotype of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is determined by distinct mechanisms mediating enhanced infectivity and conformational change of the envelope complex. J. Virol., 74:4183-91, 2000. PubMed ID: 10756031.
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Parren1997
P. W. Parren, M. C. Gauduin, R. A. Koup, P. Poignard, Q. J. Sattentau, P. Fisicaro, and D. R. Burton. Erratum to Relevance of the Antibody Response against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope to Vaccine Design. Immunol. Lett., 58:125-132, 1997. corrected and republished article originally printed in Immunol. Lett. 1997 Jun;57(1-3):105-112. PubMed ID: 9271324.
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Perdomo2008
Maria F. Perdomo, Michael Levi, Matti Sällberg, and Anders Vahlne. Neutralization of HIV-1 by Redirection of Natural Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(34):12515-12520, 26 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18719129.
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Phogat2007
S. Phogat, R. T. Wyatt, and G. B. Karlsson Hedestam. Inhibition of HIV-1 Entry by Antibodies: Potential Viral and Cellular Targets. J. Intern. Med., 262(1):26-43, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17598813.
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S. H. Pincus, K. G. Messer, D. H. Schwartz, G. K. Lewis, B. S. Graham, W. A. Blattner, and G. Fisher. Differences in the Antibody Response to Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Envelope Glycoprotein (gp160) in Infected Laboratory Workers and Vaccinees. J. Clin. Invest., 91:1987-1996, 1993. PubMed ID: 7683694.
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Pincus1996
S. H. Pincus, K. Wehrly, R. Cole, H. Fang, G. K. Lewis, J. McClure, A. J. Conley, B. Wahren, M. R. Posner, A. L. Notkins, S. A. Tilley, A. Pinter, L. Eiden, M. Teintze, D. Dorward, and V. V. Tolstikov. In Vitro Effects of Anti-HIV Immunotoxins Directed against Multiple Epitopes on HIV Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein 160. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 12:1041-1051, 1996. A panel of anti-gp160 MAbs to was used to construct anti-HIV immunotoxins by coupling antibodies to ricin A chain (RAC). The ability of the immunotoxins to kill HIV-1-infected cells was tested in tissue culture. Immunotoxins that bind epitopes on the cell surface killed infected cells, although killing was not directly proportional to binding. The activity of anti-gp41 immunotoxins was markedly enhanced in the presence of sCD4. PubMed ID: 8827220.
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Poignard2003
Pascal Poignard, Maxime Moulard, Edwin Golez, Veronique Vivona, Michael Franti, Sara Venturini, Meng Wang, Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. Heterogeneity of Envelope Molecules Expressed on Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Particles as Probed by the Binding of Neutralizing and Nonneutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 77(1):353-365, Jan 2003. PubMed ID: 12477840.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Posner1992
M. R. Posner, H. S. Elboim, T. Cannon, L. Cavicini, and T. Hideshima. Functional Activity of an HIV-1 Neutralizing IgG Human Monoclonal Antibody: ADCC and Complement-Mediated Lysis. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 8:553-558, 1992. PubMed ID: 1381201.
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Posner1992a
M. Posner, L. Cavacini, C. Emes, J. Power, M. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the V3 Loop of gp120 Mediate Variable and Distinct Effects on Binding and Viral Neutralization by a Human Monoclonal Antibody to the CD4 Binding Site. J. Cell Biochem., Suppl O(16 part E):69, 1992.
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Posner1993
M. R. Posner, L. A. Cavacini, C. L. Emes, J. Power, and R. Byrn. Neutralization of HIV-1 by F105, a Human Monoclonal Antibody to the CD4 Binding Site of gp120. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr., 6:7-14, 1993. PubMed ID: 8417177.
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Posner1995
M. R. Posner, L. A. Cavacini, J. Gambertoglio, C. Spino, E. Wolfe, C. Trapnell, N. Ketter, S. Hammer, and M. Samore. An ACTG Phase Ia Safety and Pharmacokinetic Trial of Immunotherapy with the Anti-CD4 Binding Site Human Monoclonal Antibody F105. Natl. Conf. Hum. Retroviruses Relat. Infect. (2nd), 1995:150, 1995. Aidsline: 95920546 Abstract: Eight HIV-positive asymptomatic individuals were given F105 by intravenous infusion. There were no clinical side effects or changes in biochemical tests among the eight volunteers. The plasma half life of F105 had a range of 8.7-18.6 days.
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Potts1993
B. J. Potts, K. G. Field, Y. Wu, M. Posner, L. Cavacini, and M. White-Scharf. Synergistic Inhibition of HIV-1 by CD4 Binding Domain Reagents and V3-Directed Monoclonal Antibodies. Virology, 197:415-419, 1993. Four anti-V3 loop MAbs, (59.1, 83.1, 50.1, and 58.2), were evaluated for their affinity, neutralization potencies, and their ability to synergize F105 or sCD4 neutralization. The most important parameter for synergy was the capacity to neutralize a given virus independently. PubMed ID: 8212576.
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Prabakaran2006
Ponraj Prabakaran, Jianhua Gan, You-Qiang Wu, Mei-Yun Zhang, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, and Xinhua Ji. Structural Mimicry of CD4 by a Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibody with CDR-H2 and H3 Containing Unique Motifs. J. Mol. Biol., 357(1):82-99, 17 Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16426633.
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Prevost2018
Jérémie Prévost, Jonathan Richard, Shilei Ding, Beatriz Pacheco, Roxanne Charlebois, Beatrice H Hahn, Daniel E Kaufmann, and Andrés Finzi. Envelope Glycoproteins Sampling States 2/3 Are Susceptible to ADCC by Sera from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. Virology, 515:38-45, Feb 2018. PubMed ID: 29248757.
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Pugach2015
Pavel Pugach, Gabriel Ozorowski, Albert Cupo, Rajesh Ringe, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Ronald Derking, Helen J. Kim, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de Los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Jean-Philippe Julien, Dennis R. Burton, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, P. J. Klasse, Andrew B. Ward, and John P. Moore. A Native-Like SOSIP.664 Trimer Based on an HIV-1 Subtype B env Gene. J. Virol., 89(6):3380-3395, Mar 2015. PubMed ID: 25589637.
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Raja2003
Aarti Raja, Miro Venturi, Peter Kwong, and Joseph Sodroski. CD4 Binding Site Antibodies Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein Interaction with CCR5. J. Virol., 77(1):713-718, Jan 2003. PubMed ID: 12477875.
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RobertGuroff2000
Marjorie Robert-Guroff. IgG Surfaces as an Important Component in Mucosal Protection. Nat. Med., 6(2):129-130, Feb 2000. PubMed ID: 10655090.
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Saha2012
Piyali Saha, Sanchari Bhattacharyya, Sannula Kesavardhana, Edward Roshan Miranda, P. Shaik Syed Ali, Deepak Sharma, and Raghavan Varadarajan. Designed Cyclic Permutants of HIV-1 gp120: Implications for Envelope Trimer Structure and Immunogen Design. Biochemistry, 51(9):1836-1847, 6 Mar 2012. PubMed ID: 22329717.
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Sanders2013
Rogier W. Sanders, Ronald Derking, Albert Cupo, Jean-Philippe Julien, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Helen J. Kim, Claudia Blattner, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Marit J. van Gils, C. Richter King, Ian A. Wilson, Andrew B. Ward, P. J. Klasse, and John P. Moore. A Next-Generation Cleaved, Soluble HIV-1 Env Trimer, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, Expresses Multiple Epitopes for Broadly Neutralizing but not Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 9(9):e1003618, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 24068931.
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Schiffner2016
Torben Schiffner, Natalia de Val, Rebecca A. Russell, Steven W. de Taeye, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Gabriel Ozorowski, Helen J. Kim, Travis Nieusma, Florian Brod, Albert Cupo, Rogier W. Sanders, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Chemical Cross-Linking Stabilizes Native-Like HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimer Antigens. J. Virol., 90(2):813-828, 28 Oct 2015. PubMed ID: 26512083.
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Schiffner2018
Torben Schiffner, Jesper Pallesen, Rebecca A. Russell, Jonathan Dodd, Natalia de Val, Celia C. LaBranche, David Montefiori, Georgia D. Tomaras, Xiaoying Shen, Scarlett L. Harris, Amin E. Moghaddam, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Rogier W. Sanders, Laura E. McCoy, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Structural and Immunologic Correlates of Chemically Stabilized HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins. PLoS Pathog., 14(5):e1006986, May 2018. PubMed ID: 29746590.
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Selvarajah2005
Suganya Selvarajah, Bridget Puffer, Ralph Pantophlet, Mansun Law, Robert W. Doms, and Dennis R. Burton. Comparing Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of Engineered gp120. J. Virol., 79(19):12148-12163, Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16160142.
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Si2001
Zhihai Si, Mark Cayabyab, and Joseph Sodroski. Envelope Glycoprotein Determinants of nEutralization Resistance in a Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV-HXBc2P 3.2) Derived by Passage in Monkeys. J. Virol., 75(9):4208-4218, May 2001. PubMed ID: 11287570.
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Srivastava2005
Indresh K. Srivastava, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Role of Neutralizing Antibodies in Protective Immunity Against HIV. Hum. Vaccin., 1(2):45-60, Mar-Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 17038830.
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Sugiura1999
W. Sugiura, C. C. Broder, B. Moss, and P. L. Earl. Characterization of conformation-dependent anti-gp120 murine monoclonal antibodies produced by immunization with monomeric and oligomeric human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope proteins. Virology, 254:257-67, 1999. PubMed ID: 9986792.
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Sullivan1995
N. Sullivan, Y. Sun, J. Li, W. Hofmann, and J. Sodroski. Replicative Function and Neutralization Sensitivity of Envelope Glycoproteins from Primary and T-Cell Line-Passaged Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates. J. Virol., 69:4413-4422, 1995. Three gp120 molecules derived from primary isolates were compared to T-cell adapted lines HXBc2 and MN. Complementation experiments showed viral entry into peripheral blood mononuclear cell targets was five-fold less efficient for primary isolates. Anti-CD4 binding site neutralizing MAbs were far less potent against primary isolates, and the single anti-V3 MAb tested was 3-fold less potent. The differences in neutralization efficiency could not be attributed to differences in affinity for monomeric gp120, but were related to binding to the oligomeric complex. Enhanced infectivity of primary isolates was observed using sCD4 and MAb F105, which can neutralize T-cell adapted strains. PubMed ID: 7769703.
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Sullivan1998b
N. Sullivan, Y. Sun, J. Binley, J. Lee, C. F. Barbas III, P. W. H. I. Parren, D. R. Burton, and J. Sodroski. Determinants of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein activation by soluble CD4 and monoclonal antibodies. J. Virol., 72:6332-8, 1998. PubMed ID: 9658072.
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Sundling2012
Christopher Sundling, Yuxing Li, Nick Huynh, Christian Poulsen, Richard Wilson, Sijy O'Dell, Yu Feng, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam. High-Resolution Definition of Vaccine-Elicited B Cell Responses Against the HIV Primary Receptor Binding Site. Sci. Transl. Med., 4(142):142ra96, 11 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22786681.
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Teeraputon2005
Sirilak Teeraputon, Suda Louisirirojchanakul, and Prasert Auewarakul. N-Linked Glycosylation in C2 Region of HIV-1 Envelope Reduces Sensitivity to Neutralizing Antibodies. Viral Immunol., 18(2):343-353, Summer 2005. PubMed ID: 16035946.
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Thali1991
M. Thali, U. Olshevsky, C. Furman, D. Gabuzda, M. Posner, and J. Sodroski. Characterization of a discontinuous human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120 epitope recognized by a broadly reactive neutralizing human monoclonal antibody. J. Virol., 65(11):6188-6193, 1991. An early detailed characterization of the mutations that inhibit the neutralization capacity of the MAb F105, that binds to a discontinuous epitope and inhibits CD4 binding to gp120. PubMed ID: 1717717.
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Thali1992a
M. Thali, C. Furman, D. D. Ho, J. Robinson, S. Tilley, A. Pinter, and J. Sodroski. Discontinuous, Conserved Neutralization Epitopes Overlapping the CD4-Binding Region of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 66:5635-5641, 1992. Maps the relationship between amino acid substitutions that reduce CD4-gp120 interaction, and amino acid substitutions that reduce the binding of discontinuous epitope MAbs that inhibit CD4 binding. PubMed ID: 1380099.
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Thali1994
M. Thali, M. Charles, C. Furman, L. Cavacini, M. Posner, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Resistance to Neutralization by Broadly Reactive Antibodies to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Glycoprotein Conferred by a gp41 Amino Acid Change. J. Virol., 68:674-680, 1994. A T->A amino acid substitution at position 582 of gp41 conferred resistance to neutralization to 30\% of HIV positive sera (Wilson et al. J Virol 64:3240-48 (1990)). Monoclonal antibodies that bound to the CD4 binding site were unable to neutralize this virus, but the mutation did not reduce the neutralizing capacity of a V2 region MAb G3-4, V3 region MAbs, or gp41 neutralizing MAb 2F5. PubMed ID: 7507184.
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Turbica1995
I. Turbica, M. Posner, C. Bruck, and F. Barin. Simple Enzyme Immunoassay for Titration of Antibodies to the CD4-Binding Site of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120. J. Clin. Microbiol., 33:3319-3323, 1995. PubMed ID: 8586727.
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Visciano2008
Maria Luisa Visciano, Michael Tuen, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Catarina E. Hioe. In Vivo Alteration of Humoral Responses to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp120 by Antibodies to the CD4-Binding Site of gp120. Virology, 372(2):409-420, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18054978.
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Wang2007a
Bao-Zhong Wang, Weimin Liu, Sang-Moo Kang, Munir Alam, Chunzi Huang, Ling Ye, Yuliang Sun, Yingying Li, Denise L. Kothe, Peter Pushko, Terje Dokland, Barton F. Haynes, Gale Smith, Beatrice H. Hahn, and Richard W. Compans. Incorporation of High Levels of Chimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins into Virus-Like Particles. J. Virol., 81(20):10869-10878, Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17670815.
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Watkins1993
B. A. Watkins, M. S. Reitz, Jr., C. A. Wilson, K. Aldrich, A. E. Davis, and M. Robert-Guroff. Immune escape by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 from neutralizing antibodies: evidence for multiple pathways. J. Virol., 67:7493-7500, 1993. A neutralization resistance point mutation (HXB2 A281V) was studied using a variety of MAbs, and it was shown that this substitution affects a different epitope than a previously characterized neutralization escape mutant (A582T) (Reitz 1988, Wilson 1990). PubMed ID: 7693973.
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Wilkinson2005
Royce A. Wilkinson, Chayne Piscitelli, Martin Teintze, Lisa A. Cavacini, Marshall R. Posner, and C. Martin Lawrence. Structure of the Fab Fragment of F105, a Broadly Reactive Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Antibody That Recognizes the CD4 Binding Site of HIV Type 1 gp120. J. Virol., 79(20):13060-13069, Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16189008.
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Wilkinson2007
Royce A. Wilkinson, Jody R. Evans, Jon M. Jacobs, Dustin Slunaker, Seth H. Pincus, Abraham Pinter, Charles A. Parkos, James B. Burritt, and Martin Teintze. Peptides Selected from a Phage Display Library with an HIV-Neutralizing Antibody Elicit Antibodies to HIV gp120 in Rabbits, But Not to The Same Epitope. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 23(11):1416-1427, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18184085.
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Williams2017a
Wilton B. Williams, Jinsong Zhang, Chuancang Jiang, Nathan I. Nicely, Daniela Fera, Kan Luo, M. Anthony Moody, Hua-Xin Liao, S. Munir Alam, Thomas B. Kepler, Akshaya Ramesh, Kevin Wiehe, James A. Holland, Todd Bradley, Nathan Vandergrift, Kevin O. Saunders, Robert Parks, Andrew Foulger, Shi-Mao Xia, Mattia Bonsignori, David C. Montefiori, Mark Louder, Amanda Eaton, Sampa Santra, Richard Scearce, Laura Sutherland, Amanda Newman, Hilary Bouton-Verville, Cindy Bowman, Howard Bomze, Feng Gao, Dawn J. Marshall, John F. Whitesides, Xiaoyan Nie, Garnett Kelsoe, Steven G. Reed, Christopher B. Fox, Kim Clary, Marguerite Koutsoukos, David Franco, John R. Mascola, Stephen C. Harrison, Barton F. Haynes, and Laurent Verkoczy. Initiation of HIV Neutralizing B Cell Lineages with Sequential Envelope Immunizations. Nat. Commun., 8(1):1732, 23 Nov 2017. PubMed ID: 29170366.
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Willis2022
Jordan R. Willis, Zachary T. Berndsen, Krystal M. Ma, Jon M. Steichen, Torben Schiffner, Elise Landais, Alessia Liguori, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Joel D. Allen, Sabyasachi Baboo, Oluwarotimi Omorodion, Jolene K. Diedrich, Xiaozhen Hu, Erik Georgeson, Nicole Phelps, Saman Eskandarzadeh, Bettina Groschel, Michael Kubitz, Yumiko Adachi, Tina-Marie Mullin, Nushin B. Alavi, Samantha Falcone, Sunny Himansu, Andrea Carfi, Ian A. Wilson, John R. Yates III, James C. Paulson, Max Crispin, Andrew B. Ward, and William R. Schief. Human immunoglobulin repertoire analysis guides design of vaccine priming immunogens targeting HIV V2-apex broadly neutralizing antibody precursors. Immunity, 55(11):2149-2167e9 doi, Nov 2022. PubMed ID: 36179689
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Wisnewski1996
A. Wisnewski, L. Cavacini, and M. Posner. Human antibody variable region gene usage in HIV-1 infection. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. Hum. Retrovirol., 11:31-38, 1996. PubMed ID: 8528730.
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Wolfe1996
E. J. Wolfe, L. A. Cavacini, M. H. Samore, M. R. Posner, C. Kozial, C. Spino, C. B. Trapnell, N. Ketter, S. Hammer, and J. G. Gambertoglio. Pharmacokinetics of F105, a Human Monoclonal Antibody, in Persons Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther., 59:662-667, 1996. PubMed ID: 8681491.
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Wu2008
Xueling Wu, Anna Sambor, Martha C. Nason, Zhi-Yong Yang, Lan Wu, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Soluble CD4 Broadens Neutralization of V3-Directed Monoclonal Antibodies and Guinea Pig Vaccine Sera against HIV-1 Subtype B and C Reference Viruses. Virology, 380(2):285-295, 25 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18804254.
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Wu2009
Xueling Wu, Tongqing Zhou, Sijy O'Dell, Richard T. Wyatt, Peter D. Kwong, and John R. Mascola. Mechanism of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Resistance to Monoclonal Antibody b12 That Effectively Targets the Site of CD4 Attachment. J. Virol., 83(21):10892-10907, Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19692465.
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Wu2009a
Lan Wu, Tongqing Zhou, Zhi-yong Yang, Krisha Svehla, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Ling Xu, John R. Mascola, Dennis R. Burton, James A. Hoxie, Robert W. Doms, Peter D. Kwong, and Gary J. Nabel. Enhanced Exposure of the CD4-Binding Site to Neutralizing Antibodies by Structural Design of a Membrane-Anchored Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Domain. J. Virol., 83(10):5077-5086, May 2009. PubMed ID: 19264769.
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Wu2010
Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Yuxing Li, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, William R. Schief, Michael S. Seaman, Tongqing Zhou, Stephen D. Schmidt, Lan Wu, Ling Xu, Nancy S. Longo, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Diane L. Wycuff, Yu Feng, Martha Nason, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, Peter D. Kwong, Mario Roederer, Richard T. Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Rational Design of Envelope Identifies Broadly Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies to HIV-1. Science, 329(5993):856-861, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616233.
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Wu2011
Xueling Wu, Tongqing Zhou, Jiang Zhu, Baoshan Zhang, Ivelin Georgiev, Charlene Wang, Xuejun Chen, Nancy S. Longo, Mark Louder, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Stephen Perfetto, Stephen D. Schmidt, Wei Shi, Lan Wu, Yongping Yang, Zhi-Yong Yang, Zhongjia Yang, Zhenhai Zhang, Mattia Bonsignori, John A. Crump, Saidi H. Kapiga, Noel E. Sam, Barton F. Haynes, Melissa Simek, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, James C. Mullikin, Gary J. Nabel, Mario Roederer, Lawrence Shapiro, Peter D. Kwong, and John R. Mascola. Focused Evolution of HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Revealed by Structures and Deep Sequencing. Science, 333(6049):1593-1602, 16 Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21835983.
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Wyatt1992
R. Wyatt, M. Thali, S. Tilley, A. Pinter, M. Posner, D. Ho, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Relationship of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Third Variable Loop to Elements of the CD4 Binding Site. J. Virol., 66:6997-7004, 1992. This paper examines mutations which alter MAb binding and neutralization. Anti-V3 MAb 9284 has enhanced binding due to a mutation in the C4 region that is also important for CD4 binding, and anti-CD4 binding MAbs F105, 1.5e and 1125H show increased precipitation of a gp120 from which the V3 loop was deleted, relative to wild type, in RIPA buffer containing non-ionic detergents. PubMed ID: 1279195.
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Wyatt1993
R. Wyatt, N. Sullivan, M. Thali, H. Repke, D. Ho, J. Robinson, M. Posner, and J. Sodroski. Functional and Immunologic Characterization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins Containing Deletions of the Major Variable Regions. J. Virol., 67:4557-4565, 1993. Affinity of neutralizing MAbs directed against the CD4 binding site was increased dramatically by deletion mutants across the V1/V2 and V3 structures, suggesting that these domains mask these conserved discontinuous epitopes. PubMed ID: 8331723.
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Wyatt1997
R. Wyatt, E. Desjardin, U. Olshevsky, C. Nixon, J. Binley, V. Olshevsky, and J. Sodroski. Analysis of the Interaction of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein with the gp41 Transmembrane Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 71:9722-9731, 1997. This study characterized the binding of gp120 and gp41 by comparing Ab reactivity to soluble gp120 and to a soluble complex of gp120 and gp41 called sgp140. The occlusion of gp120 epitopes in the sgp140 complex provides a guide to the gp120 domains that interact with gp41, localizing them in C1 and C5 of gp120. Mutations that disrupt the binding of the occluded antibodies do not influence NAb binding or CD4 binding, thus if the gp41 binding domain is deleted, the immunologically desirable features of gp120 for vaccine design are still intact. PubMed ID: 9371638.
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Wyatt1998
R. Wyatt, P. D. Kwong, E. Desjardins, R. W. Sweet, J. Robinson, W. A. Hendrickson, and J. G. Sodroski. The Antigenic Structure of the HIV gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. Nature, 393:705-711, 1998. Comment in Nature 1998 Jun 18;393(6686):630-1. The spatial organization of the neutralizing epitopes of gp120 is described, based on epitope maps interpreted in the context of the X-ray crystal structure of a ternary complex that includes a gp120 core, CD4 and a neutralizing antibody. PubMed ID: 9641684.
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Xiang2002
Shi-Hua. Xiang, Peter D. Kwong, Rishi Gupta, Carlo D. Rizzuto, David J. Casper, Richard Wyatt, Liping Wang, Wayne A. Hendrickson, Michael L. Doyle, and Joseph Sodroski. Mutagenic Stabilization and/or Disruption of a CD4-Bound State Reveals Distinct Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 76(19):9888-9899, Oct 2002. PubMed ID: 12208966.
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Xiang2003
Shi-Hua Xiang, Liping Wang, Mariam Abreu, Chih-Chin Huang, Peter D. Kwong, Eric Rosenberg, James E. Robinson, and Joseph Sodroski. Epitope Mapping and Characterization of a Novel CD4-Induced Human Monoclonal Antibody Capable of Neutralizing Primary HIV-1 Strains. Virology, 315(1):124-134, 10 Oct 2003. PubMed ID: 14592765.
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Xu2002
Weidong Xu, Regina Hofmann-Lehmann, Harold M. McClure, and Ruth M. Ruprecht. Passive Immunization with Human Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies: Correlates of Protective Immunity against HIV. Vaccine, 20(15):1956-1960, 6 May 2002. PubMed ID: 11983253.
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Yang2000
Xinzhen Yang, Michael Farzan, Richard Wyatt, and Joseph Sodroski. Characterization of Stable, Soluble Trimers Containing Complete Ectodomains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 74(12):5716-5725, Jun 2000. PubMed ID: 10823881.
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Yang2002
Xinzhen Yang, Juliette Lee, Erin M. Mahony, Peter D. Kwong, Richard Wyatt, and Joseph Sodroski. Highly Stable Trimers Formed by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins Fused with the Trimeric Motif of T4 Bacteriophage Fibritin. J. Virol., 76(9):4634-4642, 1 May 2002. PubMed ID: 11932429.
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Yang2005b
Xinzhen Yang, Svetla Kurteva, Sandra Lee, and Joseph Sodroski. Stoichiometry of Antibody Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 79(6):3500-3508, Mar 2005. PubMed ID: 15731244.
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York2001
J. York, K. E. Follis, M. Trahey, P. N. Nyambi, S. Zolla-Pazner, and J. H. Nunberg. Antibody binding and neutralization of primary and T-cell line-adapted isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 75(6):2741--52, Mar 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/6/2741. PubMed ID: 11222697.
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Yu2018
Wen-Han Yu, Peng Zhao, Monia Draghi, Claudia Arevalo, Christina B. Karsten, Todd J. Suscovich, Bronwyn Gunn, Hendrik Streeck, Abraham L. Brass, Michael Tiemeyer, Michael Seaman, John R. Mascola, Lance Wells, Douglas A. Lauffenburger, and Galit Alter. Exploiting Glycan Topography for Computational Design of Env Glycoprotein Antigenicity. PLoS Comput. Biol., 14(4):e1006093, Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29677181.
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Yuan2005
Wen Yuan, Stewart Craig, Xinzhen Yang, and Joseph Sodroski. Inter-Subunit Disulfide Bonds in Soluble HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. Virology, 332(1):369-383, 5 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15661168.
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Yuan2006
Wen Yuan, Jessica Bazick, and Joseph Sodroski. Characterization of the Multiple Conformational States of Free Monomeric and Trimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins after Fixation by Cross-Linker. J. Virol., 80(14):6725-6737, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16809278.
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Zhang2002
Peng Fei Zhang, Peter Bouma, Eun Ju Park, Joseph B. Margolick, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Michael N. Flora, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. A Variable Region 3 (V3) Mutation Determines a Global Neutralization Phenotype and CD4-Independent Infectivity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Associated with a Broadly Cross-Reactive, Primary Virus-Neutralizing Antibody Response. J. Virol., 76(2):644-655, Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11752155.
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Zhou2007
Tongqing Zhou, Ling Xu, Barna Dey, Ann J. Hessell, Donald Van Ryk, Shi-Hua Xiang, Xinzhen Yang, Mei-Yun Zhang, Michael B. Zwick, James Arthos, Dennis R. Burton, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Definition of a Conserved Neutralization Epitope on HIV-1 gp120. Nature, 445(7129):732-737, 15 Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 17301785.
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Zhou2010
Tongqing Zhou, Ivelin Georgiev, Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Kaifan Dai, Andrés Finzi, Young Do Kwon, Johannes F. Scheid, Wei Shi, Ling Xu, Yongping Yang, Jiang Zhu, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Joseph Sodroski, Lawrence Shapiro, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody VRC01. Science, 329(5993):811-817, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616231.
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Zwick2003a
Michael B. Zwick, Robert Kelleher, Richard Jensen, Aran F. Labrijn, Meng Wang, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. A Novel Human Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Is V1, V2, and V3 Loop Dependent and Helps Delimit the Epitope of the Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Immunoglobulin G1 b12. J. Virol., 77(12):6965-6978, Jun 2003. PubMed ID: 12768015.
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Sliepen2019
Kwinten Sliepen, Byung Woo Han, Ilja Bontjer, Petra Mooij, Fernando Garces, Anna-Janina Behrens, Kimmo Rantalainen, Sonu Kumar, Anita Sarkar, Philip J. M. Brouwer, Yuanzi Hua, Monica Tolazzi, Edith Schermer, Jonathan L. Torres, Gabriel Ozorowski, Patricia van der Woude, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Marielle J. van Breemen, Juan Miguel Camacho-Sanchez, Judith A. Burger, Max Medina-Ramirez, Nuria Gonzalez, Jose Alcami, Celia LaBranche, Gabriella Scarlatti, Marit J. van Gils, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, Andrew B. Ward, Gerrit Koopman, John P. Moore, Robin J. Shattock, Willy M. Bogers, Ian A. Wilson, and Rogier W. Sanders. Structure and immunogenicity of a stabilized HIV-1 envelope trimer based on a group-M consensus sequence. Nat Commun, 10(1):2355 doi, May 2019. PubMed ID: 31142746
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Displaying record number 791
Download this epitope
record as JSON.
MAb ID |
50-69 (SZ-50.69, 50-69D, 50.69, 50-6910) |
HXB2 Location |
Env DNA(7959..8033) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp41( BH10) |
Research Contact |
Susan Zolla-Pazner (Zollas01@mcrcr6.med.nyu), NYU, NY |
Epitope |
(Discontinuous epitope)
|
Ab Type |
gp41 cluster I |
Neutralizing |
no |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG2κ) |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, binding affinity, complement, dendritic cells, effector function, enhancing activity, immunotoxin, kinetics, mimotopes, neutralization, rate of progression, review, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity |
Notes
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45 notes.
-
50-69D: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
50-69:The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
50-69: Directed antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, ADCC.
Tyler1990
(effector function)
-
50-69: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 50-69 is discussed as the Cluster I (HR2)region-targeting, non-neutralizing anti-gp41 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a discontinuous epitope.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
50-69: The capacity of 50-69 to block completely the activity of the anti-HIV peptide T20 was investigated. T20 inhibited the fusion or syncytia formation between co-cultured CHO-WT cells expressing HIV-1 HXB2 envelope glycoprotein on their surface and HeLaT4 cells. 50-69 was not able to block the anti-fusion effect of T20.
Vincent2012
(antibody interactions)
-
50-69D: Study demonstrated that polyreactivity is common among human gp41 cluster II (98-6, 167-D and 126-6)but not cluster I (240D, 246D, 50-69D) antibodies. However, unlike 2F5, cluster II MAbs bind strongly to oligomeric forms of Env gp140 but not to gp41 peptide complexes, suggesting that polyreactivity is necessary but not sufficient for neutralization.
Dennison2011a
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
50-69: 50-69 recognized trimeric, dimeric and monomeric forms of cross-linked sgp140(-) Env glycoprotein, but it precipitated monomeric and dimeric forms less efficiently, indicating that the conformation of the cluster I region can be influenced by the oligomeric state of HIV-1 envelope proteins.
Yuan2009
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69D: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:1-69*01, IGHD:2-21, D-RF:2, IGHJ:4. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
50-69: 50-69 reacted with maltose-binding protein MBP32, containing both HR1 and HR2 domains of gp41, but did not react with MBP37 and MBP44, containing only the HR2 domain, nor with MBP-HR1, containing only the HR1 domain. In addition, 50-69 bound to MBP44/N36 and MBP-HR1/C34 complexes reaching a plateau at a concentration of ˜; 1 µg/ml. In ELISA, 50-69 reacted with the complex formed between MBP-HR1 and H44 (His-targeted protein) and C34, but failed to recognize the mixture of MBP-HR1 and T20, MBP3 and C34, and MBP3 and H44. In addition, 50-69 failed to recognize the peptide complex N36/C34.
Vincent2008
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: This Ab was used in the analysis of clade C gp140 (97CN54) antigenicity and was shown to bind to this molecule. 50-69 was also used in a competition assay where it was shown to mildly inhibit binding of N3C5 Ab and relatively inhibit binding of N03B11 Ab (43-61%), indicating proximity of their epitopes.
Sheppard2007a
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity)
-
50-69: To test the immunogenicity of three molecularly engineered gp41 variants on the cell surface their reactivity with 50-69 Ab was assessed. The reactivity of 4cSSL24 variant was comparable to gp160 while the other two variants were not recognized by this Ab since the epitope for this Ab was not present in these variants.
Kim2007
(binding affinity)
-
50-69: Point mutations in the highly conserved structural motif LLP-2 within the intracytoplasmic tail of gp41 resulted in conformational alterations of both gp41 and gp120. The alterations did not affect virus CD4 binding, coreceptor binding site exposure, or infectivity of the virus, but did result in decreased binding and neutralization by certain MAbs and human sera. 50-69 exhibited similar levels of binding to both the LLP-2 mutant and wildtype viruses, indicating that its epitope was not altered by the mutation.
Kalia2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
50.69: 50.69 was found to bind to both monomeric and oligomeric gp41. Binding of this Ab to H9/IIIB-infected cells gave a strong signal which was increased by sCD4 pretreatment. Binding to H9/MN-infected cells gave a low signal which increased dramatically with sCD4 pretreatment. Sera from both long-term survivors and AIDS patients inhibited binding of 50.69 to H9/IIIB-infected cells.
Usami2005
(antibody binding site, rate of progression)
-
50-69: This Ab was shown to inhibit HIV-1 BaL replication in macrophages but not in PHA-stimulated PBMCs. It is suggested that inhibition of HIV replication occurs by an IgG-FcγR-dependent interaction leading to endocytosis and degradation of HIV particles.
Holl2006
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
50-69: Increased binding of 50-69 Ab to gp41 in the presence of CD4 was abrogated by the small molecule HIV-1 entry inhibitor IC9564, suggesting that IC9564 arrests gp120 into a fusion-incompetent conformation unable to expose 50-69 epitope.
Huang2007
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Sera from two HIV+ people and a panel of MAbs were used to explore susceptibility to neutralization in the presence or absence of glycans within or adjacent to the V3 loop and within the C2, C4 and V5 regions of HIV-1 SF162 env gp120. SF162 and each of the five glycosylation mutants studied were all neutralization resistant to 50-69. V3 glycans tended to shield V3 loop, CD4 and co-receptor MAb binding sites, while C4 and V5 glycans shielded V3 loop, CD4, gp41 but not co-receptor MAb binding sites. Selective removal of glycans from a vaccine candidate may enable greater access to neutralization susceptible epitopes.
McCaffrey2004
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
50-69: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. gp41 MAbs 246D, 98.6, 50-69, were decreased by trypsin, unaltered by thrombin, while NAb 2F5 binding was increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: This is one of 24 MAbs and Fabs in this database that bind to the highly immunogenic gp41 cluster I region (aa 579 - 604). Only one of these has any neutralizing potential, clone 3.
Gorny2003
(review)
-
50-69: Anti-gp41 MAbs were tested in a cell-cell fusion system to investigate the antigenic changes in gp41 during binding and fusion. Cluster I MAbs 50-69, F240, 240-D,3D6, and 246-D recognize a nonhelical hydrophobic region, positions 598-604, that forms a disulfide loop in the six-helix bundle. Cluster II MAbs 98-6 and 126-6 recognized residues 644-663 of gp41, a portion of the second heptad repeat. These MAbs were found to behave similarly, so 50-69 and 98-6 were used as representatives. Exposure of cluster I and cluster II epitopes required CD4 expression on HIV HXB2 Env expressing HeLa target cells, but not the CXCR4 co-receptor. Binding to CD4 exposed hidden cluster I and II epitopes. The MAbs were found to bind to gp120/gp41 complexes, not to gp41 after shedding of gp120, and were localized to at fusing-cell interfaces. Kinetic and binding results indicate that these MAbs are exposed in transitional structures during the fusion process, possibly the prehairpin intermediate prior to co-receptor binding, although other intermediate structures may be involved. They do not bind once syncytia begin to show extensive cytoplasmic mixing. These MAbs failed to inhibit fusion. The NAb 2F5 has a very different behavior in this study.
Finnegan2002
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
50-69: Called 50-69D. Alanine mutations were introduced into the N- and C-terminal alpha-helices of gp41 to destabilize interhelical packing interactions in order to study their inhibitory effect on viral infectivity. These mutations were shown to inhibit viral replication though affecting the conformational transition to the fusion-active form of gp41, and allow increased inhibition by gp41 peptides. 2F5 sensitivity is increased in the mutated viruses, presumably because 2F5s neutralization activity is focused on the transition to the fusion active state. No other gp41 MAb against tested, including NC-1, 50-69D, 1281, 98-6D, 246-D and F240, neutralized the parental or the fusion-deficient mutated viruses.
Follis2002
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 531.
-
50-69: A panel of 12 MAbs was used to identify those that could neutralize the dual-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 89.6 -- six gave significant neutralization at 2 to 10 ug/ml: 2F5, 50-69, IgG1b12, 447-52D, 2G12, and 670-D six did not have neutralizing activity: 654-D, 4.8D, 450-D, 246-D, 98-6, and 1281 -- no synergy, only additive effects were seen for pairwise combinations of MAbs, and antagonism was noted between gp41 MAbs 50-69 and 98-6, as well as 98-6 and 2F5.
Verrier2001
(antibody interactions)
-
50-69: This paper primarily concerns 4E10 and Z13, MAbs that both bind proximally to the 2F5 binding site to a conserved epitope, and that neutralize some primary isolates from clades B, C, and E -- MAb 50-69 binding to infected cells is enhanced by sCD4, while 4E10 and Z13 binding is essentially unaltered.
Zwick2001b
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: 26 HIV-1 group M isolates (clades A to H) were tested for binding to 47 MAbs, including 5 cluster I anti-gp41 MAbs which showed good cross clade reactivity -- 50-69 bound the majority of isolates although binding was moderate to weak -- specifies discontinuous binding site range as aa 579-613.
Nyambi2000
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
50-69: Binding of panel of 21 MAbs to soluble oligomeric gp140 versus gp41 or gp120 monomers was compared -- no MAb was oligomer specific, but gp41 MAb 50-69 bound with a 5 fold preference for the oligomer, while other gp41 MAbs (1367, 98-6, 167-D, 1281, 1342, and 1379) did not show a preference.
Gorny2000b
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: A cluster I epitope that binds to rgp41 567-647, recognizes a peptide N51-C43 complex trimer of heterodimers that approximates the core of the fusogenic form of gp41 -- this MAb doesn't react with either of the peptides N51 or C43 individually -- MAbs 50-69 and 1367 had similar properties -- MAb 50-69 bound the fusogenic form of the protein in liquid phase.
Gorny2000a
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Mutations in BH10 gp160, W596Y and T605A, as well as deletions of 605-609 (TTAVP) and 597-609 (GCSGKLICTTAVP), abrogate binding of enhancing MAbs 86, 240D, 50-69, and 246-D -- 5/6 enhancing MAbs identified to date bind to the immunodominant region 579-613 -- identifies non-contiguous W596-G597-C598 and C604-T605 as minimal epitope.
Mitchell1998
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Abs that recognize discontinuous epitopes can identify mimotopes from a phage peptide display library -- 50-69 maps to an immunodominant domain in gp41 -- three groups of peptides were selected, one which seems most closely related to gp41 sequence peptide consensus is WGCxx(RK)(x n)LxC -- the analogous gp41 sequence WGCSGKLIC is present in most M group clades, except D with a common L to H substitution.
Boots1997
(mimotopes)
-
50-69: Binding of anti-gp120 MAbs IgG1b12 or 654-30D does not mediate significant exposure of the gp41 epitopes for MAbs 2F5 and 50-69.
Stamatatos1997
(antibody interactions)
-
50-69: Used to test exposure of gp41 upon sCD4 binding.
Klasse1996
-
50-69: Binds to a linear epitope located in the cluster I region -- binding of 50-69 and 240-D inhibited by Fabs A1, A4, M8B, M26B, M12B and T2.
Binley1996
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Prebinding of anti-V3, and CD4i MAbs 48d and 17b, but not anti-V2 neutralizing MAbs, expose the 50-69 epitope.
Poignard1996b
(antibody interactions)
-
50-69: Does not neutralize HIV-1 LAI.
McDougal1996
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
50-69: Virions complexed to gp41 Ab facilitate presentation of p66 RT epitopes to Th cells.
Manca1995
-
50-69: Preferentially binds oligomer -- binding increased after pretreatment of infected cells with sCD4 -- binding domain overlaps site that is critical for gp120-gp41 association.
Sattentau1995
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: One of several anti-gp41 MAbs that bind to a gp41-maltose binding fusion protein designed to study the leucine zipper domain of gp41, showing that the construct has retained aspects of normal gp41 conformation.
Chen1995
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Epitope described as cluster I, 601-604, conformational -- does not neutralize IIIB or synergize neutralization by anti-V3 MAb 447-52D or by CD4 BS MAbs.
Laal1994
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions)
-
50-69: Did not mediate deposition of complement component C3 on HIV infected cells unless cells were pre-incubated with sCD4 -- complement mediated virolysis of MN and IIIB in the presence of sCD4.
Spear1993
(complement)
-
50-69: Called SZ-50.69 -- binds to an epitope within aa 579-613.
Eddleston1993
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Two fold increase in binding to gp120 in the presence of bound sCD4.
Sattentau1991
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Enhances HIV-1 infection in vitro -- synergizes with huMAb 120-16 in vitro to enhance HIV-1 infection to level approaching that found in polyclonal anti-HIV serum.
Robinson1991
(antibody interactions, enhancing activity)
-
50-69: The epitope is affected by the conformation conferred by the two cysteines at amino acids 598 and 604.
Xu1991
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Kills HIV-infected cells when coupled to deglycosylated ricin A chain. Antibody generation paper. Antibodies were derived from 58 HIV+ patients. Synthesized by immortalization of peripheral blood cells with Epstein-Barr virus.
Gorny1989
(antibody generation, immunotoxin)
-
50-69: Reacts preferentially with gp160 oligomer, compared to gp41 monomer.
Pinter1989
(antibody binding site)
-
50-69: Combined with deglycosylated A chain of ricin is toxic to lines of HIV-infected T cells (H9) and monocytes (U937).
Till1989
(immunotoxin)
References
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Binley1996
J. M. Binley, H. J. Ditzel, C. F. Barbas III, N. Sullivan, J. Sodroski, P. W. H. I. Parren, and D. R. Burton. Human Antibody Responses to HIV Type 1 Glycoprotein 41 Cloned in Phage Display Libraries Suggest Three Major Epitopes Are Recognized and Give Evidence for Conserved Antibody Motifs in Antigen Binding. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 12:911-924, 1996. A panel of anti-gp41 human Fab fragments were generated by panning phage display antibody libraries prepared from HIV-1 positive donors with rgp41. Fabs tended to be directed against three epitopes, designated clusters I-III. None were neutralizing. A common CDR3 motif was found in several of the heavy chain sequences. PubMed ID: 8798976.
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L. J. Boots, P. M. McKenna, B. A. Arnold, P. M. Keller, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, J. E. Robinson, and A. J. Conley. Anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 human monoclonal antibodies that bind discontinuous epitopes in the viral glycoproteins can identify mimotopes from recombinant phage peptide display libraries. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:1549-59, 1997. PubMed ID: 9430247.
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C. H. Chen, T. J. Matthews, C. B. McDanal, D. P. Bolognesi, and M. L. Greenberg. A Molecular Clasp in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 TM Protein Determines the Anti-HIV Activity of gp41 Derivatives: Implication for Viral Fusion. J. Virol., 69:3771-3777, 1995. PubMed ID: 7538176.
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Dennison2011a
S. Moses Dennison, Kara Anasti, Richard M. Scearce, Laura Sutherland, Robert Parks, Shi-Mao Xia, Hua-Xin Liao, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Nonneutralizing HIV-1 gp41 Envelope Cluster II Human Monoclonal Antibodies Show Polyreactivity for Binding to Phospholipids and Protein Autoantigens. J. Virol., 85(3):1340-1347, Feb 2011. PubMed ID: 21106741.
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Eddleston1993
M. Eddleston, J. C. de la Torre, J.-Y. Xu, N. Dorfman, A. Notkins, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. B. A. Oldstone. Molecular Mimicry Accompanying HIV-1 Infection: Human Monoclonal Antibodies That Bind to gp41 and to Astrocytes. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 10:939-944, 1993. In this paper, three anti-HIV-1 gp41 specific MAbs were found to react with astrocytes: 98-6, 167-7 and 15G1. Reactive astrocytes in the hippocampus were most prominently involved, and the antibodies stained no other cell type in the brain, kidney or liver. All three mapped to a conformationally dependent epitope between aa 644-663. PubMed ID: 7506553.
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Finnegan2002
Catherine M. Finnegan, Werner Berg, George K. Lewis, and Anthony L. DeVico. Antigenic Properties of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmembrane Glycoprotein during Cell-Cell Fusion. J. Virol., 76(23):12123-12134, Dec 2002. PubMed ID: 12414953.
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Follis2002
Kathryn E. Follis, Scott J. Larson, Min Lu, and Jack H. Nunberg. Genetic Evidence that Interhelical Packing Interactions in the gp41 Core Are Critical for Transition of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein to the Fusion-Active State. J. Virol., 76(14):7356-7362, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12072535.
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Gorny2000a
M. K. Gorny and S. Zolla-Pazner. Recognition by Human Monoclonal Antibodies of Free and Complexed Peptides Representing the Prefusogenic and Fusogenic Forms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 74:6186-6192, 2000. PubMed ID: 10846104.
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M. K. Gorny, T. C. VanCott, C. Williams, K. Revesz, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Effects of oligomerization on the epitopes of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoproteins. Virology, 267:220-8, 2000. PubMed ID: 10662617.
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Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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C. E. Hioe, S. Xu, P. Chigurupati, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of HIV-1 Primary Isolates by Polyclonal and Monoclonal Human Antibodies. Int. Immunol., 9(9):1281-1290, Sep 1997. PubMed ID: 9310831.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Huang2007
Li Huang, Weihong Lai, Phong Ho, and Chin Ho Chen. Induction of a Nonproductive Conformational Change in gp120 by a Small Molecule HIV Type 1 Entry Inhibitor. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 23(1):28-32, Jan 2007. PubMed ID: 17263629.
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Kalia2005
Vandana Kalia, Surojit Sarkar, Phalguni Gupta, and Ronald C. Montelaro. Antibody Neutralization Escape Mediated by Point Mutations in the Intracytoplasmic Tail of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 79(4):2097-2107, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15681412.
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Mikyung Kim, Zhisong Qiao, Jessica Yu, David Montefiori, and Ellis L. Reinherz. Immunogenicity of Recombinant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Like Particles Expressing gp41 Derivatives in a Pre-Fusion State. Vaccine, 25(27):5102-5114, 28 Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17055621.
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Klasse1996
P. J. Klasse and Q. J. Sattentau. Altered CD4 Interactions of HIV Type 1 LAI Variants Selected for the Capacity to Induce Membrane Fusion in the Presence of a Monoclonal Antibody to Domain 2 of CD4. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 12:1015-1021, 1996. PubMed ID: 8827217.
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Laal1994
Suman Laal, Sherri Burda, Miroslav K. Gorny, Sylwia Karwowska, Aby Buchbinder, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 68(6):4001-4008, Jun 1994. PubMed ID: 7514683.
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Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Manca1995
F. Manca, D. Fenoglio, M. T. Valle, G. L. Pira, A. Kunkl, R. S. Balderas, R. G. Baccala, D. H. Kono, A. Ferraris, D. Saverino, F. Lancia, L. Lozzi, and A. N. Theofilopoulos. Human T helper cells specific for HIV reverse transcriptase: possible role in intrastructural help for HIV envelope-specific antibodies. Eur. J. Immunol., 25:1217-1223, 1995. PubMed ID: 7539750.
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McCaffrey2004
Ruth A McCaffrey, Cheryl Saunders, Mike Hensel, and Leonidas Stamatatos. N-Linked Glycosylation of the V3 Loop and the Immunologically Silent Face of gp120 Protects Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 from Neutralization by Anti-gp120 and Anti-gp41 Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(7):3279-3295, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15016849.
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McDougal1996
J. S. McDougal, M. S. Kennedy, S. L. Orloff, J. K. A. Nicholson, and T. J. Spira. Mechanisms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Neutralization: Irreversible Inactivation of Infectivity by Anti-HIV-1 Antibody. J. Virol., 70:5236-5245, 1996. Studies of polyclonal sera autologous virus inactivation indicates that in individuals over time, viral populations emerge that are resistant to inactivating effects of earlier sera. PubMed ID: 8764033.
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Mitchell1998
W. M. Mitchell, L. Ding, and J. Gabriel. Inactivation of a Common Epitope Responsible for the Induction of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement of HIV. AIDS, 12:147-156, 1998. PubMed ID: 9468363.
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Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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Pinter1989
A. Pinter, W. J. Honnen, S. A. Tilley, C. Bona, H. Zaghouani, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Oligomeric Structure of gp41, the Transmembrane Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 63:2674-2679, 1989. PubMed ID: 2786089.
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Poignard1996b
P. Poignard, T. Fouts, D. Naniche, J. P. Moore, and Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralizing antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type-1 gp120 induce envelope glycoprotein subunit dissociation. J. Exp. Med., 183:473-484, 1996. Binding of Anti-V3 and the CD4I neutralizing MAbs induces shedding of gp120 on cells infected with the T-cell line-adapted HIV-1 molecular clone Hx10. This was shown by significant increases of gp120 in the supernatant, and exposure of a gp41 epitope that is masked in the oligomer. MAbs binding either to the V2 loop or to CD4BS discontinuous epitopes do not induce gp120 dissociation. This suggests HIV neutralization probably is caused by several mechanisms, and one of the mechanisms may involve gp120 dissociation. PubMed ID: 8627160.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Robinson1991
W. E. Robinson, M. K. Gorny, J.-Y. Xu, W. M. Mitchell, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Two Immunodominant Domains of gp41 Bind Antibodies Which Enhance Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection In Vitro. J. Virol., 65:4169-4176, 1991. PubMed ID: 2072448.
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Sattentau1991
Q. J. Sattentau and J. P. Moore. Conformational Changes Induced in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein by Soluble CD4 Binding. J. Exp. Med., 174:407-415, 1991. sCD4 binding to gp120 induces conformational changes within envelope oligomers. This was measured on HIV-1-infected cells by the increased binding of gp120/V3 loop specific MAbs, and on the surface of virions by increased cleavage of the V3 loop by an exogenous proteinase. PubMed ID: 1713252.
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Sattentau1995
Q. J. Sattentau, S. Zolla-Pazner, and P. Poignard. Epitope Exposure on Functional, Oligomeric HIV-1 gp41 Molecules. Virology, 206:713-717, 1995. Most gp41 epitopes are masked when associated with gp120 on the cell surface. Weak binding of anti-gp41 MAbs can be enhanced by treatment with sCD4. MAb 2F5 binds to a membrane proximal epitope which binds in the presence of gp120 without sCD4. PubMed ID: 7530400.
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Sheppard2007a
Neil C. Sheppard, Sarah L. Davies, Simon A. Jeffs, Sueli M. Vieira, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Production and Characterization of High-Affinity Human Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins in a Mouse Model Expressing Human Immunoglobulins. Clin. Vaccine Immunol., 14(2):157-167, Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 17167037.
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Spear1993
G. T. Spear, D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, A. L. Landay, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Complement activation by human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. J. Virol., 67:53-59, 1993. This study looked at the ability of 16 human MAbs to activate complement. MAbs directed against the V3 region could induce C3 deposition on infected cells and virolysis of free virus, but antibodies to the CD4BS and C-terminal region and two regions in gp41 could induce no complement mediated effects. Pre-treatment with sCD4 could increase complement-mediated effects of anti-gp41 MAbs, but decreased the complement-mediated effects of V3 MAbs. Anti-gp41 MAbs were able to affect IIIB but not MN virolysis, suggesting spontaneous shedding of gp120 on IIIB virions exposes gp41 epitopes. IgG isotype did not appear to have an effect on virolysis or C3 deposition. PubMed ID: 7677959.
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Stamatatos1997
L. Stamatatos, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, and C. Cheng-Mayer. Binding of Antibodies to Virion-Associated gp120 Molecules of Primary-Like Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Isolates: Effect on HIV-1 Infection of Macrophages and Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells. Virology, 229:360-369, 1997. PubMed ID: 9126249.
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Till1989
M. A. Till, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. W. Uhr, and E. S. Vitetta. Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected T Cells and Monocytes Are Killed by Monoclonal Human Anti-gp41 Antibodies Coupled to Ricin A Chain. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 86:1987-1991, 1989. PubMed ID: 2538826.
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Tyler1990
D. S. Tyler, S. D. Stanley, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, P. P. Shadduck, A. J. Langlois, T. J. Matthews, D. P. Bolognesi, T. J. Palker, and K. J. Weinhold. Identification of sites within gp41 that serve as targets for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity by using human monoclonal antibodies. J. Immunol., 145:3276-3282, 1990. PubMed ID: 1700004.
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Usami2005
Osamu Usami, Peng Xiao, Hong Ling, Yi Liu, Tadashi Nakasone, and Toshio Hattori. Properties of Anti-gp41 Core Structure Antibodies, Which Compete with Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients. Microbes Infect., 7(4):650-657, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15823513.
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Verrier2001
F. Verrier, A. Nadas, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Additive effects characterize the interaction of antibodies involved in neutralization of the primary dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolate 89.6. J. Virol., 75(19):9177--86, Oct 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/19/9177. PubMed ID: 11533181.
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Vincent2008
Nadine Vincent, Amadou Kone, Blandine Chanut, Frédéric Lucht, Christian Genin, and Etienne Malvoisin. Antibodies Purified from Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients by Affinity on the Heptad Repeat Region 1/Heptad Repeat Region 2 Complex of gp41 Neutralize HIV-1 Primary Isolates. AIDS, 22(16):2075-2085, 18 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18832871.
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Vincent2012
Nadine Vincent and Etienne Malvoisin. Ability of Antibodies Specific to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein to Block the Fusion Inhibitor T20 in a Cell-Cell Fusion Assay. Immunobiology, 217(10):943-950, Oct 2012. PubMed ID: 22387075.
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Xu1991
J.-Y. Xu, M. K. Gorny, T. Palker, S. Karwowska, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Epitope mapping of two immunodominant domains of gp41, the transmembrane protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1, using ten human monoclonal antibodies. J. Virol., 65:4832-4838, 1991. The immunodominance of linear epitope in the region 590-600 of gp41 (cluster I) was established, and a second conformational epitope was mapped that reacted with a region between amino acids 644 and 663 (cluster II). Titration experiments showed that there was 100-fold more antibody to cluster I than cluster II in patient sera. PubMed ID: 1714520.
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Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
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Yuan2009
Wen Yuan, Xing Li, Marta Kasterka, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Joseph Sodroski. Oligomer-Specific Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) gp41 Envelope Glycoprotein Ectodomain Recognized by Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 25(3):319-328, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19292593.
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Zwick2001b
M. B. Zwick, A. F. Labrijn, M. Wang, C. Spenlehauer, E. O. Saphire, J. M. Binley, J. P. Moore, G. Stiegler, H. Katinger, D. R. Burton, and P. W. Parren. Broadly neutralizing antibodies targeted to the membrane-proximal external region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 glycoprotein gp41. J. Virol., 75(22):10892--905, Nov 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/22/10892. PubMed ID: 11602729.
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Sliepen2019
Kwinten Sliepen, Byung Woo Han, Ilja Bontjer, Petra Mooij, Fernando Garces, Anna-Janina Behrens, Kimmo Rantalainen, Sonu Kumar, Anita Sarkar, Philip J. M. Brouwer, Yuanzi Hua, Monica Tolazzi, Edith Schermer, Jonathan L. Torres, Gabriel Ozorowski, Patricia van der Woude, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Marielle J. van Breemen, Juan Miguel Camacho-Sanchez, Judith A. Burger, Max Medina-Ramirez, Nuria Gonzalez, Jose Alcami, Celia LaBranche, Gabriella Scarlatti, Marit J. van Gils, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, Andrew B. Ward, Gerrit Koopman, John P. Moore, Robin J. Shattock, Willy M. Bogers, Ian A. Wilson, and Rogier W. Sanders. Structure and immunogenicity of a stabilized HIV-1 envelope trimer based on a group-M consensus sequence. Nat Commun, 10(1):2355 doi, May 2019. PubMed ID: 31142746
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Displaying record number 658
Download this epitope
record as JSON.
MAb ID |
17b (1.7b, sCD4-17b, 1.7B) |
HXB2 Location |
Env |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp120 |
Research Contact |
James Robinson, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA |
Epitope |
(Discontinuous epitope)
|
Ab Type |
gp120 CD4i CoRbs (Cluster C) |
Neutralizing |
L P (weak) View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human |
Patient |
N70 |
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
acute/early infection, adjuvant comparison, antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, assay or method development, autoantibody or autoimmunity, autologous responses, binding affinity, brain/CSF, broad neutralizer, co-receptor, computational prediction, dendritic cells, drug resistance, dynamics, effector function, enhancing activity, escape, glycosylation, HAART, ART, immunoprophylaxis, immunotherapy, kinetics, mimics, mimotopes, mutation acquisition, neutralization, polyclonal antibodies, review, structure, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion |
Notes
Showing 286 of
286 notes.
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17b: A SHIV carrying a highly neutralization-sensitive Env (SHIVCNE40) was passaged in macaques. SHIVCNE40 developed enhanced replication kinetics associated with neutralization resistance against autologous serum, CD4-Ig, and several nAbs (17b, 3BNC117, N6, PGT145, PGT121, PGT128, 35O22, 2F5, 10E8). A gp41 substitution, E658K, was the major determinant for this resistance. Structural modeling and functional verification indicate that the substitution disrupts an intermolecular salt bridge with the neighboring protomer, thereby promoting fusion and facilitating immune evasion. This effect is applicable across many HIV-1 viruses of diverse subtypes. These results highlight the critical role of gp41 in shaping the neutralization profile and conformation of Env during viral adaptation. The unique intermolecular salt bridge could potentially be utilized for rational vaccine design involving more stable HIV-1 Env trimers.
Wang2019
(mutation acquisition, neutralization, structure)
-
17b: Two conserved tyrosine (Y) residues within the V2 loop of gp120, Y173 and Y177, were mutated individually or in combination, to either phenylalanine (F) or alanine (A) in several strains of diverse subtypes. In general, these mutations increased neutralization sensitivity, with a greater impact of Y177 over Y173 single mutations, of double over single mutations, and of A over F substitutions. The Y173A Y177A double mutation in HIV-1 BaL increased sensitivity to most of the weakly neutralizing MAbs tested (2158, 447-D, 268-D, B4e8, D19, 17b, 48d, 412d) and even rendered the virus sensitive to non-neutralizing antibodies against the CD4 binding site (F105, 654-30D, and b13). In the case of V2 mAb 697-30D, residue Y173 is part of its epitope, and thus abrogates its binding and has no effect on neutralization; the Y177A mutant alone did increase neutralization sensitivity to this mAb. When the double mutant was tested against bnAbs, there was a large decrease in neutralization sensitivity compared to WT for many bnAbs that target V1, V2, or V3 (PG9, PG16, VRC26.08, VRC38, PGT121, PGT122, PGT123, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, PGT135, VRC24, CH103). The double mutation had lesser or no effect on neutralization by one V3 bnAb (2G12) and by most bnAbs targeting the CD4 binding site (VRC01, VRC07, VRC03, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH31, 12A12, 3BNC117, N6), the gp120-gp41 interface (35O22, PGT151), or the MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8).
Guzzo2018
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: This study explored the basis of the neutralization resistance of tier 3 virus 253-11 (subtype CRF02_AG). Virus 253-11 was resistant to neutralization by 17b, b12, VRC03, F105, SCD4, CH12, Z13e1, PG16, PGT145, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 39F, F240, and 35O22; the virus was sensitive to 3BNC117, NIH45-46G54W, VRC01, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10, PG9, VRC26.26, 10-1074, and PGT151. Virus 253-11 was strikingly resistant to most tested antibodies that target V3/glycans, despite possessing key potential N-linked glycosylation sites, especially N301 and N332, needed for the recognition of this class of antibodies. The resistance of 253-11 was not associated with an unusually long V1/V2 loop, nor with polymorphisms in the V3 loop and N-linked glycosylation sites. The 253-11 MPER was rarely recognized by sera, but was more often recognized in a chimera consisting of a HIV-2 backbone with the 253-11 MPER, suggesting steric or kinetic hindrance of the MPER. Mutations in the 253-11 MPER previously reported to increase the lifetime of the prefusion Env conformation (Y681H, L669S), decreased the resistance of 253-11 to several mAbs, presumably destabilizing its otherwise stable, closed trimer structure. A crystal structure of a recombinant 253-11 SOSIP trimer revealed that the heptad repeat helices in gp41 are drawn in close proximity to the trimer axis and that gp120 protomers also showed a relatively compact form around the trimer axis.
Moyo2018
(neutralization, structure)
-
17b: This study used directed evolution to overcome the instability and heterogeneity of a primary Env isolate (ADA) in order to design better immunogens. HIV-1 virions were subjected to iterative cycles of destabilization and replication to select for Envs with enhanced stability. Several mutations in Env were associated with increased trimer stability, primarily in the heptad repeat regions of gp41 and V1 of gp120. Mutations from the most stable Envs were combined into a variant Env, termed "comb-mut", with superior homogeneity and stability. Comb-mut had greater binding affinity for PGT128, PG9, PG16, 2G12, VRC01, b12, and CD4-IgG2, but decreased binding to 4E10, 2F5, b6, 19b, 17b, 7B2, and D50. Comb-mut was more sensitive to neutralization by PG9. One specific mutation (K574) was shown to decrease the neutralization IC50 of mAbs b12, 2F5, 4E10, b6, 2G12, 8K8 and inhibitors sCD4, T-20, and PF-68742. Several of the Env substitutions were shown to stabilize Env spikes from HIV-1 clades A, B, and C. Spike stabilizing mutations may be useful in the development of Env immunogens that stably retain native, trimeric structure.
Leaman2013
(mimics, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
17b: CD4-mimetic compounds (CD4mc) can inhibit the interaction of gp120 with CD4 by inhibiting viral entry and inducing structural changes in Env through insertion within the Phe43 cavity of gp120. YIR-821 is a novel CD4mc that has potent antiviral activity and lower toxicity than its prototype, NBD-556. In an assay of its antiviral activity on a multi-clade panel of HIV-1 pseudoviruses, YIR-821 displayed entry inhibitor activity against 53.5% (21/40) of the pseudoviruses tested. YIR-821 enhanced neutralization mediated by coreceptor binding site antibodies 4E9C and 916B2, and by plasma IgG samples in approximately 50% of tested pseudoviruses. The direct antiviral activity of YIR-821 as an entry inhibitor was observed in 53% of both subtype B (27/51) and non-B subtype (40/75) pseudoviruses. The ADCC activity of YIR-821 was compared with CoRBS mAbs (17b and 4E9C) and cluster A region mAb A32. YIR-821 enhanced ADCC activity mediated by 4E9C or by plasma IgG. YIR-821 enhanced the binding activity of 4E9C, 17b and plasma IgG. Sequence diversity in the CD4 binding site as well as other regions, such as the gp120 inner domain layers or gp41, may be involved in the multiple mechanisms related to the sensitive/resistant phenotype of the virus to YIR-821.
Matsumoto2023
(effector function, mimics, binding affinity)
-
17b: Reduction in exposure of non-neutralizing Ab (nnAb) epitopes on native-like Env trimer immunogens results in bnAbs being elicited that have autologous tier 2 neutralization instead of tier 1. The design of trimer modifications to silence nnAb reactivity were directed towards (1) the V3 loop (2) epitopes exposed through CD4-induced conformational changes (CD4i epitopes) and (3) the exposed SOSIP trimer base that is usually buried within virus membrane. (1) In Steichen2016 2 Env variants of BG505 SOSIP.664 with reduced V3 nnAb-generating activity were created, one using mammalian display screens, BG505 MD39, and the other with an engineered disulfide bond, BG505 SOSIP.DS21. MD39's trimer design was improved by using the Rosetta Design platform and inserting 6 buried mutations to form BG505 Olio6, and both this trimer as well as the DS21 were shown to have reduced antigenicity for nnAb generation in a rabbit vaccine model. (2) To reduce CD4i epitope elicitation of nnAbs, saturation mutagenesis of Olio6 was performed, in search of the trimer that binds VRC01-class bnAbs but not CD4. BG505 Olio6.CD4KO containing the G473T mutation was identified. In addition, for the purposes of nucleic acid-based vaccine platform designs, the natural furin cleavage site between gp120 and gp41 was removed to abolish protease cleavage, by swapping the order of gp14 and gp120 in the gp160 gene, giving the trimer BG505 MD39.CP (circular permutation). (3) The exposed trimer base was masked with glycan in 3 under-glycosylated regions in order to direct bnAb responses to the distal regions (CD4bs, V2 apex, N332 superset) of the trimer instead, generating the GRSF (glycan resurfaced) MD39 and GRSF MD39.CP variants. Furthermore, variants with improved thermostability over MD39 were created, MD37 and MD64. All of these stabilizing mutations were transferred to diverse HIV isolates from different subtypes. Finally 3 subtype C (isolate 327c) trimers were assessed for binding to bnAbs, VRC01, PGT121, PGT151, PGT145, PG9 and to nnAbs, F105 and 17b. nnAb 17b interacts with non-native subtype C Env immunogens like c27c SOSIP and not native-like c27c MD37, it also binds BG505 foldon but not other BG505 trimers like SOSIP.664, MD39 and Olio6.
Kulp2017
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, assay or method development, autologous responses, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
17b: DS-SOSIP.4mut (4mut) was identified as the most immunogenic and stable of 4 engineered, soluble, closed prefusion HIV-1 Env trimers. 4mut contained 4 mutations (M154, M300, M302 and L320) designed to form hydrophobic interactions between V1V1 and V3 loops. After V3-negative selection and only with sCD4, CD4-induced mAb 17b recognized BG505 SOSIP.664 but failed to recognize 4mut, the other 3 designed trimers (DS-SOSIP.6mut containing 4mut mutations, Y177W and I420M, DS-SOSIP.I423F and DS-SOSIP.A316W), and DS-SOSIP. Each DS-SOSIP variant was able to elicit trimer-specific responses, comparable to BG505 SOSIP.664, in guinea pigs after 4 immunizations, but none elicited heterologous neutralizing activity. Crystal structures were generated for 4mut and 6mut.
Chuang2017
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: Using subtype A BG505 Env structural information, improved variants of subtype B JRFL and subtype C 16055 Env native flexibly linked (NFL) trimers were generated. The trimer-derived (TD) residues that increased well-ordered, homogeneous, stable, and soluble trimers did not require positive or negative selection as previously needed [Guenaga2015, PLoS Pathos. 11(1):e1004570]. Non-nAbs like 17b and Vc813 target the receptor-bridging sheet epitope of the co-receptor when Env is in its open conformation, after CD4 on the host cell is engaged by the CD4bs of Env. Therefore 17b is not able to bind NFL TD CC trimers that are incapable of exposing the coreceptor due to the CC disulfide bond, but it does recognize 16055 NFL TD8 and JRFL NFL TD15. Disulfide-stablilized CC trimers keep Env in its closed conformation which is preferable for nAb generation.
Guenaga2015a
(antibody interactions, assay or method development, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
17b: Most published structures of bnAbs, yet none of non- or poorly-neutralizing mAbs, were structurally compatible with a newly generated crystal structure of a mature ligand-free endoglycosidase H-treated BG505 SOSIP.664 Env trimer. Robust binding of the structurally incompatible V3- and CD4-bs targeting nAbs could be induced with CD4. A “DS” variant of BG505 SOSIP.664, containing a stabilizing disulfide bond between 201C and 433C mutations, was developed and appeared to represent an obligate intermediate in that it only bound a single CD4 and remained in a prefusion closed conformation. CD4i-targeting mAb 17b was author-defined as ineffective due to its neutralization breadth of 8% on a panel of 170 diverse HIV-1 pseudoviruses. This was consistent with structural modeling which suggested that 17b was incompatible with BG505 SOSIP.664. Soluble CD4 strongly induced 17b binding of wildtype BG505 SOSIP.664, JR-FL SOS E168K, or BG505 SOS T332N trimers, but not mutant trimers containing the DS mutations. Some mutations that stabilized the closed prefusion state of BG505 SOSIP.664 affected 17b binding modestly to moderately.
Kwon2015
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
17b: The chemokine coreceptor-binding Ab, 17b, was studied in complex with trimeric gp140 immunogens or native HIV-1 Env and they were found to have the same quaternary structure in both the closed and open phases. Thus soluble gp140 trimers from subtypes A (KNH1144) and B (JR-FL) have been designed as mimetics that go through the same structure transitions as the native trimeric Env on BaL virions.
Harris2011
(antibody interactions, assay or method development, vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
17b: Native, well-ordered, soluble mimetics of the Env trimer from subtypes B (JRFL) and C (16055) were obtained from genetically identical samples of heterogeneous mixture of disordered Env SOSIPs. Negative selection by non-nAbs was used to remove disordered oligomers, leaving well-ordered trimers that were able to bind sCD4, a panel of bnAbs that bind CD4bs, and PGT15 which is a bnAb that binds only cleavage-dependent, well-ordered, Env trimer. Several biophysical techniques were used to interrogate the structure of the purified subtype B and C trimers. Trimer antigenicity was assessed by bio-layer interferometry against F105-like non-neutralizing Abs, and some bnAbs in solution. Non-CD4bs-binding, non-nAb 17b did not recognize negatively-selected JRFL or 16055 SOSIP trimers.
Guenaga2015
(vaccine antigen design, subtype comparisons, structure)
-
17b: This paper describes the development and characterization of soluble, cleaved SOSIP gp140 Env trimers using a JR-FL background. In addition to a stabilizing disulfide bond, mediated by engineered mutations A501C and T605C that are also present in SOS gp140 proteins, SOSIP gp140 proteins have an I559P mutation (aka “IP”) that increases trimer stability. Further analyses suggested that I559P destabilizes the N-terminal helix necessary for the six-helix bundle structure in the postfusion conformation. Immunoprecipitation assays with mAbs CD4-IgG2, b12 (aka IgG1b12), 17b, 2F5, 2.2B and 4D4 demonstrated that I559P did not alter expected structural epitopes when compared to SOS gp140 proteins. Soluble CD4 induction of 17b binding was efficient for both SOS and SOSIP gp140 proteins indicating that the overlapping CD4-induced coreceptor binding site on gp120 was preserved.
Sanders2002a
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: HIV-1 and its SIV precursors share a bnAb epitope in Env V2 at the trimer apex. This study tested the immunogenicity of a chimpanzee SIV (SIVcpz) Env trimer. In mice expressing a human V2-apex bnAb heavy-chain precursor, trimer immunization induced V2-directed nAbs. Infection of macaques with chimeric simian-chimpanzee immunodeficiency viruses (SCIVs) elicited high-titer viremia, potent autologous neutralizing antibodies, rapid sequence escape in the canonical V2-apex epitope, and in some cases, low-titer heterologous plasma breadth mapping to the V2-apex. Antibody cloning from 2 macaques (T925 and T927) identified 7 lineages (53 mAbs) with long CDRH3 regions that cross-neutralize some primary HIV-1 strains with low potency. Electron microscopy of members of the two most cross-reactive lineages confirmed V2 targeting with an angle of approach distinct from prototypical V2-apex bNAbs; antibody binding either required or induced an occluded-open trimer. Probing with conformation-sensitive, nonneutralizing antibodies revealed that SCIV-expressed, but not wild-type SIVcpz Envs, as well as a subset of primary HIV-1 Envs, preferentially adopted a more open trimeric state. These results reveal the existence of a cryptic V2 epitope that is exposed in occluded-open SIVcpz and HIV-1 Env trimers and elicits cross-neutralizing responses of limited breadth and potency. This cryptic epitope, which in some Env backgrounds is immunodominant, needs to be considered in immunogen design. As part of the study, binding and neutralization assays used panels of nAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, VRC26.25, CH01, BG1, VRC38.01), non-nAbs (697-D, 1393A, CH58, CAP228-3D, 3074, 447-52D, 17b, A32), and unmutated ancestors (PG9-RUA, PG16-RUA, VRC26-UCA, CH01-RUA).
Bibollet-Ruche2023
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: Extensive analysis of new and existing structural models identifies conformation of soluble B41 SOSIP Env trimer intermediates induced by binding with CD4 alone or CD4 and mAb 17b or mAb b12 alone. CD4 or b12 binding induces large conformational rearrangements of gp41 subunits and concomitant inaccessibility of the fusion peptide. A 3.7 Å cryo-EM structure of glycosylated B41 SOSIP.664 in complex with soluble CD4 (sCD4) and mAb 17b, which targets a CD4 binding-induced epitope, and a 5.6 Å cryo-EM structure of ligand-free B41 SOSIP.664 were generated and compared. This revealed extensive Env rearrangements including movement of V1V2 loops, exposure of V3 loop, formation of bridging sheet and α0 structures, conformational changes of HR1 and C3 domains, rearrangement of N262 glycan, and subtle changes in a network of conserved residues. In addition, the fusion peptide becomes embedded and stabilized in a newly formed pocket distant from the host membrane. Further analysis with a generated cryo-EM structure of subtype B B41 SOSIP.664 complexed with sCD4 alone revealed only slight differences whether or not 17b was also present or if the soluble trimer was subtype A BG505 SOSIP.664. This suggests that 17b does not induce further conformational changes beyond those that are induced by sCD4 alone.
Ozorowski2017
(structure)
-
17b: To understand early bnAb responses, 51 HIV-1 clade C infected infants were assayed for neutralization of a 12-virus multi-clade panel. Plasma bnAbs targeting V2-apex on Env were predominant in infant elite and broad neutralizers. In infant elite neutralizers, multi-variant infection was associated with plasma bnAbs targeting diverse autologous viruses. A panel of mAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, VRC26.25, 10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, PGT135, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, PGT151, 35O22, 10E8, 4E10, F105, 17b, A32, 48d, b6, 447-52d) was assayed for their ability to neutralize Env clones from infant elite neutralizers; circulating viral variants in infant elite neutralizers were most susceptible to V2-apex bnAbs.
Mishra2020a
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
17b: In vertically-infected infant AIIMS731, a rare HIV-1 mutation in hypervariable loop 2 (L184F) was studied. In patient sequences, this mutation was present in the majority of clones. A panel of 6 V2 bnAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CAP256.25, and CH01) was assayed for neutralization of 6 patient viral clones. The AIIMS731 viral variants segregated into 4 neutralization-sensitive and 2 resistant clones; sensitive clones carried 184F, while resistant clones carried the rare 184L mutation. A large panel of bnAbs targeting non-V2 epitopes was used to assess the neutralization of the 6 patient viral variants. The bnAb panel consisted of V3/N332 glycan supersite bnAbs (10-1074, BG18, AIIMS-P01, PGT121, PGT128, and PGT135), CD4bs bnAbs (VRC01, VRC03, VRC07-523LS, N6, 3BNC117, and NIH45-46 G54W), a silent face-targeting bnAb (PG05), fusion peptide and gp120-gp41 interface bnAbs (PGT151, 35O22, and N123-VRC34.01), and MPER bnAbs (10E8, 4E10, and 2F5). All of these bnAbs had similar neutralization efficiencies for all 6 clones, suggesting that the L184F mutation was specific for viral escape from neutralization by V2 apex bnAbs. A panel of non-neutralizing mAbs (V3 loop-targeting non-nAbs 447-52D and 19b, and CD4-induced non-nAbs 17b, A32, 48d, and b6), were also assessed; 2 of the variants (the same 2 susceptible to the V2 bnAbs) showed moderate neutralization by 447-52D, 19b, 17b, and 48d. The structure of ligand-free BG505 SOSIP trimer revealed that the side chain of L184 was outward facing and did not make significant intraprotomeric interactions, but upon mutating L184 to F184, a disruption of the accessible surface between the bulky side chain of F184 on one protomer and R165 on the neighboring protomer was seen. Thus, the L184F mutation resulted in increased susceptibility to neutralization by antibodies known to target the relatively more open conformation of Env on tier 1 viruses, suggesting that the rare L184F mutation allowed Env to sample more open states resembling the CD4-bound conformation where the CCR5 binding site is exposed.
Mishra2020
(neutralization, polyclonal antibodies)
-
17b: Single chain variable fragments (scFvs) were constructed for mAbs 916B2, 4E9C, and 25C4b. Coverage of neutralization by the scFvs against a panel of 66 multiclade pseudoviruses was 89% for 4E9C, 95% for 25C4b, and 100% for 916B2. 25C4b bound the region spanning multiple domains of hairpin 1 (H1) and H2 of the bridging sheet and V3 base, similar to mAb 17b. For 4E9C, V3-base dependent binding was apparent based on lack of binding to mutants containing a V3 truncation. In contrast, binding of 916B2 was dependent on the H1 region. The study also assayed the binding of additional mAbs (17b, 12G10, 917B11, 5D6S, A32) to gp120 mutants in the CD4i region.
Tanaka2017
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: The study compared well-characterized nAbs (2G12, b12, VRC01, 10E8, 17b) with 4 mAbs derived from a Japanese patient (4E9C, 49G2, 916B2, 917B11) in their neutralization and ADCC activity against viruses of subtypes B and CRF01. CRF01 viruses were less susceptible to neutralization by 2G12 and b12, while VRC01 was highly effective in neutralizing CRF01 viruses. 49G2 showed better neutralization breadth against CRF01 than against B viruses. CRF01_AE viruses from Japan also showed a slightly higher susceptibility to anti-CD4i Ab 4E9C than the subtype B viruses, and to CRF01_AE viruses from Vietnam. Neutralization breadth of other anti-CD4i Abs 17b, 916B2 and 917B11 was low against both subtype B and CRF01_AE viruses. Anti-CD4bs Ab 49G2, which neutralized only 22% of the viruses, showed the broadest coverage of Fc-mediated signaling activity against the same panel of Env clones among the Abs tested. The CRF01_AE viruses from Japan were more susceptible to 49G2-mediated neutralization than the CRF01_AE viruses from Vietnam, but Fc-mediated signaling activity of 49G2was broader and stronger in the CRF01_AE viruses from Vietnam than the CRF01_AE viruses from Japan.
Thida2019
(effector function, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: An R5 virus isolated from chronic patient NAB01 (Patient Record# 4723) was adapted in culture to growth in the presence of target cells expressing reduced levels of CD4. Entry kinetics of the virus were altered, and these alterations resulted in extended exposure of CD4-induced neutralization-sensitive epitopes to CD4. Adapted and control viruses were assayed for their neutralization by a panel of neutralizing antibodies targeting several different regions of Env (PGT121, PGT128, 1-79, 447-52d, b6, b12, VRC01, 17b, 4E10, 2F5, Z13e1). Adapted viruses showed greater sensitivity to antibodies targeting the CD4 binding site and the V3 loop. This evolution of Env resulted in increased CD4 affinity but decreased viral fitness, a phenomenon seen also in the immune-privileged CNS, particularly in macrophages.
Beauparlant2017
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion, dynamics, kinetics)
-
17b: Soluble versions of HIV-1 Env trimers (sgp140 SOSIP.664) stabilized by a gp120-gp41 disulfide bond and a change (I559P) in gp41 have been structurally characterized. Cross-linking/mass spectrometry to evaluate the conformations of functional membrane Env and sgp140 SOSIP.664 has been reported. Differences were detected in the gp120 trimer association domain and C terminus and in the gp41 HR1 region which can guide the improvement of Env glycoprotein preparations and potentially increase their effectiveness as a vaccine. The CD4i Ab 17b exhibited poor neutralization against HIV-1AD8 full-length and cytoplasmic tail-deleted Envs.
Castillo-Menendez2019
(vaccine antigen design, structure)
-
17b: The authors used nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to define the structure of the HIV-1 MPER when linked to the transmembrane domain (MPER-TMD) in the context of a lipid bilayer. In particular, they looked at the accessibility of the MPER-TMD to 2F5, 4E10, 10E8 and DH570. The MPER appears to be accessible up to ∼10% of the time to the 2F5, 4E10, and 10E8 Fabs but ∼40% of time to the DH570 Fab. To assess possible functional roles for the MPER in membrane fusion, they generated 17 Env mutants using the sequence of a clade A isolate, 92UG037.8, mutating each of the three structural elements: hydrophobic core, turn, and kink. Mutants W670A (hydrophobic core), F673A (turn), and W680A (kink), while still sensitive to VRC01, became much more resistant to the trimer-specific bNAbs and also gained sensitivity to b6, 3791, and 17b. All mutants with changes at W666 in the hydrophobic core and K683 at the kink lost infectivity almost completely. For the rest of the mutants, infectivity ranged from 4.3 to 50.8% of that of the wild type, showing that key residues important for stabilizing the MPER structure are also critical for Env-induced membrane fusion activity, especially in the context of viral infection.
Fu2018
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: The influence of a V2 State 2/3-stabilizing Env mutation, L193A, on ADCC responses mediated by sera from HIV-1-infected individuals was evaluated. Conformations spontaneously sampled by the Env trimer at the surface of infected cells had a significant impact on ADCC. State 2/3 preferring ligand 17b recognized L193A variants of CH58 and CH77 IMCs with a significant increase compared to the WT.
Prevost2018
(effector function)
-
17b: The first cryo-EM structure of a cross-linked vaccine antigen was solved. The 4.2 Å structure of HIV-1 BG505 SOSIP soluble recombinant Env in complex with a bNAb PGV04 Fab fragment revealed how cross-linking affects key properties of the trimer. ISOSIP and GLA-SOSIP trimers were compared for antigenicity by ELISA, using a large panel of mAbs previously determined to react with BG505 Env. Non-NAbs globally lost reactivity (7-fold median loss of binding), likely because of covalent stabilization of the cross-linked ‘closed’ form of the GLA-SOSIP trimer that binds non-NAbs weakly or not at all. V3-specific non-NAbs showed 2.1–3.3-fold reduced binding. Three autologous rabbit monoclonal NAbs to the N241/N289 ‘glycan-hole’ surface, showed a median ˜1.5-fold reduction in binding. V3 non-NAb 4025 showed residual binding to the GLA-SOSIP trimer. By contrast, bNAbs like 17b broadly retained reactivity significantly better than non-NAbs, with exception of PGT145 (3.3-5.3 fold loss of binding in ELISA and SPR).
Schiffner2018
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: This study describes the generation of CHO cell lines stably expressing the following vaccine Env Ags: CRF01_AE A244 Env gp120 protein (A244.AE) and 6240 Env gp120 protein (6240.B). The antigenic profiles of the molecules were assessed with a panel of well-characterized mAbs recognizing critical epitopes and glycosylation analysis confirming previously identified sites and revealing unknown sites at non-consensus motifs.A244.AE gp120 showed low level of binding to 17b in ELISA EC50 and Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) assays. 6240.B gp120 exhibited binding to 17b.
Wen2018
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Assays of poly- and autoreactivity demonstrated that broadly neutralizing NAbs are significantly more poly- and autoreactive than non-neutralizing NAbs. 17b is neither autoreactive nor polyreactive.
Liu2015a
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, antibody polyreactivity)
-
17B: The study identified a HIV-1–neutralizing protein in breast milk, Tenascin-C (TNC). TNC is an extracellular matrix protein important in fetal development and wound healing. TNC bound the HIV-1 Envelope protein at a site that is induced upon engagement of its primary receptor, CD4, and is blocked by monoclonal antibodies that bind to the V3 loop (19B and F39F) and chemokine coreceptor binding site (17B).
Fouda2013
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: The immunologic effects of mutations in the Env cytoplasmic tail (CT) that included increased surface expression were explored using a vaccinia prime/protein boost protocol in mice. After vaccinia primes, CT- modified Envs induced up to 7-fold higher gp120-specific IgG, and after gp120 protein boosts, they elicited up to 16-fold greater Tier-1 HIV-1 neutralizing antibody titers. Envs with or without the TM1 mutations were expressed in HEK 293T cells and analyzed for the relative expression of Ab epitopes including the co-receptor binding site for 17b.
Hogan2018
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: SOSIP.664 trimer was modified at V3 positions 306 and 308 by Leucine substitution to create hydrophobic interactions with the tryptophan residue at position 316 and the V1V2 domain. These modifications stabilized the resulting SOSIP.v5.2 S306L R308L trimers. In vivo, the induction of V3 non-NAbs was significantly reduced compared with the SOSIP.v5.2 trimers.
deTaeye2018
(broad neutralizer)
-
17b: Nanodiscs (discoidal lipid bilayer particles of 10-17 nm surrounded by membrane scaffold protein) were used to incorporate Env complexes for the purpose of vaccine platform generation. The Env-NDs (Env-NDs) were characterized for antigenicity and stability by non-NAbs and NAbs. Most NAb epitopes in gp41 MPER and in the gp120:gp41 interface were well exposed while non-NAb cell surface epitopes were generally masked. Anti-gp120 non-NAb 17b, binds at a fraction of the binding of 2G12 to Env-ND, and this binding is slightly sensitive to glutaraldehyde treatment .
Witt2017
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
17b: Three strategies were applied to perturb the structure of Env in order to make the protein more susceptible to neutralization: exposure to cold, Env-activating ligands, and a chaotropic agent. A panel of mAbs (E51, 48d, 17b, 3BNC176, 19b, 447-52D, 39F, b12, b6, PG16, PGT145, PGT126, 35O22, F240, 10E8, 7b2, 2G12) was used to test the neutralization resistance of a panel of subtype B and C pseudoviruses with and without these agents. Both cold and CD4 mimicking agents (CD4Ms) increased the sensitivity of some viruses. The chaotropic agent urea had little effect by itself, but could enhance the effects of cold or CD4Ms. Thus Env destabilizing agents can make Env more susceptible to neutralization and may hold promise as priming vaccine antigens.
Johnson2017
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Env from of a highly neutralization-resistant isolate, CH120.6, was shown to be very stable and conformationally-homogeneous. Its gp140 trimer retains many antigenic properties of the intact Env, while its monomeric gp120 exposes more epitopes. Thus trimer organization and stability are important determinants for occluding epitopes and conferring resistance to antibodies. Among a panel of 21 mAbs, CH120.6 was resistant to neutralization by all non-neutralizing and strain-specific mAbs (including 17b), regardless of the location of their epitopes. It was weakly neutralized by several broadly-neutralizing mAbs (VRC01, NIH45-46, 12A12, PG9, PG16, PGT128, 4E10, and 10E8), and well neutralized by only 2 (PGT145 and 10-1074).
Cai2017
(neutralization)
-
17b: Compared to patient-derived mAbs, vaccine-elicited mAbs are often less able to neutralize the virus, due to a less-effective angle of approach to the Env spike. This study engineered an immunogen consisting of the gp120 core in complex with a CD4bs mAb, 17b. Rabbits immunized with this antigen displayed earlier affinity maturation and better virus neutralization compared to those immunized with the gp120 core alone. The 17b antibody was shown to have a steric clash with two other CD4bs Abs, GE136 and GE148, but not with VRC01.
Chen2016b
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, structure)
-
17b: The amino acid at gp120 position 375 is embedded in the Phe43 cavity, which affects susceptibility to ADCC. Most M-group strains of HIV-1 have serine at position 375, but CRF01 typically has histidine, which is a bulky residue. MAbs 2G12 and 10E8 were not affected by changes in residue 375, while recognition by CD4i mAbs 17b and A32 was increased by mutations of residue 375 to histidine or tryptophan. Participants in the AIDSVAX vaccine trial were infected by CRF01, and a significant part of the efficacy of this vaccine rested on ADCC responses. The ADCC response of MAbs derived from AIDSVAX participants (CH29, CH38, CH40, CH51, CH52, CH54, CH77, CH80, CH81, CH89, CH91, CH94) was dependent on the presence of 375H and greatly decreased by the presence of 375S.
Prevost2017
(effector function, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: The results confirm that Nef and Vpu protect HIV-1-infected cells from ADCC, but also show that not all classes of antibody can mediate ADCC. Anti-cluster-A antibodies are able to mediate potent ADCC responses, whereas anti-coreceptor binding site antibodies are not. Position 69 in gp120 is important for antibody-mediated cellular toxicity by anti-cluster-A antibodies. The angle of approach of a given class of antibodies could impact its capacity to mediate ADCC. Mabs 17b and LF17 were used as anti-CoRBS Abs.
Ding2015
(effector function)
-
17b: To understand HIV neutralization mediated by the MPER, antibodies and viruses were studied from CAP206, a patient known to produce MPER-targeted neutralizing mAbs. 41 human mAbs were isolated from CAP206 at various timepoints after infection, and 4 macaque mAbs were isolated from animals immunized with CAP206 Env proteins. Two rare, naturally-occuring single-residue changes in Env were identified in transmitted/founder viruses (W680G in CAP206 T/F and Y681D in CH505 T/F) that made the viruses less resistant to neutralization. The results point to the role of the MPER in mediating the closed trimer state, and hence the neutralization resistance of HIV. CH58 was one of several mAbs tested for neutralization of transmitted founder viruses isolated from clade C infected individuals CAP206 and CH505, compared to T/F viruses containing MPER mutations that confer enhanced neutralization sensitivity.
Bradley2016a
(neutralization)
-
17b: 15e: This study investigated the ability of native, membrane-expressed JR-FL Env trimers to elicit NAbs. Rabbits were immunized with virus-like particles (VLPs) expressing trimers (trimer VLP sera) and DNA expressing native Env trimer, followed by a protein boost (DNA trimer sera). N197 glycan- and residue 230- removal conferred sensitivity to Trimer VLP sera and DNA trimer sera respectively, showing for the first time that strain-specific holes in the "glycan fence" can allow the development of tier 2 NAbs to native spikes. All 3 sera neutralized via quaternary epitopes and exploited natural gaps in the glycan defenses of the second conserved region of JR-FL gp120. N197 glycan mutants were tested against 17b showing a loss of tier 2 phenotype. The results are in Table S5.
Crooks2015
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
17b: Env residue N197 on the BG505-SOSIP trimer was mutated to test the effect of its glycosylation on the binding kinetics of CD4BS and other mAbs. Removal of the glycan had little effect on the overall structure of the molecule. Its removal resulted in increased binding of CD4 and CD4BS antibodies (VRC01, VRC03, V3-3074), but little effect on bNAbs targeting other epitopes (PG9, PG16, PGT145, 17b, A32, 2G12, PGT121, PGT126). Two CD4BS-binding antibodies tested (b12, F105) had insufficient breadth to bind the BG505-SOSIP trimer. Removal of the N197 glycan may allow for the development of better SOSIP immunogens, particularly to elicit CD4BS-specific Abs.
Liang2016
-
17b: This study assessed the ADCC activity of antibodies of varied binding types, including CD4bs (b6, b12, VRC01, PGV04, 3BNC117), V2 (PG9, PG16), V3 (PGT126, PGT121, 10-1074), oligomannose (2G12), MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8), CD4i (17b, X5), C1/C5 (A32, C11), cluster I (240D, F240), and cluster II (98-6, 126-7). ADCC activity was correlated with binding to Env on the surfaces of virus-infected cells. ADCC was correlated with neutralization, but not always for lab-adapted viruses such as HIV-1 NLA-3.
vonBredow2016
(effector function)
-
17b: Two stable homogenous gp140 Env trimer spikes, Clade A 92UG037.8 Env and Clade C C97ZA012 Env, were identified. 293T cells stably transfected with either presented fully functional surface timers, 50% of which were uncleaved. A panel of neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs were tested for binding to the trimers. Non-neutralizing CD4i Ab, 17b did not bind cell surface or neutralize 92UG037.8 HIV-1 isolate, but it did bind well in the presence of sCD4.
Chen2015
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
17b: PGT145 was used to positively isolate a subtype B Env trimer immunogen, B41 SOSIP.664, that exists in two conformations, closed and partially open. bNAbs tested against the trimer were able to neutralize the B41 pseudovirus with a wide range of potencies. Among non-NAbs to CD4bs (b6, F91, F105); to CD4i (17b); to gp41ECTO (F240); and to V3 (447-52D, 39F, CO11, 19b and 14e), none neutralized B41 (IC50 >50µg/ml).
Pugach2015
-
17b: A comprehensive antigenic map of the cleaved trimer BG505 SOSIP.664 was made by bNAb cross-competition. Epitope clusters at the CD4bs, quaternary V1/V2 glycan, N332-oligomannose patch and new gp120-gp41 interface and their interactions were delineated. Epitope overlap, proximal steric inhibition, allosteric inhibition or reorientation of glycans were seen in Ab cross-competition. Thus bNAb binding to trimers can affect surfaces beyond their epitopes. CD4i non-NAb, 17b binding was modestly increased by the initial binding of CD4bs bNAbs, VRC01, 3BNC60, NIH45-46.
Derking2015
(antibody interactions, neutralization, binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: Two clade C recombinant Env glycoprotein trimers, DU422 and ZM197M, with native-like structural and antigenic properties involving epitopes against all known classes of bNAbs, were produced and characterized. These Clade C trimers (10-15% of which are in a partially open form) were more like B41 Clade B trimers which have 50-75% trimers in the partially open configuration than like B505 Clade B trimers, almost 100% in the closed, prefusion state. The Clade C trimers have almost no affinity for the CD4induced non-NAb, 17b, and 17b was unable to neutralize the equivalent pseudotyped viruses for either trimer.
Julien2015
(assay or method development, structure)
-
17b: Env trimer BG505 SOSIP.664 as well as the clade B trimer B41 SOSIP.664 were stabilized using a bifunctional aldehyde (glutaraldehye, GLA) or a heterobifunctional cross-linker, EDC/NHS with modest effects on antigenicity and barely any on biochemistry or structural morphology. ELISA, DSC and SPR were used to test recognition of the trimers by bNAbs, which was preserved and by weakly NAbs or non-NAbs, which was reduced. Cross-linking partially preserves quaternary morphology so that affinity chromatography by positive selection using quaternary epitope-specific bNAabs, and negative selection using non-NAbs, enriched antigenic characteristics of the trimers. Binding of CD4i-epitope-recognizing non-NAb, 19b, to trimers was almost completely eliminated by trimer cross-linking.
Schiffner2016
(assay or method development, binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: A new trimeric immunogen, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, was developed that bound and activated most known neutralizing antibodies but generally did not bind antibodies lacking neuralizing activity. This highly stable immunogen mimics the Env spike of subtype A transmitted/founder (T/F) HIV-1 strain, BG505. Anti-CDi non-NAb 17b did not neutralize BG505.T332N, the pseudoviral equivalent of the immunogen BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, and did not recognize or bind the immunogen either.
Sanders2013
(assay or method development, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
17b: A panel of Env-specific mAbs was isolated from 6 HIV1-infected lactating women. Antibodies in colostrum may help prevent mucosal infection of the infant, so this study aimed to define milk IgGs for future vaccination strategies to reduce HIV transmission during lactation. Despite the high rate of VH 1-69 usage among colostrum Env specific B cells, it did not correlate with distinct gp120 epitope specificity or function. 17b was compared to the newly-derived mAbs; it didn't cross-react with gut bacteria, and tested negative in 2 tests of autoreactivity.
Jeffries2016
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
17b: A solution-phase ECL assay for ultrasensitive and quantitative analysis of binding affinities of HIV receptor and MAb interactions has been demonstrated. This study of binding of gp120 with anti CD4 mAb Q4120-CD4-tag and 17b-gp120 with CD4-tag shows that Q4120 can completely block the binding of gp120 with CD4-tag, while 17b can only partially block their binding. The results indicate that Q4120 can serve as a more effective neutralizing antibody than 17b to potentially block the HIV infection of T cells.
Xu2013
(antibody interactions, assay or method development)
-
17B: Galactosyl ceramide (Galcer), a glycosphingolipid, is a receptor for the HIV-1 Env glycoprotein. This study has mimicked this interaction by using an artificial membrane containing synthetic Galcer and recombinant HIV-1 Env proteins to identify antibodies that would block the HIV-1 Env-Galcer interaction. HIV-1 ALVAC/AIDSVAX vaccinee-derived MAbs specific for the gp120 C1 region blocked Galcer binding of a transmitted/founder HIV-1 Env gp140. MAb 17B itself did not block Env-Galcer binding, suggesting that the C1 Ab-induced gp120 conformational changes resulted in alteration in a Galcer binding site distant from the CD4i 17B MAb binding site.
Dennison2014
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, effector function, glycosylation)
-
17b: 17b was one of 10 MAbs used to study chronic vs. consensus vs. transmitted/founder (T/F) gp41 Envs for immunogenicity. Consensus Envs were the most potent eliciters of response but could only neutralize tier 1 and some tier 2 viruses. T/F Envs elicited the greatest breadth of NAb response; and chronic Envs elicited the lowest level and narrowest response. This CCR5BS binding Nab bound well at <10 nM to 3/5 chronic Envs, 3/6 Consensus Envs and 6/7 T/F Envs.
Liao2013c
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
17b: The neutralization profile of 1F7, a human CD4bs mAb, is reported and compared to other bnNAbs. 1F7 competed with 17b for binding with gp120.
Gach2013
(neutralization)
-
17b: This study reported the Ab binding titers and neutralization of 51 patients with chronic HIV-1 infection on supressive ART for 3 yrs. A high titer of Ab against gp120, gp41, and MPER was found. Patient sera were evaluated for binding against recombinant gp120JR-FL mutants lacking either the V1/V2 loop or the V3 loop. Significantly higher end point binding titers and HIV1JR-FL neutralization were noticed in patients with >10 compared to <10 yrs of detectable HIV RNA. 17b was used as a CD4b Ab control.
Gach2014
(neutralization, HAART, ART)
-
17b: A highly conserved mechanism of exposure of ADCC epitopes on Env is reported, showing that binding of Env and CD4 within the same HIV-1 infected cell effectively exposes these epitopes. The mechanism might explain the evolutionary advantage of downregulation of cell surface CD4v by the Vpu and Nef proteins. 17b was used in co-expression and cryoelectron tomography assays to understand the conformational changes in Env upon CD4 binding.
Veillette2014
(effector function, structure)
-
17b: The ability of MAb A32 to recognize HIV-1 Env expressed on the surface of infected CD4(+) T cells as well as its ability to mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity was investigated. This study demonstrates that the epitope defined by MAb A32 is a major target on gp120 for plasma ADCC activity. 17b was used as a control and A32 showed 4-6 fold higher ADCC activity than 17b.
Ferrari2011a
(effector function)
-
17b:X-ray crystallography, surface plasmon resonance and pseudovirus neutralization were used to characterize a heavy chain only llama antibody, named JM4. The full-length IgG2b version of JM4 neutralizes over 95% of circulating HIV-1 isolates. JM4 targets a hybrid epitope on gp120 that combines elements from both the CD4 binding region and the coreceptor binding surface. JM4 epitope overlaps with the CD4i binding site of 17b.
Acharya2013
(neutralization)
-
17b: A computational method to predict Ab epitopes at the residue level, based on structure and neutralization panels of diverse viral strains has been described. This method was evaluated using 19 Env-Abs, including 17b, against 181 diverse HIV-1 strains with available Ab-Ag complex structures.
Chuang2013
(computational prediction)
-
17b: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 17b is discussed as the CD4i CoRBS (Cluster C) region-targeting, neutralizing anti-gp120 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a discontinuous epitope. Co-localization of the gp120HXBc2core CD4/17b complex (PDB:1GC1) was studied by tomogram of the chimera.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review, structure)
-
1.7B: This study mapped the amino acid changes in epitopes that led to escape from the initial autologous neutralizing Ab response in two HIV-1 B infected individuals. Escape occurred by different pathways but the responses appeared to be directed against the same region of gp120. In conclusion, a region just below the base of the V3 loop, near the coreceptor binding domain of gp120, can be a target for autologous neutralization. MAb 1.7B was used as a noncompeting human Ab in cross competition analysis.
Tang2011
(autologous responses, glycosylation, neutralization, escape, HAART, ART, structure)
-
17b: ADCC mediated by CD4i mAbs (or anti-CD4i-epitope mAbs) was studied using a panel of 41 novel mAbs. Three epitope clusters were classified, depending on cross-blocking in ELISA by different mAbs: Cluster A - in the gp120 face, cross-blocking by mAbs A32 and/or C11; Cluster B - in the region proximal to CoRBS (co-receptor binding site) involving V1V2 domain, cross-blocking by E51-M9; Cluster C - CoRBS, cross-blocking by 17b and/or 19e. The ADCC half-maximal effective concentrations of the Cluster A and B mAbs were generally 0.5-1 log lower than those of the Cluster C mAbs, and none of the Cluster A or B mAbs could neutralize HIV-1. Cluster A's A32- and C11-blockable mAbs were suggested to recognize conformational epitopes within the inner domain of gp120 that involve the C1 region. Neutralization potency and breadth were also assessed for these mAbs. No correlation was found between ADCC and neutralization Abs' action or functional responses.17b was used as the classical CoRBS Ab control in different assays, especially competition ELISA assays to determine epitope specificity.
Guan2013
(antibody interactions, effector function)
-
17b: This study uncovered a potentially significant contribution of VH replacement products which are highly enriched in IgH genes for the generation of anti-HIV Abs including anti-gp41, anti-V3 loop, anti-gp120, CD4i and PGT Abs. The VH replacement "footprints" within CD4i Abs preferentially encode negatively charged amino acids within IgH CDR3. The details of 17b VH replacement products in IgH gene and mutations and amino acid sequence analysis are described in Table 1,Table 2 and Fig 3.
Liao2013a
(antibody sequence)
-
17b: Cryoelectron tomography was used to determine structures of A12, m36, or m36/CD4 complexed to trimeric Env displayed on intact HIV-1 BaL virus. The foot print of m36 binding on gp120 is near the base of the V3 loop which resembles a "fully open" conformation similar to the coreceptor targeted CD4i mAb, 17b.
Meyerson2013
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
Lists 7 mAbs derived from patient N70: 15E, 1.9B, 2.3A, 2.3B, 2.1H, F91, 1.7B.
Robinson1992
-
17b: Systematic computational analyses of gp120 plasticity and conformational transition in complexes with CD4 binding fragments, mimetic proteins and Ab fragments is described to explain the molecular mechanisms by which gp120 interacts with the CD4bs at local and subdomain levels. An isotopic elastic network analysis, a full atomic normal mode analysis and simulation of conformational transitions were used to compare the gp120 structures in CD4 bound and 17b Ab-bound states.
Korkut2012
(structure)
-
17b: Design, synthesis, characterization and structures of gp120 in complex with dual hot-spot HIV-1 entry inhibitor small-molecules is reported. 17b was used as a surrogate for the co-receptor and structure of HIV-1 CD4:gp120:17b complex is described.
LaLonde2012
(structure)
-
17b: The sera of 20 HIV-1 patients were screened for ADCC in a novel assay measuring granzyme B (GrB) and T cell elimination and reported that complex sera mediated greater levels of ADCC than anti-HIV mAbs. The data suggested that total amount of IgG bound is an important determinant of robust ADCC which improves the vaccine potency. 17b was used as an anti CD4 binding Ab to study effects of Ab specificity and affinity on ADCC against HIV-1 infected targets.
Smalls-Mantey2012
(assay or method development, effector function)
-
17b: Isolation of VRC06 and VRC06b MAbs from a slow progressor donor 45 is reported. This is the same donor from whom bnMAbs VRC01, VRC03 and NIH 45-46 were isolated and the new MAbs are clonal variants of VRC03. 17b was used as a CoRB-specific MAb to compare binding specificity of VRC06.
Li2012
-
17b: This is a comment on Tan2012. It is noted that Tran and colleagues used high-resolution 3D cryoelectron tomography to define the conformation of Env when bound to soluble CD4 and to a series of monoclonal antibodies. It was demonstrated that antibodies binding to the CD4 binding site or coreceptor binding site of Env may lead to significantly different conformations of the trimeric Env complex. VRC01 locks the complex in a closed conformation, while binding to soluble CD4 or the monoclonal antibody 17b fixed the trimer in an open conformation.
Wright2012
(review, structure)
-
17b: Previous cryo-electron tomographic studies were extended. A more complete picture of the HIV entry process was presented by showing that HIV-1 Env binding to either soluble CD4 (sCD4) or the co-receptor mimic 17b leads to the same structural opening, or activation, of the Env spike. Atudy also demonstrated structurally that the broadly neutralizing antibodies VRC01, VRC02, VRC03 are able to block this activation, locking Env in a state that resembles closed, native Env. The cryo-electron microscopic structure of soluble trimeric Env in the 17b-bound state is presented at ˜9 Å resolution, revealing it as a novel, activated intermediate conformation of trimeric Env that could serve as a new template for immunogen design.
Tran2012
(structure)
-
17b: A computational tool (Antibody Database) identifying Env residues affecting antibody activity was developed. As input, the tool incorporates antibody neutralization data from large published pseudovirus panels, corresponding viral sequence data and available structural information. The model consists of a set of rules that provide an estimated IC50 based on Env sequence data, and important residues are found by minimizing the difference between logarithms of actual and estimated IC50. The program was validated by analysis of MAb 8ANC195, which had unknown specificity. Predicted critical N-glycosylation for 8ANC195 were confirmed in vitro and in humanized mice. The key associated residues for each MAb are summarized in the Table 1 of the paper and also in the Neutralizing Antibody Contexts & Features tool at Los Alamos Immunology Database.
West2013
(glycosylation, computational prediction)
-
17b: Different adjuvants, including Freund's adjuvant (FCA/FIA), MF59, Carbopol-971P and 974P were compared on their ability to elicit antibody responses in rabbits. Combination of Carbopol-971P and MF59 induced potent adjuvant activity with significantly higher titer nAbs than FCA/FIA. There was no difference in binding of this MAb to gp140 SF162 with MF59 adjuvant, but there was 3-fold decrease of antigenicity with FIA, C971, C974, C971+MF59 C971+MF59 as compared to the unadjuvanted sample.
Lai2012
(adjuvant comparison)
-
17b: Somatic hypermutations are preferably found in CDR loops, which alter the Ab combining sites, but not the overall structure of the variable domain. FWR of CDR are usually resistant to and less tolerant of mutations. This study reports that most bnAbs require somatic mutations in the FWRs which provide flexibility, increasing Ab breadth and potency. To determine the consequence of FWR mutations the framework residues were reverted to the Ab's germline counterpart (FWR-GL) and binding and neutralizing properties were then evaluated. 17b had limited neutralizing activity recognizing the CD4 induced site and carried fewer somatic mutations than bnAbs. Fig S4C described the comparison of Ab framework amino acid replacement vs. interactive surface area on 17b.
Klein2013
(neutralization, structure, antibody lineage)
-
17b: Antigenic properties of 2 biochemically stable and homogeneous gp140 trimers (A clade 92UG037 and C clade CZA97012) were compared with the corresponding gp120 monomers derived from the same percursor sequences. The trimers had nearly all the antigenic properties expected for native viral spikes and were markedly different from monomeric gp120. Immobilized 17b Fab could capture gp120 even in the absence of CD4 and CD4 binding greatly increased the strength of interaction. In contrast, gp140 trimer bound to 17b Fab only in the presence of CD4, suggesting that gp120 portions of unligated epitope trimer are tightly confined in a conformation distinct from the CD4-bound state.
Kovacs2012
(antibody binding site, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
17b: Intrinsic reactivity of HIV-1, a new property regulating the level of both entry and sensitivity to Abs has been reported. This activity dictates the level of responsiveness of Env protein to co-receptor, CD4 engagement and Abs. CD4 independence of the glycoprotein variants exhibits strong correlation with 17b binding. The viral sensitivity increases with the S375W mutation to 17b.
Haim2011
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: The study used the swarm of quasispecies representing Env protein variants to identify mutants conferring sensitivity and resistance to BnAbs. Libraries of Env proteins were cloned and in vitro mutagenesis was used to identify the specific AA responsible for altered neutralization/resistance, which appeared to be associated with conformational changes and exposed epitopes in different regions of gp160. The result showed that sequences in gp41, the CD4bs, and V2 domain act as global regulator of neutralization sensitivity. 17b was used as BnAb to screen Env clones. N197H mutation caused increase in neutralization by 17b, but failed in highest concentration.
ORourke2012
(neutralization)
-
17b: This study reports the isolation of a panel of Env vaccine elicited CD4bs-directed macaque mAbs and genetic and functional features that distinguish these Abs from CD4bs MAbs produced during chronic HIV-1 infection. 17b was used as a positive control Abs in competitive binding assay with non human primates mAbs.
Sundling2012
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: The goal of this study was to improve the humoral response to HIV-1 by targeting trimeric Env gp140 to B cells. The gp140 was fused to a proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL), B cell activation factor (BAFF) and CD40 ligand (CD40L). These fusion proteins increased the expression of activation-induced-cytidine deaminase (AID) responsible for somatic hypermutation, Ab affinity maturation, and Ab class switching. The Env-APRIL induced high anti-Env responses against tier1 viruses. 17b was used in immunoprecipitation assay.
Melchers2012
(neutralization)
-
17b: Synthesis of an engineered soluble heterotrimeric gp140 is described. These gp140 protomers were designed against clade A and clade B viruses. The heterotrimer gp140s exhibited broader anti-tier1 isolate neutralizing antibody responses than homotrimer gp140. 17b was used to determine and compare the immunogenicity of homo and heterotrimers gp140s and to investigate the relative exposure of the CCR5 co-receptor binding site. The relative binding of 17b to the Q461/SF162 nonlinker heterotrimer was greater than expected.
Sellhorn2012
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Crystal structures of unliganded core gp120 from HIV-1 clade B, C, and E were determined to understand the mechanism of CD4 binding capacity of unliganded HIV-1. The results suggest that the CD4 bound conformation represents "a ground state" for the gp120 core with variable loop. 17b was used as a control to prove whether the purified and crystallized gp120 is in the CD4 bound conformational state or not.
Kwon2012
(structure)
-
17b: Role of envelope deglycosylation in enhancing antigenicity of HIV-1 gp41 epitopes is reported. The mechanism of induction of broad neutralizing Abs is discussed. The hypothesis of presence of "holes" in the naive B cell repertoires for unmutated B cell receptor against HIV-1 Env was tested. 17b was used in binding assays to compare glycosylated or deglycosylated JFRL and didn't exhibit strong binding to deglycosylated JRFL. The authors inferred that glycan interferences control the binding of unmutated ancestor Abs of broad neutralizing mAb to Env gp41.
Ma2011
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
17b: A panel of glycan deletion mutants was created by point mutation into HIV gp160, showing that glycans are important targets on HIV-1 glycoproteins for broad neutralizing responses in vivo. Enrichment of high mannose N-linked glycan(HM-glycan) of HIV-1 glycoprotein enhanced neutralizing activity of sera from 8/9 patients. 17b was used as a control to compare the neutralizing activity of patients' sera. Mutated glycan 241 (N241S) had an increase neutralization sensitivity to 17b.
Lavine2012
(neutralization)
-
17b: To improve the immunogenicity of HIV-1 Env vaccines, a chimeric gp140 trimer in which V1V2 region was replaced by the GM-CSF cytokine was constructed. We selected GM-CSF was selected because of its defined adjuvant activity. Chimeric EnvGM-CSF protein enhanced Env-specific Ab and T cell responses in mice compared with wild-type Env. Probing with neutralizing antibodies showed that both the Env and GM-CSF components of the chimeric protein were folded correctly. 3 proteins were studied: Env-wild-type, Env-ΔV1V2, Env-hGM-CSF. In the absence of CD4, the CD4i epitope MAb 17b, 48d, and 412d bound poorly to Env-wild-type and Env-hGM-CSF but efficiently to Env-ΔV1V2. Adding soluble CD4 substantially increased the binding of these MAb to Env-ΔV1V2 and especially to Env-wild-type, but binding to Env-hGM-CSF was improved only modestly, suggesting that the presence of GM-CSF in the V1V2 region either limits the accessibility of the CD4i epitopes or blocks the conformational changes that expose them.
vanMontfort2011
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Broadly neutralizing antibodies circulating in plasma were studied by affinity chromatography and isoelectric focusing. The Abs fell in 2 groups. One group consisted of antibodies with restricted neutralization breadth that had neutral isoelectric points. These Abs bound to envelope monomers and trimers versus core antigens from which variable loops and other domains have been deleted. Another minor group consisted of broadly neutralizing antibodies consistently distinguished by more basic isoelectric points and specificity for epitopes shared by monomeric gp120, gp120 core, or CD4-induced structures. The pI values estimated for neutralizing plasma IgGs were compared to those of human anti-gp120 MAbs, including 5 bnMAbs (PG9, PG16, VRC01, b12, and 2G12), 2 narrowly neutralizing MAbs (17b and E51), and 3 nonneutralizing MAbs (A32, C11, and 19e). MAbs 17b and E51, with restricted neutralizing activity, had pIs from 7 to 7.85. Plasma-derived, anti-gp120 IgG fractions in this range also had narrow neutralization breadth.
Sajadi2012
(polyclonal antibodies)
-
17b: Small sized CD4 mimetics (miniCD4s) were engineered. These miniCD4s by themselves are poorly immunogenic and do not induce anti-CD4 antibodies. Stable covalent complexes between miniCD4s and gp120 and gp140 were generated through a site-directed coupling reaction. These complexes were recognized by CD4i antibodies as well as by the HIV co-receptor CCR5 and elicited CD4i antibody responses in rabbits. A panel of MAbs of defined epitope specificities, including MAb 17b, was used to analyze the antigenic integrity of the covalent complexes using capture ELISA.
Martin2011
(mimics, binding affinity)
-
17b: The long-term effect of broadly bNAbs on cell-free HIV particles and their capacity to irreversibly inactivate virus was studied. MPER-specific MAbs potently induced gp120 shedding upon prolonged contact with the virus, rendering neutralization irreversible. The kinetic and thermodynamic requirements of the shedding process were virtually identical to those of neutralization, identifying gp120 shedding as a key process associated with HIV neutralization by MPER bNAbs. Neutralizing and shedding capacity of 7 MPER-, CD4bs- and V3 loop-directed MAbs were assessed against 14 divergent strains. 17b was largely ineffective in both inducing neutralization and shedding.
Ruprecht2011
(neutralization, kinetics)
-
17b: Deglycosylations were introduced into the 24 N-linked glycosylation sites of a R5 env MWS2 cloned from semen. Mutants N156-T158A, N197-S199A, N262-S264A and N410-T412A conferred decreased infectivity and enhanced sensitivity to a series of antibodies and entry inhibitors. Mutant N156-T158A showed enhanced neutralization sensitivity to MAb 17b in the absence of soluble CD4, suggesting that deglycosylation in these sites on gp120 may be beneficial for the exposure of a CD4 induced epitope which only exists in the CD4-liganded form of gp120.
Huang2012
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
17b: In order to increase recognition of CD4 by Env and to elicit stronger neutralizing antibodies against it, two Env probes were produced and tested - monomeric Env was stabilized by pocket filling mutations in the CD4bs (PF2) and trimeric Env was formed by appending trimerization motifs to soluble gp120/gp14. PF2-containing proteins were better recognized by bNMAb against CD4bs and more rapidly elicited neutralizing antibodies against the CD4bs. Trimeric Env, however, elicited a higher neutralization potency that mapped to the V3 region of gp120.
Feng2012
(neutralization)
-
17b: A way to produce conformationally intact, deglycosylated soluble, cleaved recombinant Env trimers by inhibition of the synthesis of complex N-glycans during Env production, followed by treatment with glycosidases under conditions that preserve Env trimer integrity is described to facilitate crystallography and immunogenicity studies. Deglycosylation had no effect on basal or sCD4-induced interactions between the trimers and the coreceptor binding site-directed MAb 17b.
Depetris2012
(glycosylation, binding affinity)
-
17b: The sera of 113 HIV-1 seroconverters from three cohorts were analyzed for binding to a set of well-characterized gp120 core and resurfaced stabilized core (RSC3) protein probes, and their cognate CD4bs knockout mutants. 17b did not bind to gp120 core, gp120 core D368R, RSC3, RSC3/G367R, RSC3 Δ3711, and RSC3 Δ3711/P363N.
Lynch2012
(binding affinity)
-
17b: The study followed the dynamics of alternating viral neutralization phenotype over time in 7 patients monitored for 1-5 years starting from seroconversion. While the development of neutralization resistance, including escape from the autologous antibody response was observed, there was also temporal emergence of viruses exquisitely sensitive to both autologous and heterologous Nabs. All Envs with heightened serum sensitivity were also potently neutralized by sCD4 and/or IgG1b12.Neutralization by 17b in the absence of sCD4 was also observed. In contrast, out of nineteen serum resistant env-chimeras only three were neutralized by 17b in absence of sCD4.
Aasa-Chapman2011
(autologous responses, escape)
-
17b: To test whether HIV-1 particle maturation alters the conformation of the Env proteins, a sensitive and quantitative imaging-based Ab-binding assay was used to probe the conformations of full-length and cytoplasmic tail (CT) truncated Env proteins on mature and immature HIV-1 particles. In the absence of sCD4, binding of MAb 17b to immature particles was approximately 40% less than binding to mature particles. 17b, A1g8, and E51 binding to immature virions was stimulated by sCD4 to a greater or equal extent vs. mature particles, with MAb 17b exhibiting the greatest increase. Truncation of the CT abolished the enhanced sCD4-induced binding of 17b to immature particles. This suggested that CD4 binding triggers exposure of some epitopes to an equal extent on immature and mature virions and other epitopes to a greater extent on immature virions.
Joyner2011
(binding affinity)
-
17b: 17b MAb was used to study mechanism of neutralization by bnMAbs. In contrast to VRC01, PGV04 did not enhance 17b or X5 binding to their epitopes in the co-receptor region on the gp120 monomer, and in contrast to CD4, none of the CD4bs MAbs tested induced the 17b site on trimeric cleaved Env, suggesting that a degree of mimicry of CD4 by anti-CD4bs bnMAbs may be a consequence of binding to the CD4 epitope on monomeric gp120 rather than a neutralization mechanism.
Falkowska2012
(neutralization)
-
17b: Broadly neutralizing HIV-1 immunity associated with VRC01-like antibodies was studied by isolation of VRC01-like neutralizers with CD4bs probe; structural definition of gp120 recognition by RSC3-identified antibodies from different donors; functional complementation of heavy and light chains among VRC01-like antibodies; identification of VRC01 antibodies by 454 pyrosequencing; and cross-donor phylogenetic analysis of sequences derived from the same precursor germline gene. 17b was studied among other antibodies that derive from a common IGHV1-69 allele to assess how atypical the VRC01-like antibody convergence was. T The angular difference in heavy-chain orientation between 17b, 412d, and X5 was over 90°, or roughly 10 times as much as among the VRC01-like antibodies. 17b had 41-62% sequence identity of its heavy and light chains to respective chains of VRC-PG04 and VRC-CH31.
Wu2011
(structure)
-
17b: Molecular architectures of the soluble CD4 (sCD4)-bound states of SIV Env trimers for three different strains (SIVmneE11S, SIVmac239, and SIV CP-MAC) have been determined using cryo-electron tomography that showed only minor conformational changes following sCD4 binding in marked contrast to HIV-1 BaL, SIVmneE11S and SIVmac239. Binding of trimeric HIV-1gp120 to either sCD4 alone or to sCD4 in combination with the coreceptor mimic 17b results in an opening of the trimeric Env structure. Due to a dramatic difference between the angle of approach of MAbs 17b and that of SIV MAb 7D3, these Abs target epitopes on gp120 that are on opposites sides of the coreceptor binding site and in the vicinity of the V3 loop.
White2011
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
17b: To address the controversy of significant differences in chosen atomic coordinates of monomeric SIV gp120 in unliganded, and monomeric HIV-1 gp120 in various liganded and antibodybound states, the molecular architectures of trimeric Env from SIVmneE11S, SIVmac239 and HIV-1 R3A strains are shown to be closely comparable to that previously determined for HIV-1 BaL. The gp120 density profiles obtained from the coordinates of the trimeric Env complex with sCD4/17b (1GC1) and b12 (2NY7) are similar even though there are important differences in their atomic resolution structures.
White2010
(structure)
-
17b: This review outlines the general structure of the gp160 viral envelope, the dynamics of viral entry, the evolution of humoral response, the mechanisms of viral escape and the characterization of broadly neutralizing Abs. This MAb is noted in the review to be CD4i antibody and to have weak neutralizing activity against most HIV-1 isolates, with increased activity when soluble CD4 is added.
Gonzalez2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, escape, review)
-
17b: Crystal structures of gp120 and gp41 in complex with CD4 and/or MAbs 17b, 48d, b12, b13, 412d, X5, 211C, C11, 15e, m6, m9 and F105 were used to determine the structure and the mobility of the gp41-interactive region of gp120. Elements determined to maintain the gp120-gp41 interaction were the gp120 termini and a newly described invariant 7-stranded β-sandwich. Structurally plastic elements of gp120 responsible for the various gp120 conformation changes due to receptor- or Ab-binding were structured into 3 layers, with the V1/V2 loops emanating from layer 2 and the highly glycosylated outer domain from layer 3.
Pancera2010a
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
17b: 37 Indian clade C HIV-1 Env clones obtained at different time points from five patients with recent infection, were studied in neutralization assays for sensitivities to their autologous plasma antibodies and mAbs. One Env clone each from patients IVC2 and IVC3 was neutralized by 17b suggesting spontaneous exposure of CD4i epitopes.
Ringe2010
(neutralization)
-
17b: This paper shows that a highly neutralization-resistant virus is converted to a neutralization sensitive virus with a rare single mutation D179N in the C-terminal portion of the V2 domain. A panel of mutants were tested to determine whether they can improve the neutralization sensitivity of an extremely neutralization-resistant clinical isolate. 17b neutralized wildtype sensitive clone and 6 out of 9 mutants tested (D179N, D179E, D179Q, D179H, D179S and D179A).
ORourke2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: MAb m9 showed superior neutralization potency compared to scFv 17b in a TZM-bl assay, where it neutralized all 15 isolates compared to 17b that neutralized only 2 isolates. Unlike m9, 17b did not compete with R5Nt for binding to gp120, indicating that the epitope for m9 differs from that of 17b.
Zhang2010
(neutralization)
-
17b: A side-by-side comparison was performed on the quality of Ab responses in humans elicited by three vaccine studies focusing on Env-specific Abs. High frequency and titers of 17b-like Abs were detected in all three vaccine trials. 58% of sera from the HVTN 203 trial, 75% of sera from the HVTN 041 trial, and 81% of sera from the DP6-001 trial were able to outcompete binding to 17b MAb.
Vaine2010
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: This review focuses on recent vaccine design efforts and investigation of broadly neutralizing Abs and their epitopes to aid in the improvement of immunogen design. NAb epitopes, NAbs response to HIV-1, isolation of novel mAbs, and vaccine-elicited NAb responses in human clinical trials are discussed in this review.
Mascola2010
(review)
-
17b: A mathematical framework is designed to determine the number of Abs required to neutralize a single trimer called the stoichiometry of trimer neutralization. 15 different virus antibody combinations divided into five groups based on antibody binding sites were used in the designed model. 17b was classified into CD4i group as it binds CD4. The number of 17b Abs needed to neutralize a single trimer was determined to equal 1 with 99.8% probability.
Magnus2010
-
17b: Four human anti-phospholipid mAbs were reported to inhibit HIV-1 infection of human PBMC's by binding to monocytes and releasing soluble chemokines. The ability of different anti-phospholid mAbs to inhibit pseudovirus infection was studied. MAb 17b was able to capture HIV-1 pseudovirions only in the presence of soluble CD4 and not in its absence. 17b did not induce the production of chemokines.
Moody2010
(binding affinity)
-
17b: The antigenic structure of Gag-Env pseudovirions was characterized and it was shown that these particles can recapitulate native HIV virion epitope structures. 17b exhibited low level binding to the Gag-Env pseudovirions that was markedly improved in the presence of sCD4, indicating presence of native trimers. The Gag-Env pseudovirions were further used to identify a subset of antigen-specific B cells in chronically infected HIV subjects.
Hicar2010
(binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: Molecular modeling was used to construct a 3D model of an anti-gp120 RNA aptamer, B40t77, in complex with gp120. Externally exposed residues of gp120 that participated in stabilizing interaction with the aptamer were mutated. Binding of 17b to gp120 was inhibited by B40t77, which is suggested to be due to the overlapping binding sites of the two molecules.
Joubert2010
(binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: Biological effects of mutating I309L in HIV-1 subtype C Envs was examined. 4/11 mutated Envs showed moderate increase in their neutralization sensitivity to 17b after incubation with sCD4, indicating that I309L affects the efficiency with which the coreceptor binding site is formed.
Lynch2010
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: Unlike the MPER MAbs tested, 17b did not show any Env-independent virus capture in the conventional or in the modified version of the virus capture assay.
Leaman2010
-
17b: Impact of in vivo Env-CD4 interactions was studied during vaccinations of Rhesus macaques with two Env trimer variants rendered CD4 binding defective (368D/R and 423/425/431 trimers) and wild-type (WT) trimers. Ab binding profiles of the three trimer variants were assessed by binding analyses to different MAbs. coreceptor binding site (CoRbs) directed MAb 17b bound similarly to WT and 368D/R trimers but its binding affinity was completely abrogated for 423/425/431 trimers.
Douagi2010
(binding affinity)
-
17b: Peptide ligands for CD4i epitopes on native dualtropic Env were selected by phage display. The correct exposure of CD4i epitopes was detected with 17b, and incubation with sCD4 greatly enhanced its binding. An optimized synthetic peptide derivative (XD3) bound to all Env proteins analyzed with different coreceptor usage and inhibited binding of MAb 17b to immobilized gp120 in the presence and absence of sCD4 by 30 percent and 50 percent, respectively.
Dervillez2010
(binding affinity)
-
17b: 21c binding, autoreactivity, polyreactivity and protective benefits are discussed and compared to other autoreactive MAbs, such as 2F5 and 4E10. Regulation of CD4i MAbs, such as 21c and 17b, by tolerance mechanisms is discussed.
Haynes2010
(autoantibody or autoimmunity, antibody polyreactivity)
-
17b: Expression of gp120 was shown to lead to the accumulation of both monomeric gp120 and aberrant dimeric gp120 forms. Dimeric forms of gp120 were not recognized by CD4i MAbs, such as 17b, nor by MAbs against the gp120 inner domain, but were recognized by CD4BS MAbs. It is suggested that gp120 dimerization occludes or disrupts the inner domain and/or the co-receptor binding site. Formation of gp120 dimers was reduced by removal of the V1/V2 loops or the N and C termini.
Finzi2010
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: 17b was linked with sCD4 and the construct was tested for its neutralization breadth and potency. sCD4-17b showed significantly greater neutralization breadth and potency compared to other MAbs (b12, 2G12, 2F5 and 4E10), neutralizing 100% of HIV-1 primary isolates of subtypes A, B, C, D, F, CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG. Unlike the other MAbs, sCD4-17b was equivalently active against virus particles generated from different producer cell types.
Lagenaur2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: A set of Env variants with deletions in V1/V2 was constructed. Replication competent Env variants with V1/V2 deletions were obtained using virus evolution of V1/V2 deleted variants. Sensitivity of the evolved ΔV1V2 viruses was evaluated to study accessibility of their neutralization epitopes. In the absence of sCD4, 17b bound and neutralized ΔV1V2 variants more potently than the full-length trimer. Addition of sCD4 did not enhance 17b binding, as it was close to optimal without sCD4. 17b did not bind to the ΔV1V2 variant with V120K substitution. For the uncleaved variants, 17b bound to the ΔV1V2 but did not bind well to the full-length virus, unaffected by presence of sCD4.
Bontjer2010
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
17b:The effect of amino acid polymorphisms on the structural stability and cooperative interactions of gp120, from A and B subtype HIV-1, were compared using microcalorimetric techniques. The impact of these polymorphisms on the binding mechanisms of gp120-A and gp120-B to the host cell surface receptors and coreceptors was also studied for development of entry inhibitors. The binding affinity of 17b is increased by CD4 for gp120-B but only minimally increased for gp120-A. Binding of 17b to gp120-A induced smaller enthalpy and entropy changes compared to 17b binding to gp120-B, indicating that binding of this Ab to gp120-A induces smaller conformational changes. The epitope for this Ab is highly conserved between gp120-A and gp120-B proteins, although 17b has 3-fold weaker affinity for gp120-A.
Brower2010
(kinetics, binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: Neutralizing activities of 17b were similar against parent and GnTI (complex glycans of the neutralizing face are replaced by fully trimmed oligomannose stumps) viruses, and the N301Q mutant virus (glycan at position 301 is removed), with all viruses being resistant to neutralization by this Ab.
Binley2010
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
17b: Binding of 17b to Env HIV-1 JR-FL increased gradually as the amount of CD4-mimicking small compound NBD-556 increased. Pretreatment by NBD-556 remarkably increased binding of 17b to JR-FL Env, indicating enhancement of 17b epitope accessibility by NBD-556.
Yoshimura2010
(mimics, binding affinity)
-
17b: A panel of 109 HIV-1 pseudoviruses was assessed for neutralization sensitivities to 17b MAb and patient plasma pools from genetically diverse HIV-1 positive samples. Clustering analyses revealed that the 109 viruses could be divided to 4 sub-groups, based on their neutralization sensitivity to the plasma pools: very high (Tier 1A), above-average (Tier 1B), moderate (Tier 2), and low (Tier 3) sensitivity. 3 Tier 1A, 6 Tier 1B, 1 Tier 2 but no Tier 3 viruses were found to be sensitive to neutralization by 17b.
Seaman2010
(neutralization)
-
1.7B: gp41 L669S mutant virus was moderately sensitive to neutralization by 1.7B while the L669 wild type virus was resistant. This indicates that conformational changes in the MPER could alter the exposure of neutralization epitopes in other regions of HIV-1 Env.
Shen2010
(neutralization)
-
17b: Fusion of CD4 with 17b scFv resulted in CD4-scFv17b reagent with neutralization potency comparable to other CD4-CD4i complexes. The neutralization potency was improved by inclusion of an IgG Fc region and by linkage of CD4 to the heavy chain of 17b. The resulting CD4hc-IgG17b neutralized a range of clade A, B and C viruses with potency comparable to other broadly neutralizing Abs. The complex, however, had low expression levels.
West2010
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: To examine the antigenicity of a defined Ab epitope on the functional envelope spike, a panel of chimeric viruses engrafted at different positions with the hemagglutinin (HA) epitope tag was constructed. 17b neutralized 5/6 chimeric viruses poorly, indicating that the quaternary structure of the spikes was maintained. One virus with the HA-tag inserted in the V2 loop was more sensitive to neutralization by 17b than the wild type, indicating that the HA tag had resulted in localized alternation of gp120.
Pantophlet2009
(neutralization)
-
17b: NAb specificities of a panel of HIV sera were systematically analyzed by selective adsorption with native gp120 and specific mutant variants. The integrity of gp120 beads in adsorption assay were validated by binding analysis to 17b. gp120 point mutation D368R was used to screen the sera for CD4bs- Abs, and it was shown that this mutant could adsorb binding activity of 17b. To test for presence of coreceptor binding region MAbs in sera, gp120 I420 mutant was used. This mutant was not recognized by 17b, and it could not adsorb binding activity of 17b in adsorption assay. In some of the broadly neutralizing sera, the gp120-directed neutralization was mapped to CD4bs. Some sera were positive for NAbs against coreceptor binding region. A subset of sera also contained NAbs directed against MPER.
Li2009c
(assay or method development)
-
17b: The review discusses the implications of HIV-1 diversity on vaccine design and induction of neutralizing Abs, and possible novel approaches for rational vaccine design that can enhance coverage of HIV diversity. Patterns of within-clade and between-clade diversity in core epitopes of known potent neutralizing Abs is displayed.
Korber2009
(review)
-
17b: A set of Env variants with deletions in V1/V2 were constructed. Replication competent Env variants with V1/V2 deletions were obtained using virus evolution of V1/V2 deleted variants. Most V1/V2 deleted viruses were sensitive to neutralization by 17b, while the wild type and the evolved variants were resistant. This indicated that deletion of V1/V2 increases exposure of 17b epitope, and that the compensation mutations in the evolved viruses damage 17b epitope.
Bontjer2009
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: The crystal structure for VRC01 in complex with an HIV-1 gp120 core from a clade A/E recombinant strain was analyzed to understand the structural basis for its neutralization breadth and potency. 17b bound with high affinity to CD4-bound but not to non-CD4-bound gp120 conformation. The number of mutations from the germline and the number of mutated contact residues for 17b were smaller than those for VRC01.
Zhou2010
(neutralization, binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: Resurfaced stabilized core 3 (RSC3) protein was designed to preserve the antigenic structure of the gp120 CD4bs neutralizing surface but eliminate other antigenic regions of HIV-1. RSC3 did not show binding to 17b. Memory B cells were selected that bound to RSC3 and full IgG mAbs were expressed. Binding of 17b to gp120 was enhanced by the addition of two newly detected mAbs VRC01 and VRC02.
Wu2010
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
17b: Flexibility and rigidity of gp120 structures in isolation and in complex with CD4, CD4-mimics, and NAbs was analyzed using Floppy Inclusion and Rigid Substructure Topography program. The mean global flexibility of CD4/17b-bound gp12 was lower than that of b12-bound gp120. A common rigid core including residues 335-352 of gp120 was found, regardless of the strain or binding patterns.
Tan2009
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: Combinations of loop alternations, filling hydrophobic pockets (F-mutations) and introduction of inter-domain cysteine pairs (D-mutations) were used to construct four immunogens with stabilized gp120 core. Modified truncations of the V1V2 and the V3 loop significantly increased 17b binding, even in the absence of CD4, and introduction of stabilizing F and D mutations significantly increased the on-rates of 17b interaction. Immunization assays revealed that the truncated core protein induced much higher titer of CD4bs-directed Abs than CD4i Abs, while conformationally stabilized mutant did the opposite.
Dey2009
(kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: A review about the in vivo efficacy of MAbs against HIV-1, and about inhibition of HIV-1 infection by MAb fragments (Fab, scFv), including single molecules or fusion proteins of 17b. Also, the efficacy of engineered human Ab variable domains or "domain antibodies" (dAbs) as therapeutic agents is reviewed.
Chen2009b
(neutralization, immunotherapy, review)
-
17b: Affinity and changes in enthalpy and entropy of 17b binding to gp120/sCD4 complex were evaluated. S22 peptide, which is a 22 aa tyrosine-sulfated peptide corresponding to the CCR5 N-terminal region, competitively inhibited 17b.
Brower2009
(kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: OD (GSL)(δβ20-21)(hCD4-TM) glycoprotein variant was constructed by eliminating V1 and V2 regions, truncating V3, and deleting cleavage, fusion, and interhelical domains from Env derivatives from R3A TA1 virus. In addition, the variant was membrane-anchored, the β20-β21 hairpin was truncated, and the central 20 amino acids of the V3 loop were replaced with a basic hexapeptide. Although this variant showed increased binding to b12 and 2G12, it did not bind to 17b.
Wu2009a
(binding affinity)
-
17b: 17b competed slightly with the broadly neutralizing Ab PG9 for binding to gp120.
Walker2009a
-
17b: Δ9-12a, a mutant virus derived from an in-vitro passaged virus with four residues removed from the V3 stem, was shown to be completely resistant to CCR5 inhibitors and to neutralization by 17b. TA1, a mutant with a 15 amino acid deletion of the distal half of V3, was extremely sensitive to neutralization by 17b.
Nolan2009
(neutralization)
-
17b: Binding of 17b to gp120 was not inhibited by YZ23, an Ab derived from mice immunized with eletcrophilic analogs of gp120 (E-gp120), indicating no overlap of these MAb epitopes.
Nishiyama2009
-
17b: EpiSearch is an algorithm that predicts the location of conformational epitopes on the surface of an antigen by using peptide sequences from phage display experiments as input and ranking surface exposed patches according to the frequency distribution of similar residues in the peptides and in the patch. When tested for 17b, the conformational epitope was predicted correctly with terminal cysteine residues, but when these were omitted the accuracy of the method was lowered.
Negi2009
(computational prediction)
-
17b: Subtype A gp140 SOSIP trimers were recognized by 17b.
Kang2009
-
17b: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:1-69, IGHD:nd, D-RF:nd, IGHJ:1. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner. Anti-CD4i mAbs exclusively used the VH1 gene family.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
17b: Ten new non-neutralizing, cross-reactive mAbs were found in immunized mice. 17b was able to bind free virions, which was increased by addition of sCD4, while the newly detected mAbs could not bind free virions.
Gao2009
-
17b: Two chimeras were constructed from a new HIV-2KR.X7 proviral scaffold where the V3 region was substituted with the V3 from HIV-1 YU2 and Ccon, generating subtype B and C HIV-2 V3 chimera. Both chimera, and the wildtype HIV-2KR and its derivatives HIV-2KR.X4 and HIV-2KR.X7 were resistant to neutralization by 17b.
Davis2009
(neutralization)
-
17b: Two different but genetically related viruses, CC101.19 and D1/85.16, which are resistant to small molecule CCR5 inhibitors, and two clones from their inhibitor sensitive parental strain CC1/85, were used to analyze interactions of HIV-1 with CCR5. CC101.19 had 4 substitutions in the V3 region and D1/85.16 had 3 changes in gp41. CC101.19 was the most neutralization sensitive to 17b, while this Ab had limited neutralization activity to the two parental clones and to D1/85.16. However, gp120 from CC1/85 and D1/85.16 were the most reactive with 17b, and gp120 from all four viruses was equally reactive with 17b when sCD4 was added. This indicates that at least one major element of the CCR5 binding site has become accessible in the inhibitor-resistant CC101.19 virus.
Berro2009
(neutralization)
-
17b: 17b neutralized Tier 1 but not Tier 2 viruses. Crystal structure of F105 in complex with gp120 revealed that all four strands of the bridging sheet were displaced to uncover a hydrophobic region which served for F105 binding. A monomeric disulfide gp120 variant was bound by 17b, suggesting that 17b does not rely on access to the hydrophobic surface for binding. Binding affinity and kinetics of 17b binding to several gp120 variants as assessed.
Chen2009
(neutralization, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: This report investigated whether mannose removal alters gp120 immunogenicity in mice. Approximately 55 mannose residues were removed from gp120 by mannosidase digestion creating D-gp120 for immunization. 17b was able to bind to D-gp120 comparably as to the untreated gp120, indicating that the mannosidase digestion did not affect the antigenicity of gp120.
Banerjee2009
(binding affinity)
-
17b: An R5X4 HIV-1 strain, R3A, could tolerate partial loss of its V3 loop, but was poorly functional. After passage in tissue culture, the virus (now called TA1) still had a truncated V3 loop, but had acquired five mutations in its env gene and had also regained its function. TA1 was sensitive to neutralization by 17b MAb while the parental R3A was resistant to neutralization by this Ab. Viruses with Envs containing two or three of the five adaptive mutations were less sensitive to neutralization by 17b than TA1. Thus, the V3 truncation played a central role in sensitivity to 17b, but the adaptive mutations substantially increased sensitivity of the virus to 17b.
Agrawal-Gamse2009
(neutralization)
-
17b: 17b neutralized infection of PBLs with R5 HIV-1 strains with higher potency than X4 HIV-1 strains. However, 17b did not inhibit transcytosis of cell-free or cell-associated virus across a monolayer of epithelial cells. A mixture of 13 MAbs directed to well-defined epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope, including 17b, did not inhibit HIV-1 transcytosis, indicating that envelope epitopes involved in neutralization are not involved in mediating HIV-1 transcytosis. When the mixture of 13 MAbs and HIV-1 was incubated with polyclonal anti-human γ chain, the transcytosis was partially inhibited, indicating that agglutination of viral particles at the apical surface of cells may be critical for HIV transcytosis inhibition by HIV-specific Abs.
Chomont2008
(neutralization)
-
17b: A chimeric protein entry inhibitor, L5, was designed consisting of an allosteric peptide inhibitor 12p1 and a carbohydrate-binding protein cyanovirin (CNV) connected via a flexible linker. The L5 chimera inhibited 17b-gp120 interaction, but the CNV alone had a limited effect, indicating that the chimera has the high affinity binding property of the CNV molecule and the inhibitory property of the 12p1 peptide.
McFadden2007
-
17b: This review summarizes data on possible vaccine targets for elicitation of neutralizing Abs and discusses whether it is more practical to design a clade-specific than a clade-generic HIV-1 vaccine. Development of a neutralizing Ab response in HIV-1 infected individuals is reviewed, including data that show no apparent division of different HIV-1 subtypes into clade-related neutralization groups. The neutralizing activity of CD4i Abs, such as 17b, is discussed.
McKnight2007
(review)
-
17b: This review provides information on the HIV-1 glycoprotein properties that make it challenging to target with neutralizing Abs. 17b neutralization properties and binding to HIV-1 envelope, and current strategies to develop versions of the Env spike with functional trimer properties for elicitation of broadly neutralizing Abs, are discussed. In addition, approaches to target cellular molecules, such as CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, and MHC molecules, with therapeutic Abs are reviewed.
Phogat2007
(review)
-
17b: 17b structure, binding, neutralization, and strategies that can be used for vaccine antigen design to elicit 17b-like Abs, are reviewed in detail.
Lin2007
(review, structure)
-
17b: This review summarizes 17b Ab epitope, properties and neutralization activity. The effect of differential CCR5 cell surface expression on 17b neutralization activity is discussed.
Kramer2007
(co-receptor, neutralization, review)
-
17b: gp120 proteins with double mutation T257S+S375W, which alters the cavity at the epicenter of the CD4 binding region, showed a weak interaction with 17b in the absence of CD4 and efficient interaction with maximal 17b binding in the presence of 17b. Similar results were observed with unmodified gp120, indicating that although properly folded, the mutant proteins were not completely stabilized in the CD4-bound conformation by the two mutations. The gp120 proteins with double mutation T257S+S375W were used to immunize rabbits. The ability of rabbit sera to affect binding of CD4 to unmodified gp120 proteins was tested. CD4 binding to gp120 was enhanced by 17b.
Dey2007a
(binding affinity)
-
17b: The various effects that neutralizing and non-neutralizing anti-envelope Abs have on HIV infection are reviewed, such as Ab-mediated complement activation and Fc-receptor mediated activities, that both can, through various mechanisms, increase and decrease the infectivity of the virus. The importance of these mechanisms in vaccine design is discussed. The unusual features of the 17b MAb are described.
Willey2008
(review)
-
17b: A mathematical model was developed and used to derive transmitted or founder Env sequences from individuals with acute HIV-1 subtype B infection. All of the transmitted or early founder Envs were resistant to neutralization by 17b, while Envs from three chronically infected patients were unusually sensitive to neutralization by 17b. This indicated that the coreceptor binding surfaces on transmitted/founder Envs are conformationally masked.
Keele2008
(neutralization, acute/early infection)
-
1.7b: Transmission of HIV-1 by immature and mature DCs to CD4+ T lymphocytes was significantly higher for CXCR4- than for CCR5-tropic strains. Preneutralization of R5 virus with 1.7b prior to capture efficiently blocked transmission to 44%, while preineutralization of X4 virus with 1.7b had no effect, indicating that 1.7b treatment results in more efficient transfer of X4 than of R5 HIV-1.
vanMontfort2008
(co-receptor, neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
17b: An R5 HIV variant, in contrast to its parental virus, was shown to infect T-cell lines expressing low levels of cell surface CCR5 and to infect cells in the absence of CD4. The variant was seven-fold more sensitive to neutralization by 17b than the parental virus, indicating that the CCR5 binding site of gp120 is partially exposed on the mutant virus without prior binding to CD4. These properties of the mutant virus were determined by alternations in gp41.
Taylor2008
(co-receptor, neutralization)
-
17b: Trimeric envelope glycoproteins with a partial deletion of the V2 loop derived from subtype B SF162 and subtype C TV1 were compared. The magnitude of 17b binding to subtype C trimer was lower than to subtype B trimer, either in the presence or absence of CD4. However, the fold increase in binding of 17b in presence of CD4 was similar for both subtypes, indicating similar structural rearrangements. Subtype C trimer had many biophysical, biochemical, and immunological characteristics similar to subtype B trimer, except for a difference in the three binding sites for CD4, which showed cooperativity of CD4 binding in subtype C but not in subtype B.
Srivastava2008
(binding affinity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: In order to assess whether small molecule CCR5 inhibitor resistant viruses were more sensitive to neutralization by NAbs, two escape mutant viruses, CC101.19 and D1/85.16, were tested for their sensitivity to neutralization by 17b, compared to the sensitivity of CC1/85 parental isolate and the CCcon.19 control isolate. The CC101.19 escape mutant has 4 sequence changes in V3 while the D1/85.16 has no sequence changes in V3 and relies on other sequence changes for its resistance. None of the control or resistant viruses were sensitive to neutralization by 17b.
Pugach2008
(co-receptor, neutralization)
-
17b: The sensitivity of R5 envelopes derived from several patients and several tissue sites, including brain tissue, lymph nodes, blood, and semen, was tested to a range of inhibitors and Abs targeting CD4, CCR5, and various sites on the HIV envelope. All but one envelopes from brain tissue were macrophage-tropic while none of the envelopes from the lymph nodes were macrophage-tropic. Macrophage-tropic envelopes were also less frequent in blood and semen. None of the patient envelopes were inhibited by 17b, indicating that 17b epitope is not more exposed on macrophage-tropic envelopes than on non-macrophage tropic ones.
Peters2008a
(neutralization)
-
17b: Crystal structures of CD4M47 (a derivative of a synthetic miniprotein with HIV-1 gp120 binding surface of the CD4 receptor incorporated) and a phenylalanine variant ((Phe23)M47) were determined in ternary complexes with HIV-1 gp120 and 17b Ab. The structures revealed correlation between mimetic affinity of the miniprotein for gp120 and overall mimetic-gp120 interactive surface.
Stricher2008
(structure)
-
17b: A series of peptide conjugates were constructed via click reaction of both aryl and alkyl acetylenes with an internally incorporated azidoproline 6 derived from parent peptide RINNIPWSEAMM. Many of these conjugates exhibited increase in both affinity for gp120 and inhibition potencies at both the CD4 and coreceptor binding sites. All high affinity peptides inhibited the interactions of YU2 gp120 with 17b Ab. Inhibition was found to be concentration-dependent. The aromatic, hydrophobic, and steric features in the residue 6 side-chain were found important for the increased affinity and inhibition of the high-affinity peptides. No inhibition of gp120 binding to 17b was observed for position 7 homoalanine-derived conjugates.
Gopi2008
-
17b: Requirements for elicitation of CD4i Abs were examined by immunizing non-primate monkeys, rabbits, and human-CD4 transgenic (huCD4) rabbits with trimeric gp140. The trimers were well recognized by 17b in the absence of CD4 but the relative binding affinity increased 2-5-fold in the presence of sCD4. The avidity of the trimers for 17b in the absence of CD4 was determined to be in the low nanomolar range. Sera from immunized monkeys were able to inhibit 17b binding at a 10-fold higher dilution than sera from immunized rabbits. 17b could bind to the gp140 trimers bound to cell-surface CD4 as well, confirming that the co-receptor site is accessible after trimer binding to membrane-bound CD4.
Forsell2008
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: Neutralization of JRFL, ADA, and YU2 isolates by 17b increased only modestly with increased dose of sCD4, and was never above 50%, indicating that the dose of sCD4, although enough to expose the V3 region, was insufficient to induce full conformational exposure of the co-receptor binding site.
Wu2008
(neutralization)
-
17b: A new purification method was developed using a high affinity peptide mimicking CD4 as a ligand in affinity chromatography. This allowed the separation in one step of HIV envelope monomer from cell supernatant and capture of pre-purified trimer. Binding of 17b to gp120SF162 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the miniCD4 allows the separation of HIV-1 envelope with intact 17b epitope. gp140DF162ΔV2 was purified by the miniCD4 method to assess its ability to capture gp140 trimers. Binding of 17b to gp140DF162ΔV2 purified by the miniCD4 affinity chromatography and a multi-step method was comparable, suggesting that the SF162 trimer antigenicity was preserved.
Martin2008
(assay or method development, binding affinity)
-
17b: Variable domains of three heavy chain Abs, the VHH, were characterized. The Abs were isolated from llamas, who produce immunoglobulins devoid of light chains, immunized with HIV-1 CRF07_BC, to gp120. It was hypothesized that the small size of the VHH, in combination with their protruding CDR3 loops, and their preference for cleft recognition and binding into active sites, may allow for recognition of conserved motifs on gp120 that are occluded from conventional Abs.17b provided some inhibition of binding of the three neutralizing VHH Abs to gp120, suggesting that 17b imposes steric hinderance to binding of the VHH Abs to gp120.
Forsman2008
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: Three-dimensional structures of trimeric Env displayed on native HIV-1 in complex with CD4 and the Fab fragment of 17b were compared to the unligated state, using cryo-electron tomography combined with three-dimensional image classification and averaging. Binding of 17b and CD4 resulted in dramatic conformational changes, including lever-like opening of the trimer. Binding of CD4 made way for exposure of gp41 stalk, and the V3 region was released from the lateral edge of the spike to point towards the target cell. V1/V2 and CD4 binding site moved away from the centre of the spike.
Liu2008
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
17b: V3 loop deletions were introduced into three different primary HIV-1 strains: R3A, DH12, and TYBE. The deletions included: ΔV3(12,12) containing the first and the last 12 residues of the V3 loop, ΔV3(9,9) containing first and last 9 residues, and ΔV3(6,6) containing first and last 6 residues. Only HIV-1 R3A ΔV3(9,9) was able to support cell fusion. Passaging of this virus resulted in a virus strain (TA1) that replicated with wildtype kinetics, and that acquired several adaptive changes in gp120 and gp41 while retaining the V3 loop truncation. 17b neutralized a ΔV1/V2 virus but failed to neutralize R3A or LAI. TA1 was 100-fold more sensitive to neutralization by 17b than the ΔV1/V2 virus.
Laakso2007
(neutralization)
-
17b: HIV-1 env clones resistant to cyanovirin (CV-N), a carbohydrate binding agent, showed amino acid changes that resulted in deglycosylation of high-mannose type residues in the C2-C4 region of gp120. Compared to their parental virus HIV-1 IIIB, these resistant viruses maintained similar sensitivity to 17b, as the glycan at position 301 in the V3 loop was intact.
Hu2007
(neutralization, escape)
-
17b: Five amino acids in the gp41 N-terminal region that promote gp140 trimerization (I535, Q543, S553, K567 and R588) were considered. Their influence on the function and antigenic properties of JR-FL Env expressed on the surfaces of pseudoviruses and Env-transfected cells was studied. Various non-neutralizing antibodies bind less strongly to the Env mutant, but neutralizing antibody binding is unaffected. 17b captured both pseuduvirion preparations weakly in the absence of sCD4, but its binding was increased when sCD4 was also present. 17b failed to inhibit infection by either pseudovirus.
Dey2008
(binding affinity)
-
17b: Molecular mechanism of neutralization by MPER antibodies, 2F5 and 4E10, was studied using preparations of trimeric HIV-1 Env protein in the prefusion, the prehairpin intermediate and postfusion conformations. MAb 17b was used to analyze antigenic properties of construct 92UG-gp140-Fd, derived from isolate 92UG037.8 and stabilized by a C-terminal foldon tag. Uncleaved 92UG-gp140-Fd binds 17b, but only in the presence of CD4.
Frey2008
(binding affinity)
-
17b: A D386N change in the V4 region, which results in restoration of N-glycosylation at this site, did not have any impact on the neutralization of a mutant virus by 17b compared to wildtype. Also, there was no association between increased sensitivity to 17b neutralization and enhanced macrophage tropism.
Dunfee2007
(neutralization)
-
17b: This review summarizes data on the development of HIV-1 centralized genes (consensus and ancestral) for induction of neutralizing antibody responses. Functionality and conformation of native epitopes in proteins based on the centralized genes was tested and confirmed by binding to 17b and other MAbs. Binding of 17b following CD4 also indicated presence of functionally relevant conformational changes of the proteins.
Gao2007
(review)
-
17b: Macaques were immunized with either CD4, gp120, cross-linked gp120-human CD4 complex (gp120-CD4 XL), and with single chain complex containing gp120 rhesus macaque CD4 domains 1 and 2 (rhFLSC). Sera from the rhFLSC immunized animals showed highest competition titers, being able to block gp120-CD4 complex interactions with 17b more efficiently than sera from animals immunized with the three other proteins.
DeVico2007
(neutralization)
-
17b: Interactions of this Ab with gp120 monomer and two cleavage-defective gp140 trimers were studied. It was shown that 17b interactions with the soluble monomers and trimers were dramatically decreased by GA cross-linking of the proteins, indicating that the 17b epitope was affected by cross-linking. This Ab was associated with a large entropy change upon gp120 binding. 17b was shown to have a kinetic disadvantage as it bound to gp120 much slower than the highly neutralizing Abs 2G12 and IgG1b12.
Yuan2006
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: The neutralizing activity of coreceptor-binding site Abs, such as 17b, is reviewed.
Pantophlet2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: The G314E escape variant highly resistant to KD-247 was shown to be more sensitive to 17b Ab than the wildtype virus. 17b was shown to be able to bind and neutralize the escape virus even in the absence of rsCD4 while rsCD4 was necessary for binding of 17b to the wildtype virus, indicating that the G314E mutation induces the expression of epitopes for Abs against CD4i epitope and V3 loop.
Yoshimura2006
(neutralization, escape, binding affinity)
-
17b: Binding of 17b in the presence or absence of CD4 to wt gp120 and two constructs with 5 and 9 residues deleted in the middle of the beta3-beta5 loop in the C2 region of gp120 was examined. In concordance with previous studies, 17b did not bind wt gp120 in absence of CD4 but did bind it in the presence of CD4. In contrast, the two deletion constructs did not bind 17b regardless of presence or absence of CD4 indicating that the loop-deleted gp120 is unable to close up the bridging sheet and display the coreceptor site and the 17b epitope.
Rits-Volloch2006
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: gp120 (monomer), gp120deltaV2 (trimer), gp140 (monomer) and gp140deltaV2 (trimer) from subtype B SF162 were expressed in cells and their affinity for 17b was assessed. All four Envs bound to 17b in the absence of CD4 but the monomers showed 3-fold higher affinity for this Ab than trimers. In the presence of CD4, the 17b epitope was up-regulated in all Envs.
Sharma2006
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: This Ab was used in a microcantilever deflection assay to detect gp120 from solution. Deflection twice that of the baseline that was detected upon specific binding of gp120 to cantilevers decorated on one side with A32 was further increased by subsequent incubation with 17b.
Lam2006
(assay or method development)
-
17b: Viruses with V2 mutations R166K, D167N and P175L were resistant to 17b and a reduction of binding 17b to these viral variants was observed.
Shibata2007
(escape, binding affinity)
-
1.7b: 1.7b-neutralized HIV-1 captured on Raji-DC-SIGN cells or immature monocyte-derived DCs (iMDDCs) was successfully transferred to CD4+ T lymphocytes, indicating that the 1.7b-HIV-1 complex was disassembled upon capture by DC-SIGN-cells.
vanMontfort2007
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
17b: Chimeric VLPs, containing chimeric Con-S ΔCFI Env proteins with heterologous signal peptide (SP), transmembrane (TM), and cytoplasmic tail (CT) sequences, were all induced to bind to 17b after binding to CD4, indicating that chimeric Envs in VLPs undergo conformational changes induced by CD4.
Wang2007a
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
17b: The structure of the 17b MAb, particularly its CDRH3 region tyrosine sulfation, is reviewed. Also, the mechanism of its binding to the coreceptor binding site of gp120, and comparisons of the neutralizing potencies of 17b Ab fragments vs the whole IgG molecule are discussed. Engineering of Abs based on revealed structures of broadly neutralizing MAbs is discussed.
Burton2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, review, structure)
-
17b: Monomeric gp120 and trimeric gp140CF proteins synthesized from an artificial group M consensus Env gene (CON6) did not bind to 17b directly, but bound to it following binding to sCD4 and A32, indicating correct conformational change and subsequent exposure of the 17b epitope.
Gao2005a
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: The structure of the V3 region in the context of gp120 core complexed to the CD4 receptor and to the 17b Ab was attempted to be determined by X-ray resolution, but only the structure for V3 complexed with CD4 and X5 Ab was solved. Accessibility of the co-receptor binding site to this MAb is shown in a 3D figure.
Huang2005
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
17b: Point mutations in the highly conserved structural motif LLP-2 within the intracytoplasmic tail of gp41 resulted in conformational alterations of both gp41 and gp120. The alterations did not affect virus CD4 binding, coreceptor binding site exposure, or infectivity of the virus, but did result in decreased binding and neutralization by certain MAbs and human sera. 17b exhibited similar levels of binding to both the LLP-2 mutant and wildtype viruses, indicating that sCD4 binding to the LLP-2 mutant successfully triggered conformational change of gp120 and exposure of the co-receptor binding site.
Kalia2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: A series of genetically modified Env proteins were generated and expressed in both insect and animal cells to be monitored for their antigenic characteristics. For 17b, three of the modified proteins expressed in insect cells, including dV1V2 mutant (V1V2 deletions) followed by 3G-dV2-1G mutant (3G being mutations in three glycosylation sites and 1G being a mutation near the TM domain) and 3G-dV2 mutant, showed higher binding to the Ab than the wildtype did. This indicated that the dV1V2 mutant may expose 17b epitope better than the other Env proteins. When expressed in animal cells, only mutants 3G and dV2 showed enhanced binding to 17b but only at high concentrations of the MAb.
Kang2005
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
17b: A stable trimerization motif, GCN4, was appended to the C terminus of YU2gp120 to obtain stable gp120 trimers (gp120-GCN4). Each trimer subunit was capable of binding IgG1b12, indicating that they were at least 85% active. D457V mutation in the CD4 binding site resulted in a decreased affinity of the gp120-GCN4 trimers for CD4 and for 17b. Both the CNG-gp120 trimers and the D457V mutants showed a restricted stochiometry to 17b of one Ab molecule binding per trimer. Removal of the V1-V2 loops resulted in binding of three 17b molecules per trimer.
Pancera2005a
(binding affinity, structure)
-
17b: R-FL and YU2 HIV-1 strains were not neutralized by 17b.17b and other non-neutralizing Abs only recognized JR-FL cleavage-defective glycoproteins, while the neutralizing Abs (2G12 and IgG1b12) recognized both cleavage competent and cleavage-defective glycoproteins. It is suggested that an inefficient env glycoprotein precursor cleavage exposes non-neutralizing determinants, while only neutralizing regions remain accessible on efficiently cleaved spikes. For YU2, both cleavage-competent and -defective glycoproteins were recognized by both neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs.17b, along with other Abs able to neutralize lab-adapted isolates, displayed enhanced viral entry at higher Ab concentrations, whereas the Abs that cannot neutralize any virus did not display such enhancement.
Pancera2005
(antibody binding site, enhancing activity, neutralization, binding affinity)
-
17b: Escape mutations in HR1 of gp41 that confer resistance to Enfuvirtide reduced infection and fusion efficiency and also delayed fusion kinetics of HIV-1. The mutations also conferred increased neutralization sensitivity of virus to 17b. Enhanced neutralization correlated with reduced fusion kinetics, indicating that the mutations result in Env proteins remaining in the CD4-triggered state for a longer period of time.
Reeves2005
(antibody binding site, drug resistance, neutralization, escape, HAART, ART)
-
17b: This review summarizes data on the role of NAb in HIV-1 infection and the mechanisms of Ab protection, data on challenges and strategies to design better immunogens that may induce protective Ab responses, and data on structure and importance of MAb epitopes targeted for immune intervention. The importance of standardized assays and standardized virus panels in neutralization and vaccine studies is also discussed.
Srivastava2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity, review, structure)
-
17b: This Ab bound with an intermediate affinity to gp120IIIb, it did not prevent uptake of gp120 by APCs, and had no inhibitory effect on gp120 antigen presentation by MHC class II. 17b disassociated from gp120 at acidic pH. Lysosomal enzyme digestion of gp120 treated with 17b yielded fragmentation similar to that of gp120 alone, and digestion rate was intermediate, between the rapid digestion of gp120 alone and the slow digestion of gp120 in complex with high-affinity Ab5145A. It is thus concluded that CD4i Ab 17b does not have an inhibitory effect on gp120 processing and presentation.
Tuen2005
(antibody interactions, binding affinity)
-
17b: Ab neutralization of viruses with mixtures of neutralization-sensitive and neutralization-resistant envelope glycoproteins was measured. It was concluded that binding of a single Ab molecule is sufficient to inactivate function of an HIV-1 glycoprotein trimer. The inhibitory effect of the Ab was similar for neutralization-resistant and -sensitive viruses indicating that the major determinant of neutralization potency of an Ab is the efficiency with which it binds to the trimer. It was also indicated that each functional trimer on the virus surface supports HIV-1 entry independently, meaning that every trimer on the viral surface must be bound by an Ab for neutralization of the virus to be achieved.
Yang2005b
(neutralization)
-
17b: A substantial fraction of soluble envelope glycoprotein trimers contained inter-subunit disulfide bonds. Reduction of these disulfide bonds decreased binding of 17b to the glycoprotein, indicating that the inter-S-S bonds contribute to the exposure of the CD4-induced region.
Yuan2005
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: Conformation of two gp120 constructs, gp120 bound to CD4D12 (the first two domains of human CD4), and gp120 bound to M9 (a 27-residue CD4 analog), was characterized by binding assays with Ab b17 in the presence or absence of soluble CD4D12. JRFL gp120 alone did not bind to b17 in the absence of CD4D12 but did bind in the presence of CD4D12. The gp120-CD4D12 construct bound to b17 in the absence of soluble CD4D12, and no enhancement in binding was observed when soluble CD4D12 was present, suggesting that all of the single chain was properly folded in the CD4i conformation. gp120-M9 construct also bound to 17b but with much lower affinity, and the binding was enhanced with presence of soluble CD4D12. This suggested that gp120-M9 single chain may contain both molecules where gp120 is bound to M9 in the CD4i conformation, and molecules resembling free gp120.
Varadarajan2005
(antibody binding site, kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: A reverse capture assay was developed to assess what kind of human MAbs were produced in EBV B-cell transformation assays performed on PBMC sampled at different time-points from three HIV-1 infected patients on HAART. The reverse capture assay was validated by the solid phase MAbs that could not capture biotin-MAbs of the same or overlapping specificity when reacted with patient virus envelope glycoproteins preincubated with or without sCD4. Reverse capture assay showed that the produced Abs from the patients were able to block binding of biotin-labeled 17b, indicating presence of CD4i Abs. These were the most frequently produced Abs from all three patients, suggesting that CD4i epitopes are much more immunogenic than previously appreciated.
Robinson2005
(assay or method development, HAART, ART)
-
17b: This review summarizes data on 447-52D and 2219 crystallographic structures when bound to V3 peptides and their corresponding neutralization capabilities. 17b, like 447-52D and like other HIV-1 neutralizing Abs, was shown to have long CDR H3 loop, which is suggested to help Abs access recessed binding sites on the virus.
Stanfield2005
(antibody binding site, review, structure)
-
17b: A T-cell line adapted strain (TCLA) of CRF01_AE primary isolate DA5 (PI) was more neutralization sensitive to 17b than the primary isolate. Mutant virus derived from the CRF01_AE PI strain, that lacked N-linked glycosylation at position 197 in the C2 region of gp120, was significantly more sensitive to neutralization by 17b then the PI strain. Deglycosylated subtype B mutants at positions 197 and 234 were slightly more neutralizable by 17b.
Teeraputon2005
(antibody binding site, neutralization, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: Macaques were immunized with SF162gp140, ΔV2gp140, ΔV2ΔV3gp140 and ΔV3gp140 constructs and their antibody responses were compared to the broadly reactive NAb responses in a macaque infected with SHIV SF162P4, and with pooled sera from humans infected with heterologous HIV-1 isolates (HIVIG). 17b bound to SF162gp140 and ΔV3gp140 more efficiently than to ΔV2gp140 and ΔV2ΔV3gp140. The neutralization of SF162 by 17b was enhanced in a concentration-dependent manner by pre-incubation with sCD4.
Derby2006
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: This Ab bound to the Fc-gp120 construct, but only weakly to the chimeras lacking the V3 loop. sCD4 restored high affinity binding to all constructs.
Binley2006
(binding affinity)
-
17b: A fusion protein (FLSC R/T-IgG1) that targets CCR5 was expressed from a synthetic gene linking a single chain gp120-CD4 complex containing an R5 gp120 sequence with the hinge-Ch2-Ch3 portion of human IgG1. Binding of this protein to the CCR5 co-receptor was inhibited by MAb 17b in a dose-dependent manner. The fusion protein did not activate the co-receptor by binding, and it potently neutralized primary R5 HIV-1.
Vu2006
(co-receptor)
-
17b: Cloned Envs (clades A, B, C, D, F1, CRF01_AE, CRF02_AG, CRF06_cpx and CRF11_cpx) derived from donors either with or without broadly cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies were shown to be of comparable susceptibility to neutralization by 17b.
Cham2006
(neutralization, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: Neutralization of HIV-1 primary isolates from clade B by different formats of 17b was determined in cells expressing high or low surface concentrations of CD4 and CCR5 receptors. CD4 cell surface concentration had no effect on the inhibitory activity of this Ab while the CCR5 surface concentration had a significant effect decreasing the 50% inhibitory concentration of 17b in cell lines with low CCR5.
Choudhry2006
(co-receptor, neutralization, variant cross-reactivity)
-
1.7b: This Ab did not inhibit HIV-1 BaL replication in macrophages or in PHA-stimulated PBMCs.
Holl2006
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
17b: 17b was used as a negative control to test CDR3 tyrosine sulfation of MAbs 47e, 412d, CM51, E51, C12 and Sb1, since its CDR3 tyrosines are buried. As expected, 17b did not incorporate sulfates while the other MAbs did. Thus, the expression of 17b, or its binding to gp120 bound to CD4-Ig, was not affected by sulfation-inhibition. In addition, 17b was used as a positive control to test whether MAbs 47e, 412d, E51, Sc1 and C12 are CD4i Abs. Binding efficiency of all MAbs to ADA gp120 was doubled in the presence of CD4, showing that they are CD4-induced. scFv 17b was shown to efficiently bind to gp120 of three R5 isolates and to the HXBc2 X4 isolate. Neutralization assays showed that 17b was less efficient at neutralizing primary R5 and R5X4 isolates than MAbs 412d and E51, however, it was more efficient at neutralizing X4 isolates than these MAbs.
Choe2003
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
17b: The CDR3 regions of CD4i Abs (E51, 412d, 17b, C12 and 47e) were cloned onto human IgG1 and tested for their ability to inhibit CCR5 binding. Only E51 successfully immunoprecipitated gp120.
Dorfman2006
(co-receptor)
-
17b: The gp140δCFI protein of CON-S M group consensus protein and gp140CFI and gp140CF proteins of CON6 and WT viruses from HIV-1 subtypes A, B and C were expressed in recombinant vaccinia viruses and tested as immunogens in guinea pigs. Both CD4 induced and A32 induced 17b was shown to bind specifically to all recombinant proteins except for the gp140δFI derived from subtype C virus. This Ab also bound specifically to one of the two tested subtype B gp120 proteins. The specific binding of his Ab to CON-S indicated that its conformational epitope was intact.
Liao2006
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: The small molecule HIV-1 entry inhibitor IC9564 significantly enhanced binding of 17b Ab to gp120 on cell surface and on viral particles. The binding was independent of the presence of soluble CD4 suggesting that IC9564 induces conformational change in gp120 that exposes the concealed 17b epitope. Significant increase in neutralizing activity of 17b in the presence of IC9564 was observed for NLDH120 and NL4-3 virus strains. In contrast to CD4, IC9564 does not induce a conformational change in gp41, and inhibits CD4-induced gp41 conformational changes.
Huang2007
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: SOSIP Env proteins are modified by the introduction of a disulfide bond between gp120 and gp41 (SOS), and an I559P (IP) substitution in gp41, and form trimers. The KNH1144 subtype A virus formed more stable trimers than did the prototype subtype B SOSIP Env, JRFL. The stability of gp140 trimers was increased for JR-FL and Ba-L SOSIP proteins by substituting the five amino acid residues in the N-terminal region of gp41 with corresponding residues from KNH1144 virus. b12, 2G12, 2F5, 4E10 and CD4-IgG2 all bound similarly to the WT and to the stabilized JRFL SOSIP timers, suggesting that the trimer-stabilizing substitutions do not impair the overall antigenic structure of gp140 trimers. 17b binding was induced similarly by sCD4 in the WT and stabilized forms. Non-neutralizing MAbs PA-1 and b6 bound less efficiently to the stabilized trimer.
Dey2007
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: This Ab was found to be able to bind to a highly stable trimeric rgp140 derived from a HIV-1 subtype D isolate containing intermonomer V3-derived disulfide bonds and lacking gp120/gp41 cleavage. Protein disulfide isomerase treatment of rgp120 and rgp140 was found to severely inhibit binding of 17b, suggesting a structural need for V3-derived disulfide bonds in coreceptor binding. gp140 binding to 17b was 2-fold enhanced with by sCD4, indicating the proteolytically immature protein was able to undergo CD4i conformational changes.
Billington2007
(antibody binding site, co-receptor, vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Four consensus B Env constructs: full length gp160, uncleaved gp160, truncated gp145, and N-linked glycosylation-site deleted (gp160-201N/S) were compared. All were packaged into virions, and all but the fusion defective uncleaved version mediated infection using the CCR5 co-receptor. CD4 inducible MAbs 17b and E51 were tested for the ability to neutralize the various forms of Con B; as anticipated gp160 and gp145 were not neutralized by these two MAbs, but the gp160-201N/S mutant was neutralized with IC50 values of 10 ug/ml, suggesting increased formation and/or exposure of the co-receptor binding site. The poorly infectious clone WITO4160.27 was also somewhat susceptible to neutralization by these clones.
Kothe2007
(vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Antigens were designed to attempt to target immune responses toward the IgG1b12 epitope, while minimizing antibody responses to less desirable epitopes. One construct had a series of substitutions near the CD4 binding site (GDMR), the other had 7 additional glycans (mCHO). The 2 constructs did not elicit b12-like neutralizing antibodies, but both antigens successfully dampened other responses that were intended to be dampened while not obscuring b12 binding. CD4i MAbs (48d, 17b) did not bind to either GDMR or mCHO even with sCD4.
Selvarajah2005
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: The HIV-1 Bori-15 variant was adapted from the Bori isolate for replication microglial cells. Bori-15 had increased replication in microglial cells and a robust syncytium-forming phenotype, ability to use low levels of CD4 for infection, and increased sensitivity to neutralization by sCD4 and 17b. Four amino acid changes in gp120 V1-V2 were responsible for this change. Protein functionality and integrity of soluble, monomeric gp120-molecules derived from parental HIV-1 Bori and microglia-adapted HIV-1 Bori-15 was assessed in ELISA binding assays using F105, IgG1b12, 17b and 48d, 2G12 and 447-52D. Association rates of sCD4 and 17b were not changed, but dissociation rates were 3-fold slower for sCD4 and 14-fold slower for 17b.
Martin-Garcia2005
-
17b: The epitope for the MAb D19 is conserved and embedded in V3. D19 is unique in that for R5 viruses, it was cryptic and did not bind without exposure to sCD4, and for X4 and R5X4 isolates it was constitutively exposed. D19b is unique among CD4i antibodies in that it binds to the V3 loop. CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d were used as controls for CD4i characterization; in contrast to D19, other CD4i MAbs bind to the conserved bridging sheet and do not differentiate between R5 and X4 using strains. 17b, like D19, was able to neutralize the BaL isolate only in combination with sCD4.
Lusso2005
-
17b: IgG antibody phage display libraries were created from HIV-1+ individuals after pre-selection of PBMC with gp120, as an alternative to using bone marrow for generating libraries. 17b was among a set of Abs used for competition studies to define the binding sites of the newly isolated MAbs, representing a MAb with a CD4i epitope.
Koefoed2005
-
17b: Called 1.7B. Of 35 Env-specific MAbs tested, only 2F5, 4E10, IgG1b12, and two CD4BS adjacent MAbs (A32 and 1.4G) and gp41 MAbs (2.2B and KU32) had binding patterns suggesting polyspecific autoreactivity, and similar reactivities may be difficult to induce with vaccines because of elimination of such autoreactivity. 1.7B has no indication of polyspecific autoreactivity.
Haynes2005
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: By adding N-linked glycosylation sites to gp120, epitope masking of non-neutralizing epitopes can be achieved leaving the IgG1b12 binding site intact. This concept was originally tested with the addition of four glycosylation sites, but binding to b12 was reduced. It was modified here to exclude the C1 N-terminal region, and to include only three additional glycosylation sites. This modified protein retains full b12 binding affinity and it masks other potentially competing epitopes, and does not bind to 21 other MAbs to 7 epitopes on gp120, including 17b.
Pantophlet2004
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: 17b is known to be comprised of elements from four discontinuous beta strands. Using 17b MAb to select peptides from a combinatorial library, and analyzing the peptides using a novel discontinuous epitope reconstruction program, enabled epitope prediction. Segments of gp120 were reconstructed as an antigenic protein mimetic recognized by 17b. Comparisons then were made with a similar prediction of contact residues for CG10, a CD4i MAb that competes with 17b, but has a distinct binding site. Database note: First author "Enshell-Seijffers" is also found as "EnshellSeijffers" on annotated papers in this database.
Enshell-Seijffers2003
(antibody binding site, mimotopes, computational prediction)
-
17b: V1V2 was determined to be the region that conferred the neutralization phenotype differences between two R5-tropic primary HIV-1 isolates, JRFL and SF162. JRFL is resistant to neutralization by many sera and MAbs, while SF162 is sensitive. All MAbs tested, anti-V3, -V2, -CD4BS, and -CD4i, (except the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12 which neutralized both strains), neutralized the SF162 pseudotype but not JRFL, and chimeras that exchanged the V1V2 loops transferred the neutralization phenotype. Three CD4i MAbs were tested; all preferentially neutralized SF162, and JRFL became neutralization sensitive to CD4i Abs if the SF162 V1V2 loop was exchanged.
Pinter2004
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: A set of HIV-1 chimeras that altered V3 net charge and glycosylation patterns in V1V2 and V3, involving inserting V1V2 loops from a late stage primary isolate taken after the R5 to X4 switch, were studied with regard to phenotype, co-receptor usage, and MAb neutralization. The loops were cloned into a HXB2 envelope with a LAI viral backbone. It was observed that the addition of the late-stage isolate V1V2 region and the loss of V3-linked glycosylation site in the context of high positive charge gave an X4 phenotype. R5X4, R5, and X4 viruses were generated, and sCD4, 2G12 and b12 neutralization resistance patterns were modified by addition of the late stage V1V2, glycosylation changes, and charge in concert, while neutralization by 2F5 was unaffected. 15e, 17b, and 48d could not neutralize any of the variants tested.
Nabatov2004
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
17b: Sera from two HIV+ people and a panel of MAbs were used to explore susceptibility to neutralization in the presence or absence of glycans within or adjacent to the V3 loop and within the C2, C4 and V5 regions of HIV-1 SF162 env gp120. The loss of the glycan within the V3 loop (GM299 V3) and two sites adjacent to V3, C2 (GM292 C2) and (GM329 C3), increased neutralization susceptibility to CD4i FAb X5, but each of the glycan mutants and SF162 were refractive to neutralization with 48d and 17b. The loss of sites in C4 (GM438 C4), or V5 (GM454 V5) did not increase neutralization susceptibility to FAb X5. V3 glycans tended to shield V3 loop, CD4 and co-receptor MAb binding sites, while C4 and V5 glycans shielded V3 loop, CD4, gp41 but not co-receptor MAb binding sites. Selective removal of glycans from a vaccine candidate may enable greater access to neutralization susceptible epitopes.
McCaffrey2004
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: A pseudotyping assay showed that an X4 V3 loop peptide could enhance infectivity of X4 virus, R5 and R5X4 V3 loops peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5 virus, and R5X4 peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5X4 virus. Neither R5 nor R5X4 peptides influenced binding of CD4BS MAbs F105 and Ig1Gb12, but did increase binding of CD4i MAb 17b.
Ling2002
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
17b: A32-rgp120 complexes opened up the CCR5 co-receptor binding site, but did not induce neutralizing antibodies with greater breadth among B subtype isolates than did uncomplexed rgp120 in vaccinated guinea pigs. 17b was used as a control to show A32-bound rgp120 had enhanced binding to this CD4-inducible MAb.
Liao2004
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: The peptide 12p1 (RINNIPWSEAMM) inhibits direct binding of YU2 gp120 or Env trimer to CD4, CCR5 and MAb 17b in a concentration-dependent allosteric manner. 12p1 is thought to bind to unbound gp120 near the CD4 binding site, with a 1:1 stoichiometry. 12p1 also inhibited MAb F105 binding presumably because F105 favors an unactivated conformation, but not MAbs 2G12 or b12. The 1:1 stoichiometry, the fact that the peptide binding site is accessible on the trimer, the non-CD4 like aspect of the binding, and an ability to inhibit viral infection in cell cultures make it a promising lead for therapeutic design.
Biorn2004
-
17b: Vaccination of a gp120-CD4 fusion complex in six transgenic XMG2 XenoMouse mice that produce human IgG2 with K light chain did not produce any neutralizing antibodies. 36/39 MAbs derived from one of these mice were in one of two competition groups that were conformational and specific for the complex, suggesting this chimeric vaccine may be of little value, as immunodominant responses recognized epitopes not present in native Env. MAbs from the two CD4-gp120 complex-specific competition groups did not compete with MAbs with known targets on HIV-1 gp120, but their binding was enhanced by binding of 17b.
He2003
-
17b: Using a cell-fusion system, it was found CD4i antibodies 17b, 48d, and CG10 reacted faintly with Env expressing HeLA cells even in the absence of sCD4 or CD4 expressing target cells. Reactivity increased after sCD4 addition, but not after CD4 expressing target cell addition, and binding was not increased at the cell-to-cell CD4-Env interface. This suggests the CD4i co-receptor binding domain is largely blocked at the cell-fusion interface, and so CD4i antibodies would not be able access this site and neutralize cell-mediated viral entry.
Finnegan2001
-
17b: This review summarizes MAbs directed to HIV-1 Env. There are six CD4 inducible MAbs and Fabs in the database. The MAb forms neutralize TCLA strains only, but the smaller Fabs and scFv fragments can neutralize primary isolates.
Gorny2003
(antibody binding site, review)
-
17b: A gp120 molecule was designed to focus the immune response onto the IgG1b12 epitope. Ala substitutions that enhance the binding of IgG1b12 and reduce the binding of non-neutralizing MAbs were combined with additional N-linked glycosylation site sequons inhibiting binding of non-neutralizing MAbs; b12 bound to the mutated gp120. C1 and C5 were also removed, but this compromised b12 binding.
Pantophlet2003b
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: scFv 4KG5 reacts with a conformational epitope. Of a panel of MAbs tested, only NAb b12 enhanced 4KG5 binding to gp120. MAbs to the V2 loop, V3 loop, V3-C4 region, and CD4BS diminished binding, while MAbs directed against C1, CD4i, C5 regions didn't impact 4KG5 binding. These results suggest that the orientation or dynamics of the V1/V2 and V3 loops restricts CD4BS access on the envelope spike, and IgG1b12 can uniquely remain unaffected. This is a CD4i MAb that had no impact on 4KG5 binding.
Zwick2003a
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: The HIV-1 primary isolate DH012 has preserved the epitopes for the MAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, 17b, however natural DH012 infection in chimpanzees and DH012 gp120 vaccination in guinea pigs does not give rise to Abs against these epitopes.
Zhu2003
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: Env genes derived from uncultured brain biopsy samples from four HIV-1 infected patients with late-stage AIDS were compared to env genes from PBMC samples. Brain isolates did not differ in the total number or positions of N-glycosylation sites, patterns of coreceptor usage, or ability to be recognized by gp160 and gp41 MAbs. 17b recognized most variants, some from each of the four individuals, by gp120 immunoprecipitation.
Ohagen2003
(brain/CSF, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Thermodynamics of binding to gp120 was measured using isothermal titration calorimetry for sCD4, 17b, b12, 48d, F105, 2G12 and C11 to intact YU2 and the HXBc2 core. The free energy of binding was similar. Enthalpy and entropy changes were divergent, but compensated. Not only CD4 but MAb ligands induced thermodynamic changes in gp120 that were independent of whether the core or the full gp120 protein was used. Non-neutralizing CD4BS and CD4i MAbs (17b, 48d, 1.5e, b6, F105 and F91) had large entropy contributions to free energy (mean: 26.1 kcal/mol) of binding to the gp120 monomer, but the potent CD4BS neutralizing MAb b6 had a much smaller value of 5.7 kcal/mol. The high values suggest surface burial or protein folding an ordering of amino acids. These results suggest that while the trimeric Env complex has four surfaces, a non-neutralizing face (occluded on the oligomer), a variable face, a neutralizing face and a silent face (protected by carbohydrate masking), gp120 monomers further protect receptor binding sites by conformational or entropic masking, requiring a large energy handicap for Ab binding not faced by other anti-gp120 Abs.
Kwong2002
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: This paper describes the generation of CD4i MAb E51, that like CD4i MAb 17b, blocks CCR5 binding to sCD4-bound gp120. E51 has more cross-neutralizing potency than other prototype CD4i MAbs (17b) for B and C clade isolates. E51 and 17b both neutralized HIV-1 clade B strains HXBc2 and ADA, while JR-FL and 89.6 were only neutralized by E51, not 17b. Clade C strains MCGP1.3 and SA32 were both inhibited by 17b and E51, but E51 was more potent against SA32. The substitutions E381R, F383S, R419D I420R, K421D, Q422L, I423S, and Y435S (HXB2 numbering) all severely reduce 17b and E51 binding. All but I423S also diminish CCR5 binding by more than 50%. The mutation F383S also inhibits sCD4 binding and F105 binding, and K421D inhibits F105 binding, but not sCD4.
Xiang2003
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: This study shows the fragments of CD4i MAbs are better able to neutralize virus than whole IgG. Neutralization of HIV-1 R5 isolates JRFL, JR-CSF and ADA by CD4i MAbs X5, 17b, and 48d decreased with increased molecule size, the neutralizing potency of single-chain Fv (scFv) > than Fab fragments > whole Ab molecules. (With the exception of IgG 48d neutralization of HIV-1 ADA.) HIV-1 X4 isolates 89.6 and HxB2 are both relatively sensitive even to the larger IgG version. R5X4 isolate neutralization was dependent on the isolate and co-receptor usage. The CD4i MAb fragments neutralize HIV-1 subsequent to CD4 binding. The CD4i MAbs bind near the co-receptor binding sites on gp120. Co-receptors bind to the conserved beta19 strand and part of the V3 loop, regions that are masked by the V1V2 loops in the CD4-unbound state. When CD4 is bound, the co-receptor site is exposed near the membrane surface where it would be optimally accessible to co-receptors, and the smaller versions of the molecules are better able to overcome the steric hindrance.
Labrijn2003
(antibody binding site, co-receptor, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Anti-gp41 MAbs were tested in a cell-cell fusion system to investigate the antigenic changes in gp41 during binding and fusion. Cluster I and Cluster II MAbs required CD4 expression on HIV HXB2 Env expressing HeLa target cells, but not the CXCR4 co-receptor, binding to a fusion intermediate. 17b was used to demonstrate that the Cluster I and II MAbs bound to gp120/gp41 complexes, not to gp41 after shedding of gp120.
Finnegan2002
-
17b: A sCD4-17b single chain chimera was made that can bind to the CD4 binding site, then bind and block co-receptor interaction. This chimeric protein is a very potent neutralizing agent, more potent than IgG1b12, 2G12 or 2F5 against Ba-L infection of CCR5-MAGI cells. It has potential for prophylaxis or therapy. It neutralized 5/6 R5 and X4 strains from the B clade, but was only moderately protective against a D clade isolate, and did not neutralize clade A, C, E, and F isolates.
Dey2003
(co-receptor, immunoprophylaxis, variant cross-reactivity, immunotherapy, subtype comparisons)
-
17b: Called 1.7b. The MAb B4e8 binds to the base of the V3 loop, neutralizes multiple primary isolates and was studied for interaction with other MAbs. B4e8 enhanced binding of CD4i MAbs 4.8d, 1.7b, and A1g8 to R5X4 virus 92HT593, but only of 48d to the R5 virus 92US660, and there was only a modest impact of the combination of B4e8 and CD4i MAbs on neutralization.
Cavacini2003
(antibody interactions, co-receptor)
-
17b: This study examined antibody interactions, binding and neutralization with a B clade R5 isolate (92US660) and R5X4 isolate (92HT593). Abs generally bound and neutralized the R5X4 isolate better than the R5 isolate. Anti-V3 MAb B4a1 increased binding of CD4i MAbs 48d, 17b and A1g8, but only A1g8 binding was increased by B4a1 to the R5 isolate. Additive effects on neutralization of the R5X4 isolate with B4a1 and CD4i MAbs was observed, presumably due to increased exposure of the CD4i binding site, but not for the R5 isolate. Anti-gp41 MAb F240 had a synergistic effect on neutralization with CD4i MAbs 48d and 17b, but not with A1g8 for the R5X4 virus.
Cavacini2002
(antibody interactions, co-receptor, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: The SOS mutant envelope protein introduces a covalent disulfide bond between gp120 surface and gp41 transmembrane proteins into the R5 isolate JR-FL by adding cysteines at residues 501 and 605. Pseudovirions bearing this protein bind to CD4 and co-receptor bearing cells, but do not fuse until treatment with a reducing agent, and are arrested prior to fusion after CD4 and co-receptor engagement. CD4i Abs 17b and X5 were weakly neutralizing in all formats, WT, SOS, and when added postbinding.
Binley2003
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 4091.
-
17b: The two N-terminal domains of CD4, termed D1 and D2, when expressed in the absence of the remaining domains of CD4 retain the capacity to bind to gp120---coding sequences of D1D2 and Igαtp were fused to create a large, multivalent rec protein D1D2Igαtp, which, unlike CD4, does not enhance infection at sub-optimal concentrations---the MAb 17b can also enhance viral replication at sub-optimal concentrations, but D1D2-Igα inhibited the 17b enhancement of two primary isolates.
Arthos2002
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: A rare mutation in the neutralization sensitive R2-strain in the proximal limb of the V3 region caused Env to become sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed against the CD4 binding site (CD4BS), CD4-induced (CD4i) epitopes, soluble CD4 (sCD4), and HNS2, a broadly neutralizing sera -- 2/12 anti-V3 MAbs tested (19b and 694/98-D) neutralized R2, as did 2/3 anti-CD4BS MAbs (15e and IgG1b12), 2/2 CD4i MAbs (17b and 4.8D), and 2G12 and 2F5 -- thus multiple epitopes on R2 are functional targets for neutralization and the neutralization sensitivity profile of R2 is intermediate between the highly sensitive MN-TCLA strain and the typically resistant MN-primary strain.
Zhang2002
-
17b: gp120 mutants were used to define the CXCR4 binding site using CXCR4 displayed on paramagnetic proteoliposomes (PMPLs) to reduce non-specific gp120 binding---basic residues in the V3 loop and the β19 strand (RIKQ, positions 419-422) were involved, and deletion of the V1-V2 loops allowed CD4-independent CXCR4 binding---MAbs 17b (CD4i) and F105 (CD4BS) were used to study conformational changes in the mutants---the affinity of ΔV1 and ΔV1-V2 for 17b was dramatically increased and no longer inducible in the presence of sCD4---V3 mutants R298A and R327A were not recognized by 17b except in the presence of sCD4---mutations in the β19 strand dramatically reduced 17b affinity in the presence or absence of sCD4, consistent with known 17b contact residues in this region.
Basmaciogullar2002
-
17b: HIV-1 gp160ΔCT (cytoplasmic tail-deleted) proteoliposomes (PLs) containing native, trimeric envelope glycoproteins from R5 strains YU2 and JRFL, and X4 strain HXBc2, were made in a physiologic membrane setting as candidate immunogens for HIV vaccines---2F5 bound to gp160ΔCT with a reconstituted membrane ten-fold better than the same protein on beads---anti-CD4BS MAbs IgG1b12 and F105, A32 (C1-C4), C11 (C1-C5), and 39F (V3) MAbs bound gp160ΔCT PLs indistinguishably from gp160ΔCT expressed on the cell surface---non-neutralizing MAbs C11 and A32 bound with lower affinity than NAb IgG1b12---the MAb 17b was sCD4 inducible on gp160ΔCT PL.
Grundner2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Truncation of the gp41 cytoplasmic domain of X4, R5, and X4R5 viruses forces a conformation that more closely resembles the CD4 bound state of the external Envelope, enhancing binding of CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d and of CD4BS MAbs F105, b12, and in most cases of glycosylation site dependent MAb 2G12 and the anti-gp41 MAb 246D -- in contrast, binding of the anti-V2 MAb 697D and the anti-V3 MAb 694/98D were not affected -- viruses bearing the truncation were more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs 48d, b12, and 2G12 -- the anti-C5 MAb 1331A was used to track levels of cell surface expression of the mutated proteins.
EdwardsBH2002
(vaccine-induced immune responses)
-
17b: Five CD4i MAbs were studied, 17b, 48d and three new MAbs derived by Epstein-Barr virus transformation of PBMC from an HIV+ long term non-progressor -- 23e and 21c were converted to hybridomas to increase Ab production -- all compete with the well-characterized 17b CD4i MAb in an ELISA antigen capture assay -- critical binding residues are mapped and the CD4i MAb epitopes were distinct but share a common element near isoleucine 420, also important for CCR5 binding, and all five can block CCR5 binding to a sCD4-gp120 complex -- the MAb 48d has the epitope most similar to the CCR5 binding site.
Xiang2002b
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: A series of mutational changes were introduced into the YU2 gp120 that favored different conformations -- 375 S/W seems to favor a conformation of gp120 closer to the CD4-bound state, and is readily bound by sCD4 and CD4i MAbs (17b, 48d, 49e, 21c and 23e) but binding of anti-CD4BS MAbs (F105, 15e, IgG1b12, 21h and F91 was markedly reduced -- IgG1b12 failed to neutralize this mutant, while neutralization by 2G12 was enhanced -- 2F5 did not neutralize either WT or mutant, probably due to polymorphism in the YU2 epitope -- another mutant, 423 I/P, disrupted the gp120 bridging sheet, favored a different conformation and did not bind CD4, CCR5, or CD4i antibodies, but did bind to CD4BS MAbs.
Xiang2002
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: CD4 residue Phe43 significantly contributes to the affinity of CD4-gp120 interactions -- despite decreased affinities for gp120, CD4 proteins and CD4-mimetic peptides lacking a Phe side-chain enhance binding of gp120 to 17b in a manner similar to Phe-bearing ligands indicating the Phe42 interaction is not critical for CD4-induced conformational changes in gp120.
Dowd2002
-
17b: Uncleaved soluble gp140 (YU2 strain, R5 primary isolate) can be stabilized in an oligomer by fusion with a C-term trimeric GCN4 motif or using a T4 trimeric motif derived from T4 bacteriophage fibritin---stabilized oligomer gp140Δ683(-FT) showed strong preferential recognition by NAbs IgG1b12 and 2G12 relative to the gp120 monomer, in contrast to poorly neutralizing MAbs F105, F91, 17b, 48d, and 39F which showed reduced levels of binding, and C11, A32, and 30D which did not bind the stabilized oligomer.
Yang2002
-
17b: Ab binding characteristics of SOS gp140 were tested using SPR and RIPA -- SOS gp140 is gp120-gp41 bound by a disulfide bond -- NAbs 2G12, 2F5, IgG1b12, CD4 inducible 17b, and 19b bound to SOS gp140 better than uncleaved gp140 (gp140unc) and gp120 -- non-neutralizing MAbs 2.2B (binds to gp41 in gp140unc) and 23A (binds gp120) did not bind SOS gp140.
Schulke2002
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: The fusion process was slowed by using a suboptimal temperature (31.5 C) to re-evaluate the potential of Abs targeting fusion intermediates to block HIV entry -- preincubation of E/T cells at 31.5 C enabled polyclonal anti-N-HR Ab and anti-six-helix bundle Abs to inhibit fusion, indicating six-helix bundles form prior to fusion -- the preincubation 31.5 C step did not alter the inhibitory activity of neutralizing Abs anti-gp41 2F5, or anti-gp120 2G12, IG1b12, 48d, and 17b.
GoldingH2002
-
17b: Oligomeric gp140 (o-gp140) derived from R5 primary isolate US4 was characterized for use as a vaccine reagent -- antigen capture ELISA was used to compare the antigenicity of gp120 and o-gp140 using a panel of well characterized MAbs -- 17b recognized both gp120 monomer and o-gp140.
Srivastava2002
-
17b: Structural aspects of the interaction of neutralizing Abs with HIV-1 Env are reviewed -- Env essentially has three faces, one is largely inaccessible on the native trimer, and two that exposed but have low immunogenicity on primary viruses -- neutralization is suggested to occur by inhibition of the interaction between gp120 and the target cell membrane receptors as a result of steric hindrance and it is noted that the attachment of approximately 70 IgG molecules per virion is required for neutralization, which is equivalent to about one IgG molecule per spike -- the 2G12, 17b and b12 epitopes are discussed in detail -- the 17b epitope is masked prior to CD4 binding by the V1-V2 loop and in contrast to sCD4, the binding of cell surface CD4 to virus does not appear to make the epitope accessible to binding by 17b to allow neutralization.
Poignard2001
(antibody binding site, review)
-
17b: 17b binds to a CD4 inducible epitope which partially overlaps the CCR5 binding site -- JRFL, YU2, 89.6, and HXB2 and their C1-, V1/V2-, C5 -deletion mutants were used to study how 17b binding affects gp120-CD4 interactions -- 17b reduced CD4-gp120 interactions by decreasing the on-rate and increasing the off-rate of sCD4, while enhanced binding of sCD4 binding was observed for the 17b-bound, V1/V2 deleted gp120s -- 17b was considered to be a surrogate for CCR5, and the authors suggest that 17b binding may shift V1/V2 into a position that interferes with CD4 binding, forcing a release.
Zhang2001a
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
17b: Abs against the V3 loop (50.1, 58.2, 59.1, 257-D, 268-D, 447-52D), CD4BS (IgG1b12, 559-64D, F105), CD4i (17b), and to gp41 (2F5, F240) each showed similar binding efficiency to Env derived from related pairs of primary and TCLA lines (primary: 168P and 320SI, and TCLA: 168C and 320SI-C3.3), but the TCLA lines were much more susceptible to neutralization suggesting that the change in TCLA lines that make them more susceptible to NAbs alters some step after binding -- 17b bound at somewhat greater levels to 168C than to 168P, but this is not a general feature of 17b binding to primary versus TCLA strains.
York2001
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Mutations in two glycosylation sites in the V2 region of HIV-1 ADA at positions 190 and 197 (187 DNTSYRLINCNTS 199) cause the virus to become CD4-independent and able to enter cells through CCR5 alone---these same mutations tended to increase the neutralization sensitivity of the virus, including to 17b---only the CD4i antibodies 17b and 48d showed an increased affinity of the CD4 independent viruses relative to wild-type.
Kolchinsky2001
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
SHIV-HXBc2 is a neutralization sensitive non-pathogenic virus, and several in vivo passages through monkey's yielded highly pathogenic SHIV KU-1 -- HXBc2 and the KU-1 clone HXBc2P3.2 differ in 12 amino acids in gp160 -- substitutions in both gp120 and gp41 reduced the ability of sCD4, IgG1b12, F105 and AG1121 to Env achieve saturation and full occupancy, and neutralize KU-1 -- 17b and 2F5 also bound less efficiently to HXBc2P3.2, although 2G12 was able to bind both comparably.
Si2001
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Mutagenesis defines Ile-420, Lys-421, Gln-422, Pro-438, and Gly-441 to be important residues for CCR5 binding -- these positions are located on two strands that connect the gp120 bridging sheet and outer domain, suggesting a mechanism for conformational shifts induced by CD4 binding to facilitate CCR5 binding.
Rizzuto2000
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: A combination of gp41 fusion with the GNC4 trimeric sequences and disruption of the YU2 gp120-gp41 cleavage site resulted in stable gp140 trimers (gp140-GNC4) that preserve and expose some neutralizing epitopes while occluding some non-neutralizing epitopes -- CD4BS MAbs (F105 and F91) and CD4i (17b and 48d) recognized gp140-GNC4 as well as gp120 or gp140 -- non-neutralizing MAbs C11, A32, 522-149, M90, and #45 bound to the gp140-GNC4 glycoprotein at reduced levels compared to gp120 -- MAbs directed at the extreme termini of gp120 C1 (135/9 and 133/290) and C5 (CRA-1 and M91) bound efficiently to gp140-GNC4.
Yang2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: Soluble gp140 derived from SF162, a neutralization-resistant primary isolate, and SF162AV2 a neutralization-susceptible isolate with 30 amino acids deleted from the V2 loop, were generated with or without the gp120-gp41 cleavage site intact -- all forms are recognized by oligomer-specific MAb T4 and show enhanced binding of CD4i MAb 17b when sCD4 is bound -- the fused forms are less efficiently recognized than the cleaved forms by polyclonal neutralizing sera from HIV-infected patients -- the V3 loop is more exposed on the fused form.
Stamatatos2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: sCD4 can activate fusion between effector cells expressing Env and target cells expressing coreceptor (CCR5 or CXCR4) alone without CD4 -- CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d have little effect on a standard cell fusion assay but potently block sCD4 activated fusion -- 17b was broadly cross-reactive inhibiting sCD4 activated fusion with Env from clades A, B, C, D, E, F, and F/B.
Salzwedel2000
(subtype comparisons)
-
17b: Six mutations in MN change the virus from a high-infectivity neutralization resistant phenotype to low-infectivity neutralization sensitive -- V3, CD4BS, and CD4i MAbs are 20-100 fold more efficient at neutralizing the sensitive form -- the mutation L544P reduced binding of all MAbs against gp120 by causing conformational changes.
Park2000
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: SF162 is a neutralization-resistant HIV-1 isolate -- N-linked glycosylation modifications in the V2 loop of the SF162 gp120 revealed that these sites prevent neutralization by CD4BS MAbs (IgG1b12 and IgGCD4), and protect against neutralization by V3 MAbs (447-D and 391-95D) -- V2-region glycosylation site mutations did not alter neutralization resistance to V2 MAbs (G3.4 and G3.136) or CD4i MAbs (17b and 48d) -- V2 glycosylation site modification allows infection of macrophages, probably due to glycosylated forms requiring fewer CCR5 molecules for viral entry.
Ly2000
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: To determine the antigenicity of virus killed by thermal and chemical inactivation, retention of conformation-dependent neutralization epitopes was examined, and exposure of CD4BS epitopes was found to be enhanced (MAbs IgG1b12, 205-46-9, and 205-43-1) -- binding to 2G12 and 447-52D epitopes was essentially unaltered -- the 17b CD4i epitope was also exposed.
Grovit-Ferbas2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: The MAbs with the broadest neutralizing activity, IgG1b12, 2G12 and 2F5, all have high affinity for the native trimer, indicating that they were raised in an immune response to the oligomer on the virion surface rather than dissociated subunits -- a disulfide linked gp120-gp41 (SOS gp140) was created by introducing A501C and T605C mutations to mimic the native conformation of Env and explore its potential as an immunogen -- SOS gp140 is recognized by NAbs IgG1b12, 2G12, and CD4-IgG2, and also by anti-V3 MAbs 19b and 83.1 -- SOSgp140 is not recognized by C4 region MAbs that neutralize only TCLA strains, G3-42 and G3-519 -- nor did it bind C11, 23A, and M90, MAbs that bind to gp120 C1 and C5, where it interacts with gp41 -- MAbs that bind CD4 inducible epitopes, 17b and A32 were very strongly induced by CD4 in SOS gp140 -- anti-gp41 MAbs that bind in the region that interacts with gp120, 7B2, 2.2B, T4, T15G1 and 4D4, did not bind to SOSgp140, in contrast to 2F5, which binds to the only gp41 epitope that is well exposed in native gp120-gp41 complexes.
Binley2000
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: A CD4-independent viral variant of IIIB, IIIBx, was generated on CXCR4-expressing cells -- IIIBx exhibited greater exposure of the 17b and 48d epitopes and enhanced neutralization by CD4i MAbs and by polyclonal human sera -- the 17b epitope has significant overlap with the CCR5 coreceptor binding site.
Hoffman1999
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Deleting the V2 loop of neutralization-resistant HIV-1 isolate SF162 does not abrogate its replication in PBMC or macrophages, but it enhances its neutralization sensitivity to sera from patients with B clade infection up to 170-fold, and also enhances sensitivity to sera from clades A through F -- deletion of V2 but not V1 enabled neutralization by CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d.
Stamatatos1998
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: A panel of MAbs was shown to bind with similar or greater affinity and similar competition profiles to a deglycosylated or variable loop deleted core gp120 protein (Delta V1, V2, and V3), thus such a core protein produces a structure closely approximating full length folded monomer -- CD4i MAbs 17b and 48d bound better to the deleted protein than to wild type.
Binley1998
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: The HIV-1 virus YU2 entry can be enhanced by MAbs binding to the CD4BS, V3 loop, and CD4i epitopes -- the activation for this enhanced entry state could be conferred on HxB2 by introducing the YU2 V3 loop, or the YU2 V3 and V1/V2 loops, and the presence of V1/V2 increased the enhancement -- a similar effect is observed by sub-neutralizing concentrations of sCD4 and the effect is dependent of CCR5 -- 17b enhances YU2 enhanced viral entry 10-fold, whereas HXBc2 was neutralized.
Sullivan1998b
-
17b: sCD4 induces 17b binding in primary isolates and TCLA strains -- amino acids that reduce the efficiency of binding were determined and found also to compromise syncytia formation and viral entry -- V1V2 deletion or sCD4 binding can expose the 17b epitope for both HXBc2 and macrophage tropic YU2 -- neutralizing potency of 17b is probably weak due to poor exposure of the epitope -- 17b epitope exposure upon sCD4 binding can occur over a wide range of temperatures, consistent with the energy of CD4 binding being sufficient to drive the V1/V2 loop into a new conformation.
Sullivan1998
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Site directed mutagenesis of a WU2 protein with the V1-V2 loops deleted revealed key residues for 17b-gp120 interaction and interaction of gp120 and CCR5 -- mutations in residues that reduced 17b by 70% were R/D 419, I/R 420, Q/L 422, Y/S 435, I/S 423, K/D 121 and K/D 421-- 17b can neutralize HIV-1 strains that use different chemokine receptors, supporting a common region in gp120 in chemokine-receptor interaction.
Rizzuto1998
(antibody binding site, variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Moore and Binley provide a commentary on the papers by Rizzuto1998, Wyatt1998 and Kwong1998 -- they point out 17b shares binding elements in gp120 with chemokine receptor molecules, and that CD4 needs to bind to gp120 first to make the 17b epitope accessible and it may be sterically blocked in the CD4 bound virus, thus making it a poor NAb for primary isolates Moore1998.
Kwong1998,Moore1998,Rizzuto1998,Wyatt1998
(review, structure)
-
17b: Summary of the implications of the crystal structure of a gp120 core bound to CD4 and 17b, combined with what is known about mutations that reduce NAb binding to gp120 -- probable mechanism of neutralization is interference with chemokine receptor binding -- mutations in 88N, 117K, 121K, 256S, 257T, N262, Delta V3, E370, E381, F 382, R 419, I 420, K 421, Q 422, I 423, W 427, Y 435, P 438, M 475 of HXBc2 (IIIB) reduce binding -- the only variable residues in gp120 that contact 17b are 202T and 434M -- the contact points for 17b with the crystallized incomplete gp120 are mostly in the heavy chain of the Ab, and there is a gap between 17b's light chain and the partial gp120 which may be occupied by the V3 loop in a complete gp120 molecule -- the authors propose that the V2 and V3 loops may mask the CD4i Ab binding site, and that the V2 loop may be repositioned upon CD4 binding.
Wyatt1998
(structure)
-
17b: 17b Fab was co-crystallized with a gp120 core and CD4, and its binding site can be directly visualized---17b binds to the "bridging sheet" of gp120, an antiparallel beta sheet region, contacting residues from the C4 region and the V1/V2 stem---the contact area is small for an Ab-antigen interactive surface, and dominated in the Ab by the heavy chain---the center of the binding region has hydrophobic interactions, and the periphery charge interactions, acidic on 17b and basic on gp120.
Kwong1998
(structure)
-
17b: Neutralizes TCLA strains, but not primary isolates.
Parren1997
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Binds to sgp120 efficiently, but not soluble gp120+gp41, suggesting its gp120 epitope is blocked by gp41 binding -- partial re-exposure if sCD4 was bound -- could not bind to HXBc2 gp120 if the 19 C-term amino acids were deleted in conjunction with amino acids 31-93 in C1, but binding was restored in the presence of sCD4.
Wyatt1997
(antibody binding site)
-
17b: Virus with the V1-V2 loop deleted was viable and more susceptible to neutralization by CD4i mAb 17b, and anti-V3 MAbs 1121, 9284, and 110.4, but not to a CD4BS mAb, F105, or sCD4.
Cao1997
(vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: 48d binds to the IIIB protein and not IIIB V3 peptide, while binding to the Can0A V3 peptide, suggesting Can0A V3 is a conformer that mimics the 48d -- it does not bind to 17b, distinguishing the epitopes.
Weinberg1997
-
17b: One of 14 human mAbs tested for ability to neutralize a chimeric SHIV-vpu+, which expressed HIV-1 IIIB env -- 17b has synergistic response in combination with anti-V3 mAb 694/98-D.
Li1997
-
17b: Study shows neutralization is not predicted by MAb binding to JRFL monomeric gp120, but is associated with oligomeric Env binding -- 17b bound monomer, oligomer, and neutralized JRFL in the presence of sCD4, but if sCD4 was not present, 17b only bound monomer.
Fouts1997
-
17b: Neutralizes JR-FL -- inhibits gp120 interaction with CCR-5 in a MIP-1beta-CCR-5 competition study.
Trkola1996b
-
17b: MIP-1α binding to CCR-5 expressing cells can be inhibited by gp120-sCD4 --- binding of 17b blocks this inhibition.
Wu1996
-
17b: Binding did not result in significant gp120 dissociation from virion, in contrast to 48d, although the gp41 epitope of mAb 50-69 was exposed.
Poignard1996b
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: Many mAbs inhibit binding (anti-C1, -C5, -C4, -CD4BS) -- anti-V3 mAb 5G11 enhances binding, as do C1-C4 discontinuous epitopes A32 and 2/11c -- enhances binding of some anti-V2 MAbs.
Moore1996
(antibody interactions)
-
17b: Binds with higher affinity to monomer and oligomer, slow association rate, poor neutralization of lab strain -- this is in contrast to 48d, which has very different kinetics.
Sattentau1995a
(kinetics, binding affinity)
-
17b: Studies using a V1/V2 deletion mutant demonstrated that enhanced binding of 17b in the presence sCD4 involves the V1/V2 loops, with more significant involvement of V2 -- similar effect observed for 48d and A32.
Wyatt1995
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design)
-
17b: A mutation in gp41, 582 A/T, confers resistance to neutralization (also confers resistance to mAbs F105, 48d, 21h and 15e).
Thali1994
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Binding of 48d is much more influenced by sequence variation among molecular clones of LAI than is binding of 17b.
Moore1993d
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
17b: Epitope is better exposed upon CD4 binding to gp120 -- competes with 15e and 21h, anti-CD4 binding site mAbs -- 113 D/R, 252 R/W, 257 T/A or G, 370 E/D, 382 F/L, 420 I/R, 433A/L, 438 P/R and 475 M/S confer decreased sensitivity to neutralization.
Thali1993
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions)
-
17b: LANL database note - 48d and 17b have similar epitopes, and the pair are unique among human and rodent mAbs. Thali1993 mentions that 17b and 48d were derived from different patients, and cites the original generation of these antibodies to Robinson and Ho, unpublished data. 17b is a CHAVI reagent (http://chavi.org/); Species: human; Category: CD4i MAbs; Contact person: James Robinson.
(antibody binding site, antibody generation)
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Bontjer2010
Ilja Bontjer, Mark Melchers, Dirk Eggink, Kathryn David, John P. Moore, Ben Berkhout, and Rogier W. Sanders. Stabilized HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers Lacking the V1V2 Domain, Obtained by Virus Evolution. J. Biol. Chem, 285(47):36456-36470, 19 Nov 2010. PubMed ID: 20826824.
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Bradley2016a
Todd Bradley, Ashley Trama, Nancy Tumba, Elin Gray, Xiaozhi Lu, Navid Madani, Fatemeh Jahanbakhsh, Amanda Eaton, Shi-Mao Xia, Robert Parks, Krissey E. Lloyd, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Cindy M. Bowman, Susan Barnett, Salim S. Abdool-Karim, Scott D. Boyd, Bruno Melillo, Amos B. Smith, 3rd., Joseph Sodroski, Thomas B. Kepler, S. Munir Alam, Feng Gao, Mattia Bonsignori, Hua-Xin Liao, M Anthony Moody, David Montefiori, Sampa Santra, Lynn Morris, and Barton F. Haynes. Amino Acid Changes in the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane Proximal Region Control Virus Neutralization Sensitivity. EBioMedicine, 12:196-207, Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27612593.
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Brower2009
Evan T. Brower, Arne Schon, Jeffrey C. Klein, and Ernesto Freire. Binding Thermodynamics of the N-Terminal Peptide of the CCR5 Coreceptor to HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp120. Biochemistry, 48(4):779-785, 3 Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 19170639.
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Brower2010
Evan T. Brower, Arne Schön, and Ernesto Freire. Naturally Occurring Variability in the Envelope Glycoprotein of HIV-1 and Development of Cell Entry Inhibitors. Biochemistry, 49(11):2359-2367, 23 Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20166763.
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Burton2005
Dennis R. Burton, Robyn L. Stanfield, and Ian A. Wilson. Antibody vs. HIV in a Clash of Evolutionary Titans. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 102(42):14943-14948, 18 Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16219699.
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Cai2017
Yongfei Cai, Selen Karaca-Griffin, Jia Chen, Sai Tian, Nicholas Fredette, Christine E. Linton, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Jianming Lu, Kshitij Wagh, James Theiler, Bette Korber, Michael S. Seaman, Stephen C. Harrison, Andrea Carfi, and Bing Chen. Antigenicity-Defined Conformations of an Extremely Neutralization-Resistant HIV-1 Envelope Spike. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 114(17):4477-4482, 25 Apr 2017. PubMed ID: 28396421.
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Cao1997
J. Cao, N. Sullivan, E. Desjardin, C. Parolin, J. Robinson, R. Wyatt, and J. Sodroski. Replication and Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Lacking the V1 and V2 Variable Loops of the gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., :9808-9812, 1997. An HIV-1 mutant lacking the V1-V2 loops can replicate in Jurkat cells and revertants that replicate with wild-type efficiency rapidly evolve in culture. These viruses exhibited increased neutralization susceptibility to V3 loop or CD4i MAbs, but not to sCD4 or anti-CD4BS MAbs. Thus the gp120 V1 and V2 loops protect HIV-1 from some subsets of neutralizing antibodies. PubMed ID: 9371651.
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Castillo-Menendez2019
Luis R. Castillo-Menendez, Hanh T. Nguyen, and Joseph Sodroski. Conformational Differences between Functional Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers and Stabilized Soluble Trimers. J. Virol., 93(3), 1 Feb 2019. PubMed ID: 30429345.
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Cavacini2002
Lisa A. Cavacini, Mark Duval, James Robinson, and Marshall R. Posner. Interactions of Human Antibodies, Epitope Exposure, Antibody Binding and Neutralization of Primary Isolate HIV-1 Virions. AIDS, 16(18):2409-2417, 6 Dec 2002. Erratum in AIDS. 2003 Aug 15;17(12):1863. PubMed ID: 12461414.
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Cavacini2003
Lisa Cavacini, Mark Duval, Leslie Song, Rebecca Sangster, Shi-hua Xiang, Joseph Sodroski, and Marshall Posner. Conformational Changes in env Oligomer Induced by an Antibody Dependent on the V3 Loop Base. AIDS, 17(5):685-689, 28 Mar 2003. PubMed ID: 12646791.
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Cham2006
Fatim Cham, Peng Fei Zhang, Leo Heyndrickx, Peter Bouma, Ping Zhong, Herman Katinger, James Robinson, Guido van der Groen, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. Neutralization and Infectivity Characteristics of Envelope Glycoproteins from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infected Donors Whose Sera Exhibit Broadly Cross-Reactive Neutralizing Activity. Virology, 347(1):36-51, 30 Mar 2006. PubMed ID: 16378633.
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Chen2009
Lei Chen, Young Do Kwon, Tongqing Zhou, Xueling Wu, Sijy O'Dell, Lisa Cavacini, Ann J. Hessell, Marie Pancera, Min Tang, Ling Xu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Mei-Yun Zhang, James Arthos, Dennis R. Burton, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Gary J. Nabel, Marshall R. Posner, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis of Immune Evasion at the Site of CD4 Attachment on HIV-1 gp120. Science, 326(5956):1123-1127, 20 Nov 2009. PubMed ID: 19965434.
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Chen2009b
Weizao Chen and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Human Monoclonal Antibodies and Engineered Antibody Domains as HIV-1 Entry Inhibitors. Curr. Opin. HIV AIDS, 4(2):112-117, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19339949.
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Chen2015
Jia Chen, James M. Kovacs, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Jianming Lu, Donghyun Park, Elise Zablowsky, Michael S. Seaman, and Bing Chen. Effect of the Cytoplasmic Domain on Antigenic Characteristics of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Science, 349(6244):191-195, 10 Jul 2015. PubMed ID: 26113642.
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Chen2016b
Yajing Chen, Richard Wilson, Sijy O'Dell, Javier Guenaga, Yu Feng, Karen Tran, Chi-I Chiang, Heather E. Arendt, Joanne DeStefano, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Yuxing Li. An HIV-1 Env-Antibody Complex Focuses Antibody Responses to Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes. J. Immunol., 197(10):3982-3998, 15 Nov 2016. PubMed ID: 27815444.
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Choe2003
Hyeryun Choe, Wenhui Li, Paulette L. Wright, Natalya Vasilieva, Miro Venturi, Chih-Chin Huang, Christoph Grundner, Tatyana Dorfman, Michael B. Zwick, Liping Wang, Eric S. Rosenberg, Peter D. Kwong, Dennis R. Burton, James E. Robinson, Joseph G. Sodroski, and Michael Farzan. Tyrosine Sulfation of Human Antibodies Contributes to Recognition of the CCR5 Binding Region of HIV-1 gp120. Cell, 114(2):161-170, 25 Jul 2003. PubMed ID: 12887918.
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Chomont2008
Nicolas Chomont, Hakim Hocini, Jean-Chrysostome Gody, Hicham Bouhlal, Pierre Becquart, Corinne Krief-Bouillet, Michel Kazatchkine, and Laurent Bélec. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Do Not Inhibit Viral Transcytosis Through Mucosal Epithelial Cells. Virology, 370(2):246-254, 20 Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17920650.
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Choudhry2006
Vidita Choudhry, Mei-Yun Zhang, Ilia Harris, Igor A. Sidorov, Bang Vu, Antony S. Dimitrov, Timothy Fouts, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Increased Efficacy of HIV-1 Neutralization by Antibodies at Low CCR5 Surface Concentration. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 348(3):1107-1115, 29 Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16904645.
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Choudhry2007
Vidita Choudhry, Mei-Yun Zhang, Igor A. Sidorov, John M. Louis, Ilia Harris, Antony S. Dimitrov, Peter Bouma, Fatim Cham, Anil Choudhary, Susanna M. Rybak, Timothy Fouts, David C. Montefiori, Christopher C. Broder, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies Selected by Screening of an Immune Human Phage Library Against an Envelope Glycoprotein (gp140) Isolated from a Patient (R2) with Broadly HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies. Virology, 363(1):79-90, 20 Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17306322.
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Chuang2013
Gwo-Yu Chuang, Priyamvada Acharya, Stephen D. Schmidt, Yongping Yang, Mark K. Louder, Tongqing Zhou, Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Robert T. Bailer, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Michel C. Nussenzweig, John R. Mascola, Peter D. Kwong, and Ivelin S. Georgiev. Residue-Level Prediction of HIV-1 Antibody Epitopes Based on Neutralization of Diverse Viral Strains. J. Virol., 87(18):10047-10058, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 23843642.
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Chuang2017
Gwo-Yu Chuang, Hui Geng, Marie Pancera, Kai Xu, Cheng Cheng, Priyamvada Acharya, Michael Chambers, Aliaksandr Druz, Yaroslav Tsybovsky, Timothy G. Wanninger, Yongping Yang, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Jason Gorman, M. Gordon Joyce, Sijy O'Dell, Tongqing Zhou, Adrian B. McDermott, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure-Based Design of a Soluble Prefusion-Closed HIV-1 Env Trimer with Reduced CD4 Affinity and Improved Immunogenicity. J. Virol., 91(10), 15 May 2017. PubMed ID: 28275193.
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Crooks2015
Ema T. Crooks, Tommy Tong, Bimal Chakrabarti, Kristin Narayan, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Sergey Menis, Xiaoxing Huang, Daniel Kulp, Keiko Osawa, Janelle Muranaka, Guillaume Stewart-Jones, Joanne Destefano, Sijy O'Dell, Celia LaBranche, James E. Robinson, David C. Montefiori, Krisha McKee, Sean X. Du, Nicole Doria-Rose, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, Ping Zhu, William R. Schief, Richard T. Wyatt, Robert G. Whalen, and James M. Binley. Vaccine-Elicited Tier 2 HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Bind to Quaternary Epitopes Involving Glycan-Deficient Patches Proximal to the CD4 Binding Site. PLoS Pathog, 11(5):e1004932, May 2015. PubMed ID: 26023780.
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Davis2009
Katie L. Davis, Frederic Bibollet-Ruche, Hui Li, Julie M. Decker, Olaf Kutsch, Lynn Morris, Aidy Salomon, Abraham Pinter, James A. Hoxie, Beatrice H. Hahn, Peter D. Kwong, and George M. Shaw. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 2 (HIV-2)/HIV-1 Envelope Chimeras Detect High Titers of Broadly Reactive HIV-1 V3-Specific Antibodies in Human Plasma. J. Virol., 83(3):1240-1259, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 19019969.
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Dennison2014
S. Moses Dennison, Kara M. Anasti, Frederick H. Jaeger, Shelley M. Stewart, Justin Pollara, Pinghuang Liu, Erika L. Kunz, Ruijun Zhang, Nathan Vandergrift, Sallie Permar, Guido Ferrari, Georgia D. Tomaras, Mattia Bonsignori, Nelson L. Michael, Jerome H Kim, Jaranit Kaewkungwal, Sorachai Nitayaphan, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Vaccine-Induced HIV-1 Envelope gp120 Constant Region 1-Specific Antibodies Expose a CD4-Inducible Epitope and Block the Interaction of HIV-1 gp140 with Galactosylceramide. J. Virol., 88(16):9406-9417, Aug 2014. PubMed ID: 24920809.
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Depetris2012
Rafael S Depetris, Jean-Philippe Julien, Reza Khayat, Jeong Hyun Lee, Robert Pejchal, Umesh Katpally, Nicolette Cocco, Milind Kachare, Evan Massi, Kathryn B. David, Albert Cupo, Andre J. Marozsan, William C. Olson, Andrew B. Ward, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, and John P Moore. Partial Enzymatic Deglycosylation Preserves the Structure of Cleaved Recombinant HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. J. Biol. Chem., 287(29):24239-24254, 13 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22645128.
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Derby2006
Nina R. Derby, Zane Kraft, Elaine Kan, Emma T. Crooks, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, James M. Binley, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Antibody Responses Elicited in Macaques Immunized with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) SF162-Derived gp140 Envelope Immunogens: Comparison with Those Elicited during Homologous Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4 and Heterologous HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 80(17):8745-8762, Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16912322.
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Derking2015
Ronald Derking, Gabriel Ozorowski, Kwinten Sliepen, Anila Yasmeen, Albert Cupo, Jonathan L. Torres, Jean-Philippe Julien, Jeong Hyun Lee, Thijs van Montfort, Steven W. de Taeye, Mark Connors, Dennis R. Burton, Ian A. Wilson, Per-Johan Klasse, Andrew B. Ward, John P. Moore, and Rogier W. Sanders. Comprehensive Antigenic Map of a Cleaved Soluble HIV-1 Envelope Trimer. PLoS Pathog, 11(3):e1004767, Mar 2015. PubMed ID: 25807248.
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Dervillez2010
Xavier Dervillez, Volker Klaukien, Ralf Dürr, Joachim Koch, Alexandra Kreutz, Thomas Haarmann, Michaela Stoll, Donghan Lee, Teresa Carlomagno, Barbara Schnierle, Kalle Möbius, Christoph Königs, Christian Griesinger, and Ursula Dietrich. Peptide Ligands Selected with CD4-Induced Epitopes on Native Dualtropic HIV-1 Envelope Proteins Mimic Extracellular Coreceptor Domains and Bind to HIV-1 gp120 Independently of Coreceptor Usage. J. Virol., 84(19):10131-10138, Oct 2010. PubMed ID: 20660187.
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deTaeye2018
Steven W. de Taeye, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Andrea Vecchione, Enzo Scutigliani, Kwinten Sliepen, Judith A. Burger, Patricia van der Woude, Anna Schorcht, Edith E. Schermer, Marit J. van Gils, Celia C. LaBranche, David C. Montefiori, Ian A. Wilson, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Rogier W. Sanders. Stabilization of the gp120 V3 Loop through Hydrophobic Interactions Reduces the Immunodominant V3-Directed Non-Neutralizing Response to HIV-1 Envelope Trimers. J. Biol. Chem., 293(5):1688-1701, 2 Feb 2018. PubMed ID: 29222332.
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DeVico2007
Anthony DeVico, Timothy Fouts, George K. Lewis, Robert C. Gallo, Karla Godfrey, Manhattan Charurat, Ilia Harris, Lindsey Galmin, and Ranajit Pal. Antibodies to CD4-Induced Sites in HIV gp120 Correlate with the Control of SHIV Challenge in Macaques Vaccinated with Subunit Immunogens. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 104(44):17477-17482, 30 Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17956985.
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Dey2003
Barna Dey, Christie S. Del Castillo, and Edward A. Berger. Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by sCD4-17b, a Single-Chain Chimeric Protein, Based on Sequential Interaction of gp120 with CD4 and Coreceptor. J. Virol., 77(5):2859-2865, Mar 2003. PubMed ID: 12584309.
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Dey2007
Antu K. Dey, Kathryn B. David, Per J. Klasse, and John P. Moore. Specific Amino Acids in the N-Terminus of the gp41 Ectodomain Contribute to the Stabilization of a Soluble, Cleaved gp140 Envelope Glycoprotein from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. Virology, 360(1):199-208, 30 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17092531.
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Dey2007a
Barna Dey, Marie Pancera, Krisha Svehla, Yuuei Shu, Shi-Hua Xiang, Jeffrey Vainshtein, Yuxing Li, Joseph Sodroski, Peter D Kwong, John R Mascola, and Richard Wyatt. Characterization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Monomeric and Trimeric gp120 Glycoproteins Stabilized in the CD4-Bound State: Antigenicity, Biophysics, and Immunogenicity. J Virol, 81(11):5579-5593, Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17360741.
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Dey2008
Antu K. Dey, Kathryn B. David, Neelanjana Ray, Thomas J. Ketas, Per J. Klasse, Robert W. Doms, and John P. Moore. N-Terminal Substitutions in HIV-1 gp41 Reduce the Expression of Non-Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins on the Virus. Virology, 372(1):187-200, 1 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18031785.
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Dey2009
Barna Dey, Krisha Svehla, Ling Xu, Dianne Wycuff, Tongqing Zhou, Gerald Voss, Adhuna Phogat, Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Yuxing Li, George Shaw, Peter D. Kwong, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Richard T. Wyatt. Structure-Based Stabilization of HIV-1 gp120 Enhances Humoral Immune Responses to the Induced Co-Receptor Binding Site. PLoS Pathog, 5(5):e1000445, May 2009. PubMed ID: 19478876.
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Ding2015
Shilei Ding, Maxime Veillette, Mathieu Coutu, Jérémie Prévost, Louise Scharf, Pamela J. Bjorkman, Guido Ferrari, James E. Robinson, Christina Stürzel, Beatrice H. Hahn, Daniel Sauter, Frank Kirchhoff, George K. Lewis, Marzena Pazgier, and Andrés Finzi. A Highly Conserved Residue of the HIV-1 gp120 Inner Domain Is Important for Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity Responses Mediated by Anti-cluster A Antibodies. J. Virol., 90(4):2127-2134, Feb 2016. PubMed ID: 26637462.
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Ditzel1997
H. J. Ditzel, P. W. Parren, J. M. Binley, J. Sodroski, J. P. Moore, C. F. Barbas, III, and D. R. Burton. Mapping the Protein Surface of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Using Human Monoclonal Antibodies from Phage Display Libraries. J. Mol. Biol., 267:684-695, 1997. (Genbank: U82767 U82768 U82769 U82770 U82771 U82772 U82942 U82943 U82944 U82945 U82946 U82947 U82948 U82949 U82950 U82951 U82952 U82961 U82962) Recombinant monoclonal antibodies from phage display libraries provide a method for Env surface epitope mapping. Diverse epitopes are accessed by presenting gp120 to the library in different forms, such as sequential masking of epitopes with existing MAbs or sCD4 prior to selection or by selection on peptides. Fabs identified by these methods have specificities associated with epitopes presented poorly on native multimeric envelope. PubMed ID: 9126846.
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Dorfman2006
Tatyana Dorfman, Michael J. Moore, Alexander C. Guth, Hyeryun Choe, and Michael Farzan. A Tyrosine-Sulfated Peptide Derived from the Heavy-Chain CDR3 Region of an HIV-1-Neutralizing Antibody Binds gp120 and Inhibits HIV-1 Infection. J. Biol. Chem., 281(39):28529-28535, 29 Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 16849323.
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Douagi2010
Iyadh Douagi, Mattias N. E. Forsell, Christopher Sundling, Sijy O'Dell, Yu Feng, Pia Dosenovic, Yuxing Li, Robert Seder, Karin Loré, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam. Influence of Novel CD4 Binding-Defective HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens on Neutralizing Antibody and T-Cell Responses in Nonhuman Primates. J. Virol., 84(4):1683-1695, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19955308.
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Dowd2002
Cynthia S. Dowd, Stephanie Leavitt, Gregory Babcock, Alexis P. Godillot, Don Van Ryk, Gabriela A. Canziani, Joseph Sodroski, Ernesto Freire, and Irwin M. Chaiken. Beta-Turn Phe in HIV-1 Env Binding Site of CD4 and CD4 Mimetic Miniprotein Enhances Env Binding Affinity but Is Not Required for Activation of Co-Receptor/17b Site. Biochemistry, 41(22):7038-7046, 4 Jun 2002. PubMed ID: 12033937.
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Dunfee2007
Rebecca L. Dunfee, Elaine R. Thomas, Jianbin Wang, Kevin Kunstman, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Loss of the N-Linked Glycosylation Site at Position 386 in the HIV Envelope V4 Region Enhances Macrophage Tropism and Is Associated with Dementia. Virology, 367(1):222-234, 10 Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17599380.
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EdwardsBH2002
Bradley H. Edwards, Anju Bansal, Steffanie Sabbaj, Janna Bakari, Mark J. Mulligan, and Paul A. Goepfert. Magnitude of Functional CD8+ T-Cell Responses to the Gag Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Correlates Inversely with Viral Load in Plasma. J. Virol., 76(5):2298-2305, Mar 2002. PubMed ID: 11836408.
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Enshell-Seijffers2003
David Enshell-Seijffers, Dmitri Denisov, Bella Groisman, Larisa Smelyanski, Ronit Meyuhas, Gideon Gross, Galina Denisova, and Jonathan M. Gershoni. The Mapping and Reconstitution of a Conformational Discontinuous B-Cell Epitope of HIV-1. J. Mol. Biol., 334(1):87-101, 14 Nov 2003. PubMed ID: 14596802.
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Falkowska2012
Emilia Falkowska, Alejandra Ramos, Yu Feng, Tongqing Zhou, Stephanie Moquin, Laura M. Walker, Xueling Wu, Michael S. Seaman, Terri Wrin, Peter D. Kwong, Richard T. Wyatt, John R. Mascola, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. PGV04, an HIV-1 gp120 CD4 Binding Site Antibody, Is Broad and Potent in Neutralization but Does Not Induce Conformational Changes Characteristic of CD4. J. Virol., 86(8):4394-4403, Apr 2012. PubMed ID: 22345481.
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Feng2012
Yu Feng, Krisha McKee, Karen Tran, Sijy O'Dell, Stephen D. Schmidt, Adhuna Phogat, Mattias N. Forsell, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, John R. Mascola, and Richard T. Wyatt. Biochemically Defined HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Variant Immunogens Display Differential Binding and Neutralizing Specificities to the CD4-Binding Site. J. Biol. Chem., 287(8):5673-5686, 17 Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22167180.
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Ferrari2011a
Guido Ferrari, Justin Pollara, Daniel Kozink, Tiara Harms, Mark Drinker, Stephanie Freel, M. Anthony Moody, S. Munir Alam, Georgia D. Tomaras, Christina Ochsenbauer, John C. Kappes, George M. Shaw, James A. Hoxie, James E. Robinson, and Barton F. Haynes. An HIV-1 gp120 Envelope Human Monoclonal Antibody That Recognizes a C1 Conformational Epitope Mediates Potent Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Activity and Defines a Common ADCC Epitope in Human HIV-1 Serum. J. Virol., 85(14):7029-7036, Jul 2011. PubMed ID: 21543485.
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Finnegan2001
Catherine M. Finnegan, Werner Berg, George K. Lewis, and Anthony L. DeVico. Antigenic Properties of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope during Cell-Cell Fusion. J. Virol., 75(22):11096-11105, Nov 2001. PubMed ID: 11602749.
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Finnegan2002
Catherine M. Finnegan, Werner Berg, George K. Lewis, and Anthony L. DeVico. Antigenic Properties of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmembrane Glycoprotein during Cell-Cell Fusion. J. Virol., 76(23):12123-12134, Dec 2002. PubMed ID: 12414953.
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Finzi2010
Andrés Finzi, Beatriz Pacheco, Xin Zeng, Young Do Kwon, Peter D. Kwong, and Joseph Sodroski. Conformational Characterization of Aberrant Disulfide-Linked HIV-1 gp120 Dimers Secreted from Overexpressing Cells. J Virol Methods, 168(1-2):155-161, Sep 2010. PubMed ID: 20471426.
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Forsell2008
Mattias N. E. Forsell, Barna Dey, Andreas Mörner, Krisha Svehla, Sijy O'dell, Carl-Magnus Högerkorp, Gerald Voss, Rigmor Thorstensson, George M. Shaw, John R. Mascola, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, and Richard T. Wyatt. B Cell Recognition of the Conserved HIV-1 Co-Receptor Binding Site Is Altered by Endogenous Primate CD4. PLoS Pathog., 4(10):e1000171, 2008. PubMed ID: 18833294.
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Forsman2008
Anna Forsman, Els Beirnaert, Marlén M. I. Aasa-Chapman, Bart Hoorelbeke, Karolin Hijazi, Willie Koh, Vanessa Tack, Agnieszka Szynol, Charles Kelly, Áine McKnight, Theo Verrips, Hans de Haard, and Robin A Weiss. Llama Antibody Fragments with Cross-Subtype Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Neutralizing Properties and High Affinity for HIV-1 gp120. J. Virol., 82(24):12069-12081, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18842738.
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Fouda2013
Genevieve G. Fouda, Tatenda Mahlokozera, Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez, Maria G. Salazar, Gerald Learn, Surender B. Kumar, S. Moses Dennison, Elizabeth Russell, Katherine Rizzolo, Frederick Jaeger, Fangping Cai, Nathan A. Vandergrift, Feng Gao, Beatrice Hahn, George M. Shaw, Christina Ochsenbauer, Ronald Swanstrom, Steve Meshnick, Victor Mwapasa, Linda Kalilani, Susan Fiscus, David Montefiori, Barton Haynes, Jesse Kwiek, S. Munir Alam, and Sallie R. Permar. Postnatally-Transmitted HIV-1 Envelope Variants Have Similar Neutralization-Sensitivity and Function to That of Nontransmitted Breast Milk Variants. Retrovirology, 10:3, 2013. PubMed ID: 23305422.
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Fouts1997
T. R. Fouts, J. M. Binley, A. Trkola, J. E. Robinson, and J. P. Moore. Neutralization of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolate JR-FL by Human Monoclonal Antibodies Correlates with Antibody Binding to the Oligomeric Form of the Envelope Glycoprotein Complex. J. Virol., 71:2779-2785, 1997. To test whether antibody neutralization of HIV-1 primary isolates is correlated with the affinities for the oligomeric envelope glycoproteins, JRFL was used as a model primary virus and a panel of 13 human MAbs were evaluated for: half-maximal binding to rec monomeric JRFL gp120; half-maximal binding to oligomeric - JRFL Env expressed on the surface of transfected 293 cells; and neutralization of JRFL in a PBMC-based neutralization assay. Antibody affinity for oligomeric JRFL Env but not monomeric JRFL gp120 correlated with JRFL neutralization. PubMed ID: 9060632.
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Frey2008
Gary Frey, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Marco Morelli, Yifan Cheng, and Bing Chen. A Fusion-Intermediate State of HIV-1 gp41 Targeted by Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 105(10):3739-3744, 11 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18322015.
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Fu2018
Qingshan Fu, Md Munan Shaik, Yongfei Cai, Fadi Ghantous, Alessandro Piai, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Zhijun Liu, Stephen C. Harrison, Michael S. Seaman, Bing Chen, and James J. Chou. Structure of the Membrane Proximal External Region of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 115(38):E8892-E8899, 18 Sep 2018. PubMed ID: 30185554.
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Gach2013
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Christy L. Lavine, Socheata Lao, David C. Montefiori, Barton F. Haynes, Joseph G. Sodroski, Xinzhen Yang, and NIAID Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI). High-Mannose Glycan-Dependent Epitopes Are Frequently Targeted in Broad Neutralizing Antibody Responses during Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection. J. Virol., 86(4):2153-2164, Feb 2012. PubMed ID: 22156525.
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Leaman2010
Daniel P. Leaman, Heather Kinkead, and Michael B. Zwick. In-Solution Virus Capture Assay Helps Deconstruct Heterogeneous Antibody Recognition of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 84(7):3382-3395, Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20089658.
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Leaman2013
Daniel P. Leaman and Michael B. Zwick. Increased Functional Stability and Homogeneity of Viral Envelope Spikes through Directed Evolution. PLoS Pathog., 9(2):e1003184, Feb 2013. PubMed ID: 23468626.
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A. Li, T. W. Baba, J. Sodroski, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. Robinson, M. R. Posner, H. Katinger, C. F. Barbas III, D. R. Burton, T.-C. Chou, and R. M Ruprecht. Synergistic Neutralization of a Chimeric SIV/HIV Type 1 Virus with Combinations of Human Anti-HIV Type 1 Envelope Monoclonal Antibodies or Hyperimmune Globulins. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:647-656, 1997. Multiple combinations of MAbs were tested for their ability to synergize neutralization of a SHIV construct containing HIV IIIB env. All of the MAb combinations tried were synergistic, suggesting such combinations may be useful for passive immunotherapy or immunoprophylaxis. Because SHIV can replicate in rhesus macaques, such approaches can potentially be studied in an it in vivo monkey model. PubMed ID: 9168233.
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Li2009c
Yuxing Li, Krisha Svehla, Mark K. Louder, Diane Wycuff, Sanjay Phogat, Min Tang, Stephen A. Migueles, Xueling Wu, Adhuna Phogat, George M. Shaw, Mark Connors, James Hoxie, John R. Mascola, and Richard Wyatt. Analysis of Neutralization Specificities in Polyclonal Sera Derived from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Individuals. J Virol, 83(2):1045-1059, Jan 2009. PubMed ID: 19004942.
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Li2012
Yuxing Li, Sijy O'Dell, Richard Wilson, Xueling Wu, Stephen D. Schmidt, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, Mark K. Louder, Nancy S. Longo, Christian Poulsen, Javier Guenaga, Bimal K. Chakrabarti, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mario Roederer, Mark Connors, John R. Mascola, and Richard T. Wyatt. HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Display Dual Recognition of the Primary and Coreceptor Binding Sites and Preferential Binding to Fully Cleaved Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 86(20):11231-11241, Oct 2012. PubMed ID: 22875963.
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Liang2016
Yu Liang, Miklos Guttman, James A. Williams, Hans Verkerke, Daniel Alvarado, Shiu-Lok Hu, and Kelly K. Lee. Changes in Structure and Antigenicity of HIV-1 Env Trimers Resulting from Removal of a Conserved CD4 Binding Site-Proximal Glycan. J. Virol., 90(20):9224-9236, 15 Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27489265.
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Liao2004
Hua-Xin Liao, S Munir Alam, John R. Mascola, James Robinson, Benjiang Ma, David C. Montefiori, Maria Rhein, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard Scearce, and Barton F. Haynes. Immunogenicity of Constrained Monoclonal Antibody A32-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Env gp120 Complexes Compared to That of Recombinant HIV Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 78(10):5270-5278, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113908.
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Liao2006
Hua-Xin Liao, Laura L. Sutherland, Shi-Mao Xia, Mary E. Brock, Richard M. Scearce, Stacie Vanleeuwen, S. Munir Alam, Mildred McAdams, Eric A. Weaver, Zenaido Camacho, Ben-Jiang Ma, Yingying Li, Julie M. Decker, Gary J. Nabel, David C. Montefiori, Beatrice H. Hahn, Bette T. Korber, Feng Gao, and Barton F. Haynes. A Group M Consensus Envelope Glycoprotein Induces Antibodies That Neutralize Subsets of Subtype B and C HIV-1 Primary Viruses. Virology, 353(2):268-282, 30 Sep 2006. PubMed ID: 17039602.
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Liao2013a
Hongyan Liao, Jun-tao Guo, Miles D. Lange, Run Fan, Michael Zemlin, Kaihong Su, Yongjun Guan, and Zhixin Zhang. Contribution of V(H) Replacement Products to the Generation of Anti-HIV Antibodies. Clin. Immunol., 146(1):46-55, Jan 2013. PubMed ID: 23220404.
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Liao2013c
Hua-Xin Liao, Chun-Yen Tsao, S. Munir Alam, Mark Muldoon, Nathan Vandergrift, Ben-Jiang Ma, Xiaozhi Lu, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Cindy Bowman, Robert Parks, Haiyan Chen, Julie H. Blinn, Alan Lapedes, Sydeaka Watson, Shi-Mao Xia, Andrew Foulger, Beatrice H. Hahn, George M. Shaw, Ron Swanstrom, David C. Montefiori, Feng Gao, Barton F. Haynes, and Bette Korber. Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of Transmitted/Founder, Consensus, and Chronic Envelope Glycoproteins of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 87(8):4185-4201, Apr 2013. PubMed ID: 23365441.
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Lin2007
George Lin and Peter L. Nara. Designing Immunogens to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies to the HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):514-541, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045109.
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Ling2002
Hong Ling, Xiao-Yan Zhang, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Activation of gp120 of Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Their V3 Loop-Derived Peptides. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 297(3):625-631, 27 Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12270140.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Liu2008
Jun Liu, Alberto Bartesaghi, Mario J. Borgnia, Guillermo Sapiro, and Sriram Subramaniam. Molecular Architecture of Native HIV-1 gp120 Trimers. Nature, 455(7209):109-113, 4 Sep 2008. PubMed ID: 18668044.
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Liu2015a
Mengfei Liu, Guang Yang, Kevin Wiehe, Nathan I. Nicely, Nathan A. Vandergrift, Wes Rountree, Mattia Bonsignori, S. Munir Alam, Jingyun Gao, Barton F. Haynes, and Garnett Kelsoe. Polyreactivity and Autoreactivity among HIV-1 Antibodies. J. Virol., 89(1):784-798, Jan 2015. PubMed ID: 25355869.
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Lusso2005
Paolo Lusso, Patricia L. Earl, Francesca Sironi, Fabio Santoro, Chiara Ripamonti, Gabriella Scarlatti, Renato Longhi, Edward A. Berger, and Samuele E. Burastero. Cryptic Nature of a Conserved, CD4-Inducible V3 Loop Neutralization Epitope in the Native Envelope Glycoprotein Oligomer of CCR5-Restricted, but not CXCR4-Using, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Strains. J. Virol., 79(11):6957-6968, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890935.
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Ly2000
A. Ly and L. Stamatatos. V2 Loop Glycosylation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 Envelope Facilitates Interaction of this Protein with CD4 and CCR5 Receptors and Protects the Virus from Neutralization by Anti-V3 Loop and Anti-CD4 Binding Site Antibodies. J. Virol., 74:6769-6776, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888615.
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Lynch2010
Rebecca M. Lynch, Rong Rong, Bing Li, Tongye Shen, William Honnen, Joseph Mulenga, Susan Allen, Abraham Pinter, S. Gnanakaran, and Cynthia A. Derdeyn. Subtype-Specific Conservation of Isoleucine 309 in the envelope V3 Domain Is Linked to Immune Evasion in Subtype C HIV-1 Infection. Virology, 404(1):59-70, 15 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20494390.
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Lynch2012
Rebecca M. Lynch, Lillian Tran, Mark K. Louder, Stephen D. Schmidt, Myron Cohen, CHAVI 001 Clinical Team Members, Rebecca DerSimonian, Zelda Euler, Elin S. Gray, Salim Abdool Karim, Jennifer Kirchherr, David C. Montefiori, Sengeziwe Sibeko, Kelly Soderberg, Georgia Tomaras, Zhi-Yong Yang, Gary J. Nabel, Hanneke Schuitemaker, Lynn Morris, Barton F. Haynes, and John R. Mascola. The Development of CD4 Binding Site Antibodies during HIV-1 Infection. J. Virol., 86(14):7588-7595, Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22573869.
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Ma2011
Ben-Jiang Ma, S. Munir Alam, Eden P. Go, Xiaozhi Lu, Heather Desaire, Georgia D. Tomaras, Cindy Bowman, Laura L. Sutherland, Richard M. Scearce, Sampa Santra, Norman L. Letvin, Thomas B. Kepler, Hua-Xin Liao, and Barton F. Haynes. Envelope Deglycosylation Enhances Antigenicity of HIV-1 gp41 Epitopes for Both Broad Neutralizing Antibodies and Their Unmutated Ancestor Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 7(9):e1002200, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21909262.
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Magnus2010
Carsten Magnus and Roland R. Regoes. Estimating the Stoichiometry of HIV Neutralization. PLoS Comput. Biol., 6(3):e1000713, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20333245.
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Martin2008
Grégoire Martin, Yide Sun, Bernadette Heyd, Olivier Combes, Jeffrey B Ulmer, Anne Descours, Susan W Barnett, Indresh K Srivastava, and Loïc Martin. A Simple One-Step Method for the Preparation of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Immunogens Based on a CD4 Mimic Peptide. Virology, 381(2):241-250, 25 Nov 2008. PubMed ID: 18835005.
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Martin2011
Grégoire Martin, Brian Burke, Robert Thaï, Antu K. Dey, Olivier Combes, Bernadette Heyd, Anthony R. Geonnotti, David C. Montefiori, Elaine Kan, Ying Lian, Yide Sun, Toufik Abache, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, Hocine Madaoui, Raphaël Guérois, Susan W. Barnett, Indresh K. Srivastava, Pascal Kessler, and Loïc Martin. Stabilization of HIV-1 Envelope in the CD4-Bound Conformation through Specific Cross-Linking of a CD4 Mimetic. J. Biol. Chem., 286(24):21706-21716, 17 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21487012.
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Martin-Garcia2005
Julio Martín-García, Simon Cocklin, Irwin M. Chaiken, and Francisco González-Scarano. Interaction with CD4 and Antibodies to CD4-Induced Epitopes of the Envelope gp120 from a Microglial Cell-Adapted Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 79(11):6703-6713, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15890908.
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Mascola2010
John R. Mascola and David C. Montefiori. The Role of Antibodies in HIV Vaccines. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 28:413-444, Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20192810.
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Matsumoto2023
Kaho Matsumoto, Takeo Kuwata, William D. Tolbert, Jonathan Richard, Shilei Ding, Jérémie Prévost, Shokichi Takahama, George P. Judicate, Takamasa Ueno, Hirotomo Nakata, Takuya Kobayakawa, Kohei Tsuji, Hirokazu Tamamura, Amos B. Smith, III, Marzena Pazgier, Andrés Finzi, and Shuzo Matsushita. Characterization of a Novel CD4 Mimetic Compound YIR-821 against HIV-1 Clinical Isolates. J. Virol., 97(1):e0163822, 31 Jan 2023. PubMed ID: 36511698.
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McCaffrey2004
Ruth A McCaffrey, Cheryl Saunders, Mike Hensel, and Leonidas Stamatatos. N-Linked Glycosylation of the V3 Loop and the Immunologically Silent Face of gp120 Protects Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 SF162 from Neutralization by Anti-gp120 and Anti-gp41 Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(7):3279-3295, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15016849.
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McCann2005
C. M. Mc Cann, R. J. Song, and R. M. Ruprecht. Antibodies: Can They Protect Against HIV Infection? Curr. Drug Targets Infect. Disord., 5(2):95-111, Jun 2005. PubMed ID: 15975016.
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McFadden2007
Karyn McFadden, Simon Cocklin, Hosahudya Gopi, Sabine Baxter, Sandya Ajith, Naheed Mahmood, Robin Shattock, and Irwin Chaiken. A Recombinant Allosteric Lectin Antagonist of HIV-1 Envelope gp120 Interactions. Proteins, 67(3):617-629, 15 May 2007. PubMed ID: 17348010.
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McKnight2007
Aine McKnight and Marlen M. I. Aasa-Chapman. Clade Specific Neutralising Vaccines for HIV: An Appropriate Target? Curr. HIV Res., 5(6):554-560, Nov 2007. PubMed ID: 18045111.
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Melchers2012
Mark Melchers, Ilja Bontjer, Tommy Tong, Nancy P. Y. Chung, Per Johan Klasse, Dirk Eggink, David C. Montefiori, Maurizio Gentile, Andrea Cerutti, William C. Olson, Ben Berkhout, James M. Binley, John P. Moore, and Rogier W. Sanders. Targeting HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers to B Cells by Using APRIL Improves Antibody Responses. J. Virol., 86(5):2488-2500, Mar 2012. PubMed ID: 22205734.
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Meyerson2013
Joel R. Meyerson, Erin E. H. Tran, Oleg Kuybeda, Weizao Chen, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Andrea Gorlani, Theo Verrips, Jeffrey D. Lifson, and Sriram Subramaniam. Molecular Structures of Trimeric HIV-1 Env in Complex with Small Antibody Derivatives. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 110(2):513-518, 8 Jan 2013. PubMed ID: 23267106.
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Mishra2020
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Bimal Kumar Das, Sushil Kumar Kabra, Rakesh Lodha, and Kalpana Luthra. A Rare Mutation in an Infant-Derived HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Alters Interprotomer Stability and Susceptibility to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Targeting the Trimer Apex. J. Virol., 94(19), 15 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32669335.
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Mishra2020a
Nitesh Mishra, Shaifali Sharma, Ayushman Dobhal, Sanjeev Kumar, Himanshi Chawla, Ravinder Singh, Muzamil Ashraf Makhdoomi, Bimal Kumar Das, Rakesh Lodha, Sushil Kumar Kabra, and Kalpana Luthra. Broadly Neutralizing Plasma Antibodies Effective against Autologous Circulating Viruses in Infants with Multivariant HIV-1 Infection. Nat. Commun., 11(1):4409, 2 Sep 2020. PubMed ID: 32879304.
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Moody2010
M. Anthony Moody, Hua-Xin Liao, S. Munir Alam, Richard M. Scearce, M. Kelly Plonk, Daniel M. Kozink, Mark S. Drinker, Ruijun Zhang, Shi-Mao Xia, Laura L. Sutherland, Georgia D. Tomaras, Ian P. Giles, John C. Kappes, Christina Ochsenbauer-Jambor, Tara G. Edmonds, Melina Soares, Gustavo Barbero, Donald N. Forthal, Gary Landucci, Connie Chang, Steven W. King, Anita Kavlie, Thomas N. Denny, Kwan-Ki Hwang, Pojen P. Chen, Philip E. Thorpe, David C. Montefiori, and Barton F. Haynes. Anti-Phospholipid Human Monoclonal Antibodies Inhibit CCR5-Tropic HIV-1 and Induce beta-Chemokines. J. Exp. Med., 207(4):763-776, 12 Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20368576.
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J. P. Moore, H. Yoshiyama, D. D. Ho, J. E. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Antigenic Variation in gp120s from Molecular Clones of HIV-1 LAI. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 9:1185-1193, 1993. The binding of MAbs to four molecular clones of HIV-1 LAI: HxB2, HxB3, Hx10, and NL4-3, was measured. Despite the close relationship between these clones, there is considerable variation in their antigenic structure, judged by MAb reactivities to the V2, V3, and C4 domains and to discontinuous epitopes. Small variations in sequence can profoundly affect recognition of gp120 by all five groups of defined anti-gp120 neutralizing antibodies. PubMed ID: 7511394.
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Moore1996
J. P. Moore and J. Sodroski. Antibody cross-competition analysis of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein. J. Virol., 70:1863-1872, 1996. 46 anti-gp120 monomer MAbs were used to create a competition matrix, and MAb competition groups were defined. The data suggests that there are two faces of the gp120 glycoprotein: a face occupied by the CD4BS, which is presumably also exposed on the oligomeric envelope glycoprotein complex, and a second face which is presumably inaccessible on the oligomer and interacts with a number of nonneutralizing antibodies. PubMed ID: 8627711.
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Moore1998
J. P. Moore and J. Binley. HIV Envelope's Letters Boxed into Shape. Nature, 393:630-631, 1998. Comment on Nature 1998 Jun 18;393(6686):648-59 and Nature 1998 Jun 18;393(6686):705-11. PubMed ID: 9641673.
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Moyo2018
Thandeka Moyo, June Ereño-Orbea, Rajesh Abraham Jacob, Clara E. Pavillet, Samuel Mundia Kariuki, Emily N. Tangie, Jean-Philippe Julien, and Jeffrey R. Dorfman. Molecular Basis of Unusually High Neutralization Resistance in Tier 3 HIV-1 Strain 253-11. J. Virol., 92(14), 15 Jul 2018. PubMed ID: 29618644.
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Nabatov2004
Alexey A. Nabatov, Georgios Pollakis, Thomas Linnemann, Aletta Kliphius, Moustapha I. M. Chalaby, and William A. Paxton. Intrapatient Alterations in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 V1V2 and V3 Regions Differentially Modulate Coreceptor Usage, Virus Inhibition by CC/CXC Chemokines, Soluble CD4, and the b12 and 2G12 Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 78(1):524-530, Jan 2004. PubMed ID: 14671134.
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Negi2009
Surendra S. Negi and Werner Braun. Automated Detection of Conformational Epitopes Using Phage Display Peptide Sequences. Bioinform. Biol. Insights, 3:71-81, 2009. PubMed ID: 20140073.
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Nishiyama2009
Yasuhiro Nishiyama, Stephanie Planque, Yukie Mitsuda, Giovanni Nitti, Hiroaki Taguchi, Lei Jin, Jindrich Symersky, Stephane Boivin, Marcin Sienczyk, Maria Salas, Carl V. Hanson, and Sudhir Paul. Toward Effective HIV Vaccination: Induction of Binary Epitope Reactive Antibodies with Broad HIV Neutralizing Activity. J. Biol. Chem., 284(44):30627-30642, 30 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19726674.
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Nolan2009
Katrina M. Nolan, Gregory Q. Del Prete, Andrea P. O. Jordan, Beth Haggarty, Josephine Romano, George J. Leslie, and James A. Hoxie. Characterization of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 V3 Deletion Mutation That Confers Resistance to CCR5 Inhibitors and the Ability to Use Aplaviroc-Bound Receptor. J. Virol., 83(8):3798-3809, Apr 2009. PubMed ID: 19193800.
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Ohagen2003
Asa Ohagen, Amy Devitt, Kevin J. Kunstman, Paul R. Gorry, Patrick P. Rose, Bette Korber, Joann Taylor, Robert Levy, Robert L. Murphy, Steven M. Wolinsky, and Dana Gabuzda. Genetic and Functional Analysis of Full-Length Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 env Genes Derived from Brain and Blood of Patients with AIDS. J. Virol., 77(22):12336-12345, Nov 2003. PubMed ID: 14581570.
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ORourke2010
Sara M. O'Rourke, Becky Schweighardt, Pham Phung, Dora P. A. J. Fonseca, Karianne Terry, Terri Wrin, Faruk Sinangil, and Phillip W. Berman. Mutation at a Single Position in the V2 Domain of the HIV-1 Envelope Protein Confers Neutralization Sensitivity to a Highly Neutralization-Resistant Virus. J. Virol., 84(21):11200-11209, Nov 2010. PubMed ID: 20702624.
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ORourke2012
Sara M. O'Rourke, Becky Schweighardt, Pham Phung, Kathryn A. Mesa, Aaron L. Vollrath, Gwen P. Tatsuno, Briana To, Faruk Sinangil, Kay Limoli, Terri Wrin, and Phillip W. Berman. Sequences in Glycoprotein gp41, the CD4 Binding Site, and the V2 Domain Regulate Sensitivity and Resistance of HIV-1 to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. J. Virol., 86(22):12105-12114, Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 22933284.
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Oscherwitz1999
J. Oscherwitz, F. M. Gotch, K. B. Cease, and J. A. Berzofsky. New Insights and Approaches Regarding B- and T-Cell Epitopes in HIV Vaccine Design. AIDS, 13(Suppl A):S163-174, 1999. PubMed ID: 10885773.
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Ozorowski2017
Gabriel Ozorowski, Jesper Pallesen, Natalia de Val, Dmitry Lyumkis, Christopher A. Cottrell, Jonathan L. Torres, Jeffrey Copps, Robyn L. Stanfield, Albert Cupo, Pavel Pugach, John P. Moore, Ian A. Wilson, and Andrew B. Ward. Open and Closed Structures Reveal Allostery and Pliability in the HIV-1 Envelope Spike. Nature, 547(7663):360-363, 20 Jul 2017. PubMed ID: 28700571.
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Pancera2005
Marie Pancera and Richard Wyatt. Selective Recognition of Oligomeric HIV-1 Primary Isolate Envelope Glycoproteins by Potently Neutralizing Ligands Requires Efficient Precursor Cleavage. Virology, 332(1):145-156, 5 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15661147.
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Pancera2005a
Marie Pancera, Jacob Lebowitz, Arne Schön, Ping Zhu, Ernesto Freire, Peter D. Kwong, Kenneth H. Roux, Joseph Sodroski, and Richard Wyatt. Soluble Mimetics of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Viral Spikes Produced by Replacement of the Native Trimerization Domain with a Heterologous Trimerization Motif: Characterization and Ligand Binding Analysis. J. Virol., 79(15):9954-9969, Aug 2005. PubMed ID: 16014956.
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Pancera2010a
Marie Pancera, Shahzad Majeed, Yih-En Andrew Ban, Lei Chen, Chih-chin Huang, Leopold Kong, Young Do Kwon, Jonathan Stuckey, Tongqing Zhou, James E. Robinson, William R. Schief, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, and Peter D. Kwong. Structure of HIV-1 gp120 with gp41-Interactive Region Reveals Layered Envelope Architecture and Basis of Conformational Mobility. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(3):1166-1171, 19 Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 20080564.
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Ralph Pantophlet, Ian A. Wilson, and Dennis R. Burton. Hyperglycosylated Mutants of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 Monomeric gp120 as Novel Antigens for HIV Vaccine Design. J. Virol., 77(10):5889-8901, May 2003. PubMed ID: 12719582.
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Pantophlet2004
R. Pantophlet, I. A. Wilson, and D. R. Burton. Improved Design of an Antigen with Enhanced Specificity for the Broadly HIV-Neutralizing Antibody b12. Protein Eng. Des. Sel., 17(10):749-758, Oct 2004. PubMed ID: 15542540.
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Pantophlet2006
Ralph Pantophlet and Dennis R. Burton. GP120: Target for Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 24:739-769, 2006. PubMed ID: 16551265.
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Pantophlet2009
Ralph Pantophlet, Meng Wang, Rowena O. Aguilar-Sino, and Dennis R. Burton. The Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Spike of Primary Viruses Can Suppress Antibody Access to Variable Regions. J. Virol., 83(4):1649-1659, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 19036813.
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E. J. Park, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and G. V. Quinnan. A global neutralization resistance phenotype of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is determined by distinct mechanisms mediating enhanced infectivity and conformational change of the envelope complex. J. Virol., 74:4183-91, 2000. PubMed ID: 10756031.
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P. W. Parren, M. C. Gauduin, R. A. Koup, P. Poignard, Q. J. Sattentau, P. Fisicaro, and D. R. Burton. Erratum to Relevance of the Antibody Response against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope to Vaccine Design. Immunol. Lett., 58:125-132, 1997. corrected and republished article originally printed in Immunol. Lett. 1997 Jun;57(1-3):105-112. PubMed ID: 9271324.
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Peters2008a
Paul J. Peters, Maria J. Duenas-Decamp, W. Matthew Sullivan, Richard Brown, Chiambah Ankghuambom, Katherine Luzuriaga, James Robinson, Dennis R. Burton, Jeanne Bell, Peter Simmonds, Jonathan Ball, and Paul R. Clapham. Variation in HIV-1 R5 Macrophage-Tropism Correlates with Sensitivity to Reagents that Block Envelope: CD4 Interactions But Not with Sensitivity to Other Entry Inhibitors. Retrovirology, 5:5, 2008. PubMed ID: 18205925.
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S. Phogat, R. T. Wyatt, and G. B. Karlsson Hedestam. Inhibition of HIV-1 Entry by Antibodies: Potential Viral and Cellular Targets. J. Intern. Med., 262(1):26-43, Jul 2007. PubMed ID: 17598813.
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Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Yuxian He, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The V1/V2 Domain of gp120 Is a Global Regulator of the Sensitivity of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates to Neutralization by Antibodies Commonly Induced upon Infection. J. Virol., 78(10):5205-5215, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113902.
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P. Poignard, T. Fouts, D. Naniche, J. P. Moore, and Q. J. Sattentau. Neutralizing antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus type-1 gp120 induce envelope glycoprotein subunit dissociation. J. Exp. Med., 183:473-484, 1996. Binding of Anti-V3 and the CD4I neutralizing MAbs induces shedding of gp120 on cells infected with the T-cell line-adapted HIV-1 molecular clone Hx10. This was shown by significant increases of gp120 in the supernatant, and exposure of a gp41 epitope that is masked in the oligomer. MAbs binding either to the V2 loop or to CD4BS discontinuous epitopes do not induce gp120 dissociation. This suggests HIV neutralization probably is caused by several mechanisms, and one of the mechanisms may involve gp120 dissociation. PubMed ID: 8627160.
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Poignard2001
P. Poignard, E. O. Saphire, P. W. Parren, and D. R. Burton. gp120: Biologic aspects of structural features. Annu. Rev. Immunol., 19:253--74, 2001. URL: http://immunol.annualreviews.org/cgi/content/full/19/1/253. PubMed ID: 11244037.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Prevost2017
Jérémie Prévost, Daria Zoubchenok, Jonathan Richard, Maxime Veillette, Beatriz Pacheco, Mathieu Coutu, Nathalie Brassard, Matthew S. Parsons, Kiat Ruxrungtham, Torsak Bunupuradah, Sodsai Tovanabutra, Kwan-Ki Hwang, M. Anthony Moody, Barton F. Haynes, Mattia Bonsignori, Joseph Sodroski, Daniel E. Kaufmann, George M. Shaw, Agnes L. Chenine, and Andrés Finzi. Influence of the Envelope gp120 Phe 43 Cavity on HIV-1 Sensitivity to Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity Responses. J. Virol., 91(7), 1 Apr 2017. PubMed ID: 28100618.
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Prevost2018
Jérémie Prévost, Jonathan Richard, Shilei Ding, Beatriz Pacheco, Roxanne Charlebois, Beatrice H Hahn, Daniel E Kaufmann, and Andrés Finzi. Envelope Glycoproteins Sampling States 2/3 Are Susceptible to ADCC by Sera from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. Virology, 515:38-45, Feb 2018. PubMed ID: 29248757.
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Pugach2008
Pavel Pugach, Thomas J. Ketas, Elizabeth Michael, and John P. Moore. Neutralizing Antibody and Anti-Retroviral Drug Sensitivities of HIV-1 Isolates Resistant to Small Molecule CCR5 Inhibitors. Virology, 377(2):401-407, 1 Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18519143.
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Pugach2015
Pavel Pugach, Gabriel Ozorowski, Albert Cupo, Rajesh Ringe, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Ronald Derking, Helen J. Kim, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de Los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Jean-Philippe Julien, Dennis R. Burton, Ian A. Wilson, Rogier W. Sanders, P. J. Klasse, Andrew B. Ward, and John P. Moore. A Native-Like SOSIP.664 Trimer Based on an HIV-1 Subtype B env Gene. J. Virol., 89(6):3380-3395, Mar 2015. PubMed ID: 25589637.
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Reeves2005
Jacqueline D. Reeves, Fang-Hua Lee, John L. Miamidian, Cassandra B. Jabara, Marisa M. Juntilla, and Robert W. Doms. Enfuvirtide Resistance Mutations: Impact on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Function, Entry Inhibitor Sensitivity, and Virus Neutralization. J. Virol., 79(8):4991-4999, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15795284.
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Ringe2010
Rajesh Ringe, Madhuri Thakar, and Jayanta Bhattacharya. Variations in Autologous Neutralization and CD4 Dependence of b12 Resistant HIV-1 Clade C env Clones Obtained at Different Time Points from Antiretroviral Naïve Indian Patients with Recent Infection. Retrovirology, 7:76, 2010. PubMed ID: 20860805.
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Rits-Volloch2006
Sophia Rits-Volloch, Gary Frey, Stephen C. Harrison, and Bing Chen. Restraining the Conformation of HIV-1 gp120 by Removing a Flexible Loop. EMBO J., 25(20):5026-5035, 18 Oct 2006. PubMed ID: 17006538.
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Rizzuto1998
C. D. Rizzuto, R. Wyatt, N. Hernandez-Ramos, Y. Sun, P. D. Kwong, W. A. Hendrickson, and J. Sodroski. A Conserved HIV gp120 Glycoprotein Structure Involved in Chemokine Receptor Binding. Science, 280:1949-1953, 1998. This paper compares the epitope for CD4 inducible MAbs with the chemokine co-receptor binding site on the gp120 molecule. Site-directed mutagenesis of YU2 Env was guided by information obtained from the crystallized CD4-17b-gp120 core structure, Kwong et al, 1998. YU2 is a primary macrophage tropic R5 isolate with high affinity for both CD4 and CCR5. A protein with the V1-V2 loops deleted, called wt$\Delta$ was the basis for the assay which detected binding of virus to cells expressing CCR5 in the presence of sCD4. Preincubaton with MAb 17b blocks binding, as did the natural ligand for CCR5, MIP-1$\beta$ and anti-CCR5 MAb 2D7. Mutations 437 P/A and 442 Q/L increased CCR5 binding affinity. The region of gp120 CCR5 binding is shown to be the highly conserved $\beta$-sheet bridging structure, located proximal to the V3 loop. PubMed ID: 9632396.
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Rizzuto2000
Carlo Rizzuto and Joseph Sodroski. Fine Definition of a Conserved CCR5-Binding Region on the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Glycoprotein 120. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 16(8):741-749, 20 May 2000. PubMed ID: 10826481.
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Robinson1992
J. Robinson, H. Yoshiyama, D. Holton, S. Elliot, and D.D. Ho. Distinct Antigenic Sites on HIV gp120 Identified by a Panel of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Cell Biochem., Suppl 16E:71, 1992.
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Robinson2005
James E. Robinson, Debra Holton Elliott, Effie A. Martin, Kathryne Micken, and Eric S. Rosenberg. High Frequencies of Antibody Responses to CD4 Induced Epitopes in HIV Infected Patients Started on HAART during Acute Infection. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):115-121, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720981.
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Ruprecht2011
Claudia R. Ruprecht, Anders Krarup, Lucy Reynell, Axel M. Mann, Oliver F. Brandenberg, Livia Berlinger, Irene A. Abela, Roland R. Regoes, Huldrych F. Günthard, Peter Rusert, and Alexandra Trkola. MPER-Specific Antibodies Induce gp120 Shedding and Irreversibly Neutralize HIV-1. J. Exp. Med., 208(3):439-454, 14 Mar 2011. PubMed ID: 21357743.
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Sajadi2012
Mohammad M. Sajadi, George K. Lewis, Michael S. Seaman, Yongjun Guan, Robert R. Redfield, and Anthony L. DeVico. Signature Biochemical Properties of Broadly Cross-Reactive HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies in Human Plasma. J. Virol., 86(9):5014-5025, May 2012. PubMed ID: 22379105.
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Salzwedel2000
K. Salzwedel, E. D. Smith, B. Dey, and E. A. Berger. Sequential CD4-Coreceptor Interactions in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Env Function: Soluble CD4 Activates Env for Coreceptor-Dependent Fusion and Reveals Blocking Activities of Antibodies against Cryptic Conserved Epitopes on gp120. J. Virol., 74:326-333, 2000. PubMed ID: 10590121.
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Sanders2002a
Rogier W. Sanders, Mika Vesanen, Norbert Schuelke, Aditi Master, Linnea Schiffner, Roopa Kalyanaraman, Maciej Paluch, Ben Berkhout, Paul J. Maddon, William C. Olson, Min Lu, and John P. Moore. Stabilization of the Soluble, Cleaved, Trimeric Form of the Envelope Glycoprotein Complex of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 76(17):8875-8889, Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12163607.
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Sanders2013
Rogier W. Sanders, Ronald Derking, Albert Cupo, Jean-Philippe Julien, Anila Yasmeen, Natalia de Val, Helen J. Kim, Claudia Blattner, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Jacob Korzun, Michael Golabek, Kevin de los Reyes, Thomas J. Ketas, Marit J. van Gils, C. Richter King, Ian A. Wilson, Andrew B. Ward, P. J. Klasse, and John P. Moore. A Next-Generation Cleaved, Soluble HIV-1 Env Trimer, BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, Expresses Multiple Epitopes for Broadly Neutralizing but not Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. PLoS Pathog., 9(9):e1003618, Sep 2013. PubMed ID: 24068931.
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Sattentau1995a
Q. J. Sattentau and J. P. Moore. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 neutralization is determined by epitope exposure on the gp120 oligomer. J. Exp. Med., 182:185-196, 1995. This study suggests that antibodies specific for one of five different binding regions on gp120 are associated with viral neutralization: V2, V3, C4, the CD4 binding site, and a complex discontinuous epitope that does not interfere with CD4 binding. Kinetic binding properties of a set of MAbs that bind to these regions were studied, analyzing binding to both functional oligomeric LAI gp120 and soluble monomeric LAI BH10 gp120; neutralization ID$_50$s were also evaluated. It was found that the neutralization ID$_50$s was related to the ability to bind oligomeric, not monomeric, gp120, and concluded that with the exception of the V3 loop, regions of gp120 that are immunogenic will be poorly presented on cell-line-adapted virions. Further, the association rate, estimated as the t$_1/2$ to reach equilibrium binding to multimeric, virion associated, gp120, appears to be a major factor relating to affinity and potency of the neutralization response to cell-line-adapted virus. PubMed ID: 7540648.
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Schiffner2016
Torben Schiffner, Natalia de Val, Rebecca A. Russell, Steven W. de Taeye, Alba Torrents de la Peña, Gabriel Ozorowski, Helen J. Kim, Travis Nieusma, Florian Brod, Albert Cupo, Rogier W. Sanders, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Chemical Cross-Linking Stabilizes Native-Like HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimer Antigens. J. Virol., 90(2):813-828, 28 Oct 2015. PubMed ID: 26512083.
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Schiffner2018
Torben Schiffner, Jesper Pallesen, Rebecca A. Russell, Jonathan Dodd, Natalia de Val, Celia C. LaBranche, David Montefiori, Georgia D. Tomaras, Xiaoying Shen, Scarlett L. Harris, Amin E. Moghaddam, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Rogier W. Sanders, Laura E. McCoy, John P. Moore, Andrew B. Ward, and Quentin J. Sattentau. Structural and Immunologic Correlates of Chemically Stabilized HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins. PLoS Pathog., 14(5):e1006986, May 2018. PubMed ID: 29746590.
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Schulke2002
Norbert Schulke, Mika S. Vesanen, Rogier W. Sanders, Ping Zhu, Min Lu, Deborah J. Anselma, Anthony R. Villa, Paul W. H. I. Parren, James M. Binley, Kenneth H. Roux, Paul J. Maddon, John P. Moore, and William C. Olson. Oligomeric and Conformational Properties of a Proteolytically Mature, Disulfide-Stabilized Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp140 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 76(15):7760-76, Aug 2002. PubMed ID: 12097589.
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Seaman2010
Michael S. Seaman, Holly Janes, Natalie Hawkins, Lauren E. Grandpre, Colleen Devoy, Ayush Giri, Rory T. Coffey, Linda Harris, Blake Wood, Marcus G. Daniels, Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Alan Lapedes, Victoria R Polonis, Francine E. McCutchan, Peter B. Gilbert, Steve G. Self, Bette T. Korber, David C. Montefiori, and John R. Mascola. Tiered Categorization of a Diverse Panel of HIV-1 Env Pseudoviruses for Assessment of Neutralizing Antibodies. J Virol, 84(3):1439-1452, Feb 2010. PubMed ID: 19939925.
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Sellhorn2012
George Sellhorn, Zane Kraft, Zachary Caldwell, Katharine Ellingson, Christine Mineart, Michael S. Seaman, David C. Montefiori, Eliza Lagerquist, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Engineering, Expression, Purification, and Characterization of Stable Clade A/B Recombinant Soluble Heterotrimeric gp140 Proteins. J. Virol., 86(1):128-142, Jan 2012. PubMed ID: 22031951.
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Selvarajah2005
Suganya Selvarajah, Bridget Puffer, Ralph Pantophlet, Mansun Law, Robert W. Doms, and Dennis R. Burton. Comparing Antigenicity and Immunogenicity of Engineered gp120. J. Virol., 79(19):12148-12163, Oct 2005. PubMed ID: 16160142.
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Sharma2006
Victoria A. Sharma, Elaine Kan, Yide Sun, Ying Lian, Jimna Cisto, Verna Frasca, Susan Hilt, Leonidas Stamatatos, John J. Donnelly, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, Susan W. Barnett, and Indresh K. Srivastava. Structural Characteristics Correlate with Immune Responses Induced by HIV Envelope Glycoprotein Vaccines. Virology, 10 Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16769099.
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Shen2010
Xiaoying Shen, S. Moses Dennison, Pinghuang Liu, Feng Gao, Frederick Jaeger, David C. Montefiori, Laurent Verkoczy, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, and Georgia D. Tomaras. Prolonged Exposure of the HIV-1 gp41 Membrane Proximal Region with L669S Substitution. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 107(13):5972-5977, 30 Mar 2010. PubMed ID: 20231447.
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Shibata2007
Junji Shibata, Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Akiko Honda, Atsushi Koito, Toshio Murakami, and Shuzo Matsushita. Impact of V2 Mutations on Escape from a Potent Neutralizing Anti-V3 Monoclonal Antibody during In Vitro Selection of a Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate. J. Virol., 81(8):3757-3768, Apr 2007. PubMed ID: 17251298.
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Si2001
Zhihai Si, Mark Cayabyab, and Joseph Sodroski. Envelope Glycoprotein Determinants of nEutralization Resistance in a Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV-HXBc2P 3.2) Derived by Passage in Monkeys. J. Virol., 75(9):4208-4218, May 2001. PubMed ID: 11287570.
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Smalls-Mantey2012
Adjoa Smalls-Mantey, Nicole Doria-Rose, Rachel Klein, Andy Patamawenu, Stephen A. Migueles, Sung-Youl Ko, Claire W. Hallahan, Hing Wong, Bai Liu, Lijing You, Johannes Scheid, John C. Kappes, Christina Ochsenbauer, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Mark Connors. Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity against Primary HIV-Infected CD4+ T Cells Is Directly Associated with the Magnitude of Surface IgG Binding. J. Virol., 86(16):8672-8680, Aug 2012. PubMed ID: 22674985.
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Srivastava2002
Indresh K. Srivastava, Leonidas Stamatatos, Harold Legg, Elaine Kan, Anne Fong, Stephen R. Coates, Louisa Leung, Mark Wininger, John J. Donnelly, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Purification and Characterization of Oligomeric Envelope Glycoprotein from a Primary R5 Subtype B Human Immunodeficiency Virus. J. Virol., 76(6):2835-2847, Mar 2002. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/76/6/2835. PubMed ID: 11861851.
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Srivastava2005
Indresh K. Srivastava, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Role of Neutralizing Antibodies in Protective Immunity Against HIV. Hum. Vaccin., 1(2):45-60, Mar-Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 17038830.
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Srivastava2008
Indresh K. Srivastava, Elaine Kan, Yide Sun, Victoria A. Sharma, Jimna Cisto, Brian Burke, Ying Lian, Susan Hilt, Zohar Biron, Karin Hartog, Leonidas Stamatatos, Ruben Diaz-Avalos, R Holland Cheng, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, and Susan W. Barnett. Comparative Evaluation of Trimeric Envelope Glycoproteins Derived from Subtype C and B HIV-1 R5 Isolates. Virology, 372(2):273-290, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18061231.
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Stamatatos1998
L. Stamatatos and C. Cheng-Mayer. An Envelope Modification That Renders a Primary, Neutralization-Resistant Clade B Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolate Highly Susceptible to Neutralization by Sera from Other Clades. J. Virol., 72:7840-7845, 1998. PubMed ID: 9733820.
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Stamatatos2000
L. Stamatatos, M. Lim, and C. Cheng-Mayer. Generation and structural analysis of soluble oligomeric gp140 envelope proteins derived from neutralization-resistant and neutralization-susceptible primary HIV type 1 isolates. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 16(10):981--94, 1 Jul 2000. PubMed ID: 10890360.
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Stanfield2005
Robyn L. Stanfield and Ian A. Wilson. Structural Studies of Human HIV-1 V3 Antibodies. Hum Antibodies, 14(3-4):73-80, 2005. PubMed ID: 16720977.
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Stricher2008
François Stricher, Chih-chin Huang, Anne Descours, Sophie Duquesnoy, Olivier Combes, Julie M. Decker, Young Do Kwon, Paolo Lusso, George M. Shaw, Claudio Vita, Peter D. Kwong, and Loïc Martin. Combinatorial Optimization of a CD4-Mimetic Miniprotein and Cocrystal Structures with HIV-1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Mol. Biol., 382(2):510-524, 3 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18619974.
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Sullivan1998
N. Sullivan, Y. Sun, Q. Sattentau, M. Thali, D. Wu, G. Denisova, J. Gershoni, J. Robinson, J. Moore, and J. Sodroski. CD4-Induced Conformational Changes in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Glycoprotein: Consequences for Virus Entry and Neutralization. J. Virol., 72:4694-4703, 1998. A study of the sCD4 inducible MAb 17bi, and the MAb CG10 that recognizes a gp120-CD4 complex. These epitopes are minimally accessible upon attachment of gp120 to the cell. The CD4-binding induced changes in gp120 were studied, exploring the sequestering of chemokine receptor binding sites from the humoral response. PubMed ID: 9573233.
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Sullivan1998b
N. Sullivan, Y. Sun, J. Binley, J. Lee, C. F. Barbas III, P. W. H. I. Parren, D. R. Burton, and J. Sodroski. Determinants of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein activation by soluble CD4 and monoclonal antibodies. J. Virol., 72:6332-8, 1998. PubMed ID: 9658072.
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Sundling2012
Christopher Sundling, Yuxing Li, Nick Huynh, Christian Poulsen, Richard Wilson, Sijy O'Dell, Yu Feng, John R. Mascola, Richard T. Wyatt, and Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam. High-Resolution Definition of Vaccine-Elicited B Cell Responses Against the HIV Primary Receptor Binding Site. Sci. Transl. Med., 4(142):142ra96, 11 Jul 2012. PubMed ID: 22786681.
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Tan2009
Hepan Tan and A. J. Rader. Identification of Putative, Stable Binding Regions through Flexibility Analysis of HIV-1 gp120. Proteins, 74(4):881-894, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 18704932.
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Tanaka2017
Kazuki Tanaka, Takeo Kuwata, Muntasir Alam, Gilad Kaplan, Shokichi Takahama, Kristel Paola Ramirez Valdez, Anna Roitburd-Berman, Jonathan M. Gershoni, and Shuzo Matsushita. Unique Binding Modes for the Broad Neutralizing Activity of Single-Chain Variable Fragments (scFv) Targeting CD4-Induced Epitopes. Retrovirology, 14(1):44, 22 Sep 2017. PubMed ID: 28938888.
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Tang2011
Haili Tang, James E. Robinson, S. Gnanakaran, Ming Li, Eric S. Rosenberg, Lautaro G. Perez, Barton F. Haynes, Hua-Xin Liao, Celia C. Labranche, Bette T. Korber, and David C. Montefiori. Epitopes Immediately below the Base of the V3 Loop of gp120 as Targets for the Initial Autologous Neutralizing Antibody Response in Two HIV-1 Subtype B-Infected Individuals. J. Virol., 85(18):9286-9299, Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21734041.
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Taylor2008
Brian M. Taylor, J. Scott Foulke, Robin Flinko, Alonso Heredia, Anthony DeVico, and Marvin Reitz. An Alteration of Human Immunodeficiency Virus gp41 Leads to Reduced CCR5 Dependence and CD4 Independence. J. Virol., 82(11):5460-5471, Jun 2008. PubMed ID: 18353949.
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Teeraputon2005
Sirilak Teeraputon, Suda Louisirirojchanakul, and Prasert Auewarakul. N-Linked Glycosylation in C2 Region of HIV-1 Envelope Reduces Sensitivity to Neutralizing Antibodies. Viral Immunol., 18(2):343-353, Summer 2005. PubMed ID: 16035946.
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Thali1993
M. Thali, J. P. Moore, C. Furman, M. Charles, D. D. Ho, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Characterization of Conserved Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Neutralization Epitopes Exposed upon gp120-CD4 Binding. J. Virol., 67:3978-3988, 1993. Five regions are likely to contribute to the 48d and 17b discontinuous epitopes, either directly or through local conformational effects: the hydrophobic ring-like structure formed by the disulfide bond that links C3 and C4, the base of the stem-loop that contains V1 and V2, and the hydrophobic region in C2 from Arg 252 to Asp 262. Additionally changes in Glu 370, and Met 475 in C5, affected binding and neutralization. The hydrophobic character of these critical regions is consistent with the limited exposure on gp120 prior to CD4 binding. PubMed ID: 7685405.
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Thali1994
M. Thali, M. Charles, C. Furman, L. Cavacini, M. Posner, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Resistance to Neutralization by Broadly Reactive Antibodies to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Glycoprotein Conferred by a gp41 Amino Acid Change. J. Virol., 68:674-680, 1994. A T->A amino acid substitution at position 582 of gp41 conferred resistance to neutralization to 30\% of HIV positive sera (Wilson et al. J Virol 64:3240-48 (1990)). Monoclonal antibodies that bound to the CD4 binding site were unable to neutralize this virus, but the mutation did not reduce the neutralizing capacity of a V2 region MAb G3-4, V3 region MAbs, or gp41 neutralizing MAb 2F5. PubMed ID: 7507184.
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Thida2019
Win Thida, Takeo Kuwata, Yosuke Maeda, Tetsu Yamashiro, Giang Van Tran, Kinh Van Nguyen, Masafumi Takiguchi, Hiroyuki Gatanaga, Kazuki Tanaka, and Shuzo Matsushita. The Role of Conventional Antibodies Targeting the CD4 Binding Site and CD4-Induced Epitopes in the Control of HIV-1 CRF01\_AE Viruses. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 508(1):46-51, 1 Jan 2019. PubMed ID: 30470571.
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Tran2012
Erin E. H. Tran, Mario J. Borgnia, Oleg Kuybeda, David M. Schauder, Alberto Bartesaghi, Gabriel A. Frank, Guillermo Sapiro, Jacqueline L. S. Milne, and Sriram Subramaniam. Structural Mechanism of Trimeric HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Activation. PLoS Pathog., 8(7):e1002797, 2012. PubMed ID: 22807678.
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Trkola1996b
A. Trkola, T. Dragic, J. Arthos, J. M. Binley, W. C. Olson, G. P. Allaway, C. Cheng-Mayer, J. Robinson, P. J. Maddon, and J. P. Moore. CD4-Dependent, Antibody-Sensitive Interactions between HIV-1 and Its Co-Receptor CCR-5. Nature, 384:184-187, 1996. CCR-5 is a co-factor for fusion of HIV-1 strains of the non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) phenotype with CD4+ T-cells. CD4 binding greatly increases the efficiency of gp120-CCR-5 interaction. Neutralizing MAbs against the V3 loop and CD4-induced epitopes on gp120 inhibited the interaction of gp120 with CCR-5, without affecting gp120-CD4 binding. PubMed ID: 8906796.
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Tuen2005
Michael Tuen, Maria Luisa Visciano, Peter C. Chien, Jr., Sandra Cohen, Pei-de Chen, James Robinson, Yuxian He, Abraham Pinter, Miroslaw K Gorny, and Catarina E Hioe. Characterization of Antibodies that Inhibit HIV gp120 Antigen Processing and Presentation. Eur. J. Immunol., 35(9):2541-2551, Sep 2005. PubMed ID: 16106369.
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Vaine2010
Michael Vaine, Shixia Wang, Qin Liu, James Arthos, David Montefiori, Paul Goepfert, M. Juliana McElrath, and Shan Lu. Profiles of Human Serum Antibody Responses Elicited by Three Leading HIV Vaccines Focusing on the Induction of Env-Specific Antibodies. PLoS One, 5(11):e13916, 2010. PubMed ID: 21085486.
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vanMontfort2007
Thijs van Montfort, Alexey A. Nabatov, Teunis B. H. Geijtenbeek, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Efficient Capture of Antibody Neutralized HIV-1 by Cells Expressing DC-SIGN and Transfer to CD4+ T Lymphocytes. J. Immunol., 178(5):3177-85, 1 Mar 2007. PubMed ID: 17312166.
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vanMontfort2008
Thijs van Montfort, Adri A. M. Thomas, Georgios Pollakis, and William A. Paxton. Dendritic Cells Preferentially Transfer CXCR4-Using Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Variants to CD4+ T Lymphocytes in trans. J. Viro.l, 82(16):7886-7896, Aug 2008. PubMed ID: 18524826.
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vanMontfort2011
Thijs van Montfort, Mark Melchers, Gözde Isik, Sergey Menis, Po-Ssu Huang, Katie Matthews, Elizabeth Michael, Ben Berkhout, William R. Schief, John P. Moore, and Rogier W. Sanders. A Chimeric HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimer with an Embedded Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF) Domain Induces Enhanced Antibody and T Cell Responses. J. Biol. Chem., 286(25):22250-22261, 24 Jun 2011. PubMed ID: 21515681.
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Varadarajan2005
Raghavan Varadarajan, Deepak Sharma, Kausik Chakraborty, Mayuri Patel, Michael Citron, Prem Sinha, Ramkishor Yadav, Umar Rashid, Sarah Kennedy, Debra Eckert, Romas Geleziunas, David Bramhill, William Schleif, Xiaoping Liang, and John Shiver. Characterization of gp120 and Its Single-Chain Derivatives, gp120-CD4D12 and gp120-M9: Implications for Targeting the CD4i Epitope in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Vaccine Design. J. Virol., 79(3):1713-1723, Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15650196.
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Veillette2014
Maxime Veillette, Anik Désormeaux, Halima Medjahed, Nour-Elhouda Gharsallah, Mathieu Coutu, Joshua Baalwa, Yongjun Guan, George Lewis, Guido Ferrari, Beatrice H. Hahn, Barton F. Haynes, James E. Robinson, Daniel E. Kaufmann, Mattia Bonsignori, Joseph Sodroski, and Andres Finzi. Interaction with Cellular CD4 Exposes HIV-1 Envelope Epitopes Targeted by Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity. J. Virol., 88(5):2633-2644, Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24352444.
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vonBredow2016
Benjamin von Bredow, Juan F. Arias, Lisa N. Heyer, Brian Moldt, Khoa Le, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dennis R. Burton, and David T. Evans. Comparison of Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity and Virus Neutralization by HIV-1 Env-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 90(13):6127-6139, 1 Jul 2016. PubMed ID: 27122574.
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Vu2006
John R. Vu, Timothy Fouts, Katherine Bobb, Jennifer Burns, Brenda McDermott, David I. Israel, Karla Godfrey, and Anthony DeVico. An Immunoglobulin Fusion Protein Based on the gp120-CD4 Receptor Complex Potently Inhibits Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 In Vitro. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 22(6):477-490, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16796521.
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Walker2009a
Laura M. Walker, Sanjay K. Phogat, Po-Ying Chan-Hui, Denise Wagner, Pham Phung, Julie L. Goss, Terri Wrin, Melissa D. Simek, Steven Fling, Jennifer L. Mitcham, Jennifer K. Lehrman, Frances H. Priddy, Ole A. Olsen, Steven M. Frey, Phillip W . Hammond, Protocol G Principal Investigators, Stephen Kaminsky, Timothy Zamb, Matthew Moyle, Wayne C. Koff, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. Broad and Potent Neutralizing Antibodies from an African Donor Reveal a new HIV-1 Vaccine Target. Science, 326(5950):285-289, 9 Oct 2009. PubMed ID: 19729618.
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Wang2007a
Bao-Zhong Wang, Weimin Liu, Sang-Moo Kang, Munir Alam, Chunzi Huang, Ling Ye, Yuliang Sun, Yingying Li, Denise L. Kothe, Peter Pushko, Terje Dokland, Barton F. Haynes, Gale Smith, Beatrice H. Hahn, and Richard W. Compans. Incorporation of High Levels of Chimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins into Virus-Like Particles. J. Virol., 81(20):10869-10878, Oct 2007. PubMed ID: 17670815.
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Weinberg1997
J. Weinberg, H. X. Liao, J. V. Torres, T. J. Matthews, J. Robinson, and B. F. Haynes. Identification of a synthetic peptide that mimics an HIV glycoprotein 120 envelope conformational determinant exposed following ligation of glycoprotein 120 by CD4. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 13:657-64, 1997. PubMed ID: 9168234.
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Wen2018
Yingxia Wen, Hung V. Trinh, Christine E Linton, Chiara Tani, Nathalie Norais, DeeAnn Martinez-Guzman, Priyanka Ramesh, Yide Sun, Frank Situ, Selen Karaca-Griffin, Christopher Hamlin, Sayali Onkar, Sai Tian, Susan Hilt, Padma Malyala, Rushit Lodaya, Ning Li, Gillis Otten, Giuseppe Palladino, Kristian Friedrich, Yukti Aggarwal, Celia LaBranche, Ryan Duffy, Xiaoying Shen, Georgia D. Tomaras, David C. Montefiori, William Fulp, Raphael Gottardo, Brian Burke, Jeffrey B. Ulmer, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Hua-Xin Liao, Barton F. Haynes, Nelson L. Michael, Jerome H. Kim, Mangala Rao, Robert J. O'Connell, Andrea Carfi, and Susan W. Barnett. Generation and Characterization of a Bivalent Protein Boost for Future Clinical Trials: HIV-1 Subtypes CR01\_AE and B gp120 Antigens with a Potent Adjuvant. PLoS One, 13(4):e0194266, 2018. PubMed ID: 29698406.
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West2010
Anthony P. West, Jr., Rachel P. Galimidi, Christopher P. Foglesong, Priyanthi N. P. Gnanapragasam, Joshua S. Klein, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Evaluation of CD4-CD4i Antibody Architectures Yields Potent, Broadly Cross-Reactive Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Reagents. J. Virol., 84(1):261-269, Jan 2010. PubMed ID: 19864392.
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West2013
Anthony P. West, Jr., Louise Scharf, Joshua Horwitz, Florian Klein, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Computational Analysis of Anti-HIV-1 Antibody Neutralization Panel Data to Identify Potential Functional Epitope Residues. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 110(26):10598-10603, 25 Jun 2013. PubMed ID: 23754383.
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White2010
Tommi A. White, Alberto Bartesaghi, Mario J. Borgnia, Joel R. Meyerson, M. Jason V. de la Cruz, Julian W. Bess, Rachna Nandwani, James A. Hoxie, Jeffrey D. Lifson, Jacqueline L. S. Milne, and Sriram Subramaniam. Molecular Architectures of Trimeric SIV and HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins on Intact Viruses: Strain-Dependent Variation in Quaternary Structure. PLoS Pathog, 6(12):e1001249, 2010. PubMed ID: 21203482.
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White2011
Tommi A. White, Alberto Bartesaghi, Mario J. Borgnia, M. Jason V. de la Cruz, Rachna Nandwani, James A. Hoxie, Julian W. Bess, Jeffrey D. Lifson, Jacqueline L. S. Milne, and Sriram Subramaniam. Three-Dimensional Structures of Soluble CD4-Bound States of Trimeric Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins Determined by Using Cryo-Electron Tomography. J. Virol., 85(23):12114-12123, Dec 2011. PubMed ID: 21937655.
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Willey2008
Suzanne Willey and Marlén M. I. Aasa-Chapman. Humoral Immunity to HIV-1: Neutralisation and Antibody Effector Functions. Trends Microbiol., 16(12):596-604, Dec 2008. PubMed ID: 18964020.
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Witt2017
Kristen C. Witt, Luis Castillo-Menendez, Haitao Ding, Nicole Espy, Shijian Zhang, John C. Kappes, and Joseph Sodroski. Antigenic Characterization of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) Envelope Glycoprotein Precursor Incorporated into Nanodiscs. PLoS One, 12(2):e0170672, 2017. PubMed ID: 28151945.
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Wright2012
Elizabeth R. Wright and Paul W. Spearman. Unraveling the Structural Basis of HIV-1 Neutralization. Future Microbiol., 7(11):1251-1254, Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 23075444.
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Wu1996
L. Wu, N. P. Gerard, R. Wyatt, H. Choe, C. Parolin, N. Ruffing, A. Borsetti, A. A. Cardoso, E. Desjardin, W. Newman, C. Gerard, and J. Sodroski. CD4-Induced Interaction of Primary HIV-1 gp120 Glycoproteins with the Chemokine Receptor CCR-5. Nature, 384:179-183, 1996. Results suggest that HIV-1 attachment to CD4 creates a high-affinity binding site for CCR-5, leading to membrane fusion and virus entry. CD4-induced or V3 neutralizing MAbs block the interaction of gp120-CD4 complexes with CCR-5. PubMed ID: 8906795.
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Wu2008
Xueling Wu, Anna Sambor, Martha C. Nason, Zhi-Yong Yang, Lan Wu, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Soluble CD4 Broadens Neutralization of V3-Directed Monoclonal Antibodies and Guinea Pig Vaccine Sera against HIV-1 Subtype B and C Reference Viruses. Virology, 380(2):285-295, 25 Oct 2008. PubMed ID: 18804254.
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Wu2009a
Lan Wu, Tongqing Zhou, Zhi-yong Yang, Krisha Svehla, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Ling Xu, John R. Mascola, Dennis R. Burton, James A. Hoxie, Robert W. Doms, Peter D. Kwong, and Gary J. Nabel. Enhanced Exposure of the CD4-Binding Site to Neutralizing Antibodies by Structural Design of a Membrane-Anchored Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Domain. J. Virol., 83(10):5077-5086, May 2009. PubMed ID: 19264769.
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Wu2010
Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Yuxing Li, Carl-Magnus Hogerkorp, William R. Schief, Michael S. Seaman, Tongqing Zhou, Stephen D. Schmidt, Lan Wu, Ling Xu, Nancy S. Longo, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Mark K. Louder, Diane L. Wycuff, Yu Feng, Martha Nason, Nicole Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, Peter D. Kwong, Mario Roederer, Richard T. Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and John R. Mascola. Rational Design of Envelope Identifies Broadly Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies to HIV-1. Science, 329(5993):856-861, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616233.
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Wu2011
Xueling Wu, Tongqing Zhou, Jiang Zhu, Baoshan Zhang, Ivelin Georgiev, Charlene Wang, Xuejun Chen, Nancy S. Longo, Mark Louder, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Stephen Perfetto, Stephen D. Schmidt, Wei Shi, Lan Wu, Yongping Yang, Zhi-Yong Yang, Zhongjia Yang, Zhenhai Zhang, Mattia Bonsignori, John A. Crump, Saidi H. Kapiga, Noel E. Sam, Barton F. Haynes, Melissa Simek, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Mark Connors, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, James C. Mullikin, Gary J. Nabel, Mario Roederer, Lawrence Shapiro, Peter D. Kwong, and John R. Mascola. Focused Evolution of HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Revealed by Structures and Deep Sequencing. Science, 333(6049):1593-1602, 16 Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21835983.
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Wyatt1995
R. Wyatt, J. Moore, M. Accola, E. Desjardin, J. Robinson, and J. Sodroski. Involvement of the V1/V2 Variable Loop Structure in the Exposure of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Epitopes Induced by Receptor Binding. J. Virol., 69:5723-5733, 1995. Deletions in the V1/V2 loops of gp120 resulted in the loss of the ability of sCD4 to induce binding of the MAbs 17b, 48d, and A32. A32 can induce binding of 17b and 48d; this induction does not appear to involve the V1/V2 regions. PubMed ID: 7543586.
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Wyatt1997
R. Wyatt, E. Desjardin, U. Olshevsky, C. Nixon, J. Binley, V. Olshevsky, and J. Sodroski. Analysis of the Interaction of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein with the gp41 Transmembrane Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 71:9722-9731, 1997. This study characterized the binding of gp120 and gp41 by comparing Ab reactivity to soluble gp120 and to a soluble complex of gp120 and gp41 called sgp140. The occlusion of gp120 epitopes in the sgp140 complex provides a guide to the gp120 domains that interact with gp41, localizing them in C1 and C5 of gp120. Mutations that disrupt the binding of the occluded antibodies do not influence NAb binding or CD4 binding, thus if the gp41 binding domain is deleted, the immunologically desirable features of gp120 for vaccine design are still intact. PubMed ID: 9371638.
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Wyatt1998
R. Wyatt, P. D. Kwong, E. Desjardins, R. W. Sweet, J. Robinson, W. A. Hendrickson, and J. G. Sodroski. The Antigenic Structure of the HIV gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. Nature, 393:705-711, 1998. Comment in Nature 1998 Jun 18;393(6686):630-1. The spatial organization of the neutralizing epitopes of gp120 is described, based on epitope maps interpreted in the context of the X-ray crystal structure of a ternary complex that includes a gp120 core, CD4 and a neutralizing antibody. PubMed ID: 9641684.
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Xiang2002
Shi-Hua. Xiang, Peter D. Kwong, Rishi Gupta, Carlo D. Rizzuto, David J. Casper, Richard Wyatt, Liping Wang, Wayne A. Hendrickson, Michael L. Doyle, and Joseph Sodroski. Mutagenic Stabilization and/or Disruption of a CD4-Bound State Reveals Distinct Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein. J. Virol., 76(19):9888-9899, Oct 2002. PubMed ID: 12208966.
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Xiang2002b
Shi-Hua Xiang, Najah Doka, Rabeéea K. Choudhary, Joseph Sodroski, and James E. Robinson. Characterization of CD4-Induced Epitopes on the HIV Type 1 gp120 Envelope Glycoprotein Recognized by Neutralizing Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 18(16):1207-1217, 1 Nov 2002. PubMed ID: 12487827.
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Xiang2003
Shi-Hua Xiang, Liping Wang, Mariam Abreu, Chih-Chin Huang, Peter D. Kwong, Eric Rosenberg, James E. Robinson, and Joseph Sodroski. Epitope Mapping and Characterization of a Novel CD4-Induced Human Monoclonal Antibody Capable of Neutralizing Primary HIV-1 Strains. Virology, 315(1):124-134, 10 Oct 2003. PubMed ID: 14592765.
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Xu2013
Xiao-Hong Nancy Xu, Zhaoyang Wen, and William J. Brownlow. Ultrasensitive Analysis of Binding Affinity of HIV Receptor and Neutralizing Antibody Using Solution-Phase Electrochemiluminescence Assay. J. Electroanal. Chem. (Lausanne), 688:53-60, 1 Jan 2013. PubMed ID: 23565071.
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Yang2000
Xinzhen Yang, Michael Farzan, Richard Wyatt, and Joseph Sodroski. Characterization of Stable, Soluble Trimers Containing Complete Ectodomains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins. J. Virol., 74(12):5716-5725, Jun 2000. PubMed ID: 10823881.
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Yang2002
Xinzhen Yang, Juliette Lee, Erin M. Mahony, Peter D. Kwong, Richard Wyatt, and Joseph Sodroski. Highly Stable Trimers Formed by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoproteins Fused with the Trimeric Motif of T4 Bacteriophage Fibritin. J. Virol., 76(9):4634-4642, 1 May 2002. PubMed ID: 11932429.
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Yang2005b
Xinzhen Yang, Svetla Kurteva, Sandra Lee, and Joseph Sodroski. Stoichiometry of Antibody Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 79(6):3500-3508, Mar 2005. PubMed ID: 15731244.
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York2001
J. York, K. E. Follis, M. Trahey, P. N. Nyambi, S. Zolla-Pazner, and J. H. Nunberg. Antibody binding and neutralization of primary and T-cell line-adapted isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J. Virol., 75(6):2741--52, Mar 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/6/2741. PubMed ID: 11222697.
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Yoshimura2006
Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Junji Shibata, Tetsuya Kimura, Akiko Honda, Yosuke Maeda, Atsushi Koito, Toshio Murakami, Hiroaki Mitsuya, and Shuzo Matsushita. Resistance Profile of a Neutralizing Anti-HIV Monoclonal Antibody, KD-247, that Shows Favourable Synergism with Anti-CCR5 Inhibitors. AIDS, 20(16):2065-2073, 24 Oct 2006. PubMed ID: 17053352.
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Yoshimura2010
Kazuhisa Yoshimura, Shigeyoshi Harada, Junji Shibata, Makiko Hatada, Yuko Yamada, Chihiro Ochiai, Hirokazu Tamamura, and Shuzo Matsushita. Enhanced Exposure of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Primary Isolate Neutralization Epitopes through Binding of CD4 Mimetic Compounds. J. Virol., 84(15):7558-7568, Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20504942.
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Yuan2005
Wen Yuan, Stewart Craig, Xinzhen Yang, and Joseph Sodroski. Inter-Subunit Disulfide Bonds in Soluble HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers. Virology, 332(1):369-383, 5 Feb 2005. PubMed ID: 15661168.
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Yuan2006
Wen Yuan, Jessica Bazick, and Joseph Sodroski. Characterization of the Multiple Conformational States of Free Monomeric and Trimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoproteins after Fixation by Cross-Linker. J. Virol., 80(14):6725-6737, Jul 2006. PubMed ID: 16809278.
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Zhang2001a
W. Zhang, A. P. Godillot, R. Wyatt, J. Sodroski, and I. Chaiken. Antibody 17b Binding at the Coreceptor Site Weakens the Kinetics of the Interaction of Envelope Glycoprotein gp120 with CD4. Biochemistry, 40(6):1662-1670, 13 Feb 2001. PubMed ID: 11327825.
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Zhang2002
Peng Fei Zhang, Peter Bouma, Eun Ju Park, Joseph B. Margolick, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Michael N. Flora, and Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr. A Variable Region 3 (V3) Mutation Determines a Global Neutralization Phenotype and CD4-Independent Infectivity of a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Associated with a Broadly Cross-Reactive, Primary Virus-Neutralizing Antibody Response. J. Virol., 76(2):644-655, Jan 2002. PubMed ID: 11752155.
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Zhang2010
Mei-Yun Zhang, Andrew Rosa Borges, Roger G. Ptak, Yanping Wang, Antony S. Dimitrov, S. Munir Alam, Lindsay Wieczorek, Peter Bouma, Timothy Fouts, Shibo Jiang, Victoria R. Polonis, Barton F. Haynes, Gerald V. Quinnan, David C. Montefiori, and Dimiter S. Dimitrov. Potent and Broad Neutralizing Activity of a Single Chain Antibody Fragment against Cell-Free and Cell-Associated HIV-1. mAbs, 2(3):266-274, May-Jun 2010. PubMed ID: 20305395.
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Zhou2007
Tongqing Zhou, Ling Xu, Barna Dey, Ann J. Hessell, Donald Van Ryk, Shi-Hua Xiang, Xinzhen Yang, Mei-Yun Zhang, Michael B. Zwick, James Arthos, Dennis R. Burton, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, Joseph Sodroski, Richard Wyatt, Gary J. Nabel, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Definition of a Conserved Neutralization Epitope on HIV-1 gp120. Nature, 445(7129):732-737, 15 Feb 2007. PubMed ID: 17301785.
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Zhou2010
Tongqing Zhou, Ivelin Georgiev, Xueling Wu, Zhi-Yong Yang, Kaifan Dai, Andrés Finzi, Young Do Kwon, Johannes F. Scheid, Wei Shi, Ling Xu, Yongping Yang, Jiang Zhu, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Joseph Sodroski, Lawrence Shapiro, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Structural Basis for Broad and Potent Neutralization of HIV-1 by Antibody VRC01. Science, 329(5993):811-817, 13 Aug 2010. PubMed ID: 20616231.
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Zhu2003
Chongbin Zhu, Thomas J. Matthews, and Chin Ho Chen. Neutralization Epitopes of the HIV-1 Primary Isolate DH012. Vaccine, 21(23):3301-3306, 4 Jul 2003. PubMed ID: 12804861.
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Zwick2003a
Michael B. Zwick, Robert Kelleher, Richard Jensen, Aran F. Labrijn, Meng Wang, Gerald V. Quinnan, Jr., Paul W. H. I. Parren, and Dennis R. Burton. A Novel Human Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp120 Is V1, V2, and V3 Loop Dependent and Helps Delimit the Epitope of the Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Immunoglobulin G1 b12. J. Virol., 77(12):6965-6978, Jun 2003. PubMed ID: 12768015.
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Wang2019
Qian Wang, Lihong Liu, Wuze Ren, Agegnehu Gettie, Hua Wang, Qingtai Liang, Xuanling Shi, David C. Montefiori, Tongqing Zhou, and Linqi Zhang. A Single Substitution in gp41 Modulates the Neutralization Profile of SHIV during In Vivo Adaptation. Cell Rep., 27(9):2593-2607.e5, 28 May 2019. PubMed ID: 31141685.
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Displaying record number 954
Download this epitope
record as JSON.
MAb ID |
830A |
HXB2 Location |
Env |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp120 |
Research Contact |
Susan Zolla-Pazner |
Epitope |
(Discontinuous epitope)
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp120 V2 // V2 glycan(V2g) // V2 apex |
Neutralizing |
P (tier 1) View neutralization details |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human |
Patient |
|
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, binding affinity, co-receptor, glycosylation, neutralization, review, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity, viral fitness and/or reversion |
Notes
Showing 13 of
13 notes.
-
830A: The study describes the generation, crystal structure, and immunogenic properties of a native-like Env SOSIP trimer based on a group M consensus (ConM) sequence. A crystal structure of ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer together with nAbs PGT124 and 35O22 revealed that ConM SOSIP.v7 is structurally similar to other Env trimers. In rabbits, the ConM SOSIP trimer induced serum nAbs that neutralized the autologous Tier 1A virus (ConM from 2004) and a related Tier 1B ConS virus (ConM from 2001). These responses target the trimer apex and were enhanced when the trimers were presented on ferritin nanoparticles. The neutralization of ConM and ConS pseudoviruses was tested against a large panel of nAbs and non-nAbs (2219, 2557, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, 830A, 654-30D, 1008-30D, 1570D, 729-30D, F105, 181D, 246D, 50-69D, sCD4, VRC01, 3BNC117, CH31, PG9, PG16, CH01, PGDM1400, PGT128, PGT121, 10-1074, PGT151, VRC43.01, 2G12, DH511.2_K3, 10E8, 2F5, 4E10); most nAbs were able to neutralize these pseudoviruses. Soluble ConM trimers were able to weakly activate B cells expressing PGT121 and PG16 BCRs but were inactive against those expressing VRC01 and PGT145. In contrast, at the same molar amount of trimers, the ConM SOSIP.v7-ferritin nanoparticles activated all 4 B cells efficiently. Binding of bnAbs 2G12 and PGT145 and non-nAbs F105 and 19b to ConM SOSIP.v7 trimer and SOSIP showed that the ferritin-bound trimer bound more avidly than the soluble trimer. This study shows that native-like HIV-1 Env trimers can be generated from consensus sequences, and such immunogens might be suitable vaccine components to prime and/or boost desirable nAb responses.
Sliepen2019
(neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
-
830A: A panel of 30 contemporary subtype B pseudoviruses (PSVs) was generated. Neutralization sensitivities of these PSVs were compared with subtype B strains from earlier in the pandemic using 31 nAbs (PG9, PG16, PGT145, PGDM1400, CH02, CH03, CH04, 830A, PGT121, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, 10-1074, 2192, 2219, 3074, 3869, 447-52D, b12, NIH45-46, VRC01, VRC03, 3BNC117, HJ16, sCD4, 10E8, 4E10, 2F5, 7H6, 2G12, 35O22). A significant reduction in Env neutralization sensitivity was observed for 27 out of 31 nAbs for the contemporary, as compared to earlier-decade subtype B PSVs. A decline in neutralization sensitivity was observed across all Env domains; the nAbs that were most potent early in the pandemic suffered the greatest decline in potency over time. A metaanalysis demonstrated this trend across multiple subtypes. As HIV-1 Env diversification continues, changes in Env antigenicity and neutralization sensitivity should continue to be evaluated to inform the development of improved vaccine and antibody products to prevent and treat HIV-1.
Wieczorek2023
(neutralization, viral fitness and/or reversion)
-
830A: A panel of 58 mAbs was cloned from a rhesus macaque immunized with envelope glycoprotein immunogens developed from HIV-1 clade B-infected human donor VC10014. Neutralizing mAbs predominantly targeted linear epitopes in the V3 region in the cradle orientation (V3C), with others targeting the V3 ladle orientation (V3L), the CD4 binding site, C1, C4, or gp41. Nonneutralizing mAbs bound C1, C5, or undetermined gp120 conformational epitopes. Neutralization potency strongly correlated with the magnitude of binding to infected primary macaque splenocytes and to the level of ADCC, but did not correlate with ADCP. MAbs were traced to 23 of 72 functional IgHV germline alleles. Neutralizing V3C mAbs displayed minimal nucleotide SHM in the H chain V region (3.77%), indicating that relatively little affinity maturation was needed to achieve in-clade neutralization breadth. This study underscores the polyfunctional nature of vaccine-elicited tier 2-neutralizing V3 Abs and demonstrates partial reproduction of a human donor’s Ab response through nonhuman primate vaccination. Several previously-isolated mAbs were used in binding assays: b12, VRC01, N6, 3BNC117, 2558, 2219, 1006-15D, 447-52D, 10-1074, 830A, 2F5, F240, PGDM1400, 2219.
Spencer2021
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
830A: The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
830A: The study compared various factors affecting the accessibility of epitopes for antibodies targeting the V2 integrin (V2i) region, versus the V3 region. CD4 treament of BaL and JRFL pseudoviruses increased their neutralization sensitivity to V3 MAbs, but not to V2i MAbs. Viruses grown in a glycosidase inhibitor were more sensitive to neutralization by V3, but not V2i, MAbs. Increasing the time of virus-MAb interaction increased virus neutralization by some V2i MAbs and all V3 MAbs. The structural dynamics of V2i and V3 epitopes has important effects in neutralization. The V2i MAbs tested were: 697, 830A, 1357, 1361, 1393, 2158, and 2297.
Upadhyay2014
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
830A: This study characterized the Elisa cross-reactivity, neutralization, and Ig variable genes of a panel of 7 anti-V2 mAbs: 1361, 1393A, 1357, 697, 830A, 2158, and 2297. Despite sequence variability, the 7 mAbs recognize conserved immunologic features of V2, with 6 of them targeting similar epitopes. The crystal structure of the mAb 697 binding site was determined.
Gorny2012
(neutralization)
-
830A: 830A partially blocked the capture of virions by MAbs 2.2G, 2.3E, 2.5B, derived from B-cell cultures from SHIV-infected rhesus macaques, and capture by MAbs 2909 and 447.
Robinson2010
(binding affinity)
-
830A: 2909 is a human anti-Env NAb that was selected by neutralization assay and binds to the quaternary structure on the intact virion. ELISA-based competition assays and subsequent mutational analysis determined that the CD4BS and V2 and V3 loops contribute to the 2909 epitope: 2909 binding was inhibited by MAbs 447-52d (anti-V3), 830A (anti-V2), and IgG1b12 (anti-CD4BS) and sCD4. 2909 was not inhibited by MAbs 670, 1418, nor 2G12.
Gorny2005
-
830A: V1V2 was determined to be the region that conferred the neutralization phenotype differences between two R5-tropic primary HIV-1 isolates, JRFL and SF162. JRFL is resistant to neutralization by many sera and MAbs, while SF162 is sensitive. All MAbs tested, anti-V3, -V2, -CD4BS, and -CD4i, (except the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12, which neutralized both strains), neutralized the SF162 pseudotype but not JRFL, and chimeras that exchanged the V1V2 loops transferred the neutralization phenotype. Three anti-V2 MAb were tested -- both 2158 and 830A bound more strongly to JRFL, but neutralized SF162, and did not neutralize JRFL. Thus V2 domains are better neutralization targets in SF162.
Pinter2004
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
830A: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. V2 MAbs 830A and 2158 were decreased by trypsin, unaffected by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
830A: A pseudotyping assay showed that an X4 V3 loop peptide could enhance infectivity of X4 virus, R5 and R5X4 V3 loops peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5 virus, and R5X4 peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5X4 virus. Neither R5 nor R5X4 peptides influenced binding of CD4BS MAbs F105 and Ig1Gb12, but did increase binding of CD4i MAb 17b. Of three V2 MAbs, only 830A, not 2158 or 1357 was enhanced by V3 peptide binding.
Ling2002
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
-
830A: This broad review of anti-Envelope MAbs notes that V2 MAbs are generally weakly neutralizing at best, and somewhat strain specific. 830A neutralizes SF162.
Gorny2003
(variant cross-reactivity, review)
-
830A: 26 HIV-1 group M isolates (clades A to H) were tested for binding to 47 MAbs, including 5 anti-V2 MAbs, which showed weak and sporadic binding, with the most frequent binding to C and D clades.
Nyambi2000
(variant cross-reactivity, subtype comparisons)
References
Showing 13 of
13 references.
Isolation Paper
Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2005
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Leonidas Stamatatos, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Constance Williams, Xiao-Hong Wang, Sandra Cohen, Robert Staudinger, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Identification of a New Quaternary Neutralizing Epitope on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virus Particles. J. Virol., 79(8):5232-5237, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15795308.
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Gorny2012
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Ruimin Pan, Constance Williams, Xiao-Hong Wang, Barbara Volsky, Timothy O'Neal, Brett Spurrier, Jared M. Sampson, Liuzhe Li, Michael S. Seaman, Xiang-Peng Kong, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Functional and Immunochemical Cross-Reactivity of V2-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. Virology, 427(2):198-207, 5 Jun 2012. PubMed ID: 22402248.
Show all entries for this paper.
Ling2002
Hong Ling, Xiao-Yan Zhang, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Activation of gp120 of Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Their V3 Loop-Derived Peptides. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 297(3):625-631, 27 Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12270140.
Show all entries for this paper.
Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
Show all entries for this paper.
Pinter2004
Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Yuxian He, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The V1/V2 Domain of gp120 Is a Global Regulator of the Sensitivity of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates to Neutralization by Antibodies Commonly Induced upon Infection. J. Virol., 78(10):5205-5215, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113902.
Show all entries for this paper.
Robinson2010
James E. Robinson, Kelly Franco, Debra Holton Elliott, Mary Jane Maher, Ashley Reyna, David C. Montefiori, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Zane Kraft, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Quaternary Epitope Specificities of Anti-HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Generated in Rhesus Macaques Infected by the Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus SHIVSF162P4. J. Virol., 84(7):3443-3453, Apr 2010. PubMed ID: 20106929.
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Spencer2021
David A. Spencer, Delphine C. Malherbe, Nestor Vazquez Bernat, Monika Adori, Benjamin Goldberg, Nicholas Dambrauskas, Heidi Henderson, Shilpi Pandey, Tracy Cheever, Philip Barnette, William F. Sutton, Margaret E. Ackerman, James J. Kobie, D. Noah Sather, Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam, Nancy L. Haigwood, and Ann J. Hessell. Polyfunctional Tier 2-Neutralizing Antibodies Cloned following HIV-1 Env Macaque Immunization Mirror Native Antibodies in a Human Donor. J Immunol, 206(5):999-1012 doi, Mar 2021. PubMed ID: 33472907
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Upadhyay2014
Chitra Upadhyay, Luzia M. Mayr, Jing Zhang, Rajnish Kumar, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Arthur Nádas, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Catarina E. Hioe. Distinct Mechanisms Regulate Exposure of Neutralizing Epitopes in the V2 and V3 Loops of HIV-1 Envelope. J. Virol., 88(21):12853-12865, Nov 2014. PubMed ID: 25165106.
Show all entries for this paper.
Wieczorek2023
Lindsay Wieczorek, Eric Sanders-Buell, Michelle Zemil, Eric Lewitus, Erin Kavusak, Jonah Heller, Sebastian Molnar, Mekhala Rao, Gabriel Smith, Meera Bose, Amy Nguyen, Adwitiya Dhungana, Katherine Okada, Kelly Parisi, Daniel Silas, Bonnie Slike, Anuradha Ganesan, Jason Okulicz, Tahaniyat Lalani, Brian K. Agan, Trevor A. Crowell, Janice Darden, Morgane Rolland, Sandhya Vasan, Julie Ake, Shelly J. Krebs, Sheila Peel, Sodsai Tovanabutra, and Victoria R. Polonis. Evolution of HIV-1 envelope towards reduced neutralization sensitivity, as demonstrated by contemporary HIV-1 subtype B from the United States. PLoS Pathog, 19(12):e1011780 doi, Dec 2023. PubMed ID: 38055771
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Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
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Sliepen2019
Kwinten Sliepen, Byung Woo Han, Ilja Bontjer, Petra Mooij, Fernando Garces, Anna-Janina Behrens, Kimmo Rantalainen, Sonu Kumar, Anita Sarkar, Philip J. M. Brouwer, Yuanzi Hua, Monica Tolazzi, Edith Schermer, Jonathan L. Torres, Gabriel Ozorowski, Patricia van der Woude, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Marielle J. van Breemen, Juan Miguel Camacho-Sanchez, Judith A. Burger, Max Medina-Ramirez, Nuria Gonzalez, Jose Alcami, Celia LaBranche, Gabriella Scarlatti, Marit J. van Gils, Max Crispin, David C. Montefiori, Andrew B. Ward, Gerrit Koopman, John P. Moore, Robin J. Shattock, Willy M. Bogers, Ian A. Wilson, and Rogier W. Sanders. Structure and immunogenicity of a stabilized HIV-1 envelope trimer based on a group-M consensus sequence. Nat Commun, 10(1):2355 doi, May 2019. PubMed ID: 31142746
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Displaying record number 1347
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Notes
Showing 13 of
13 notes.
-
2158: Two conserved tyrosine (Y) residues within the V2 loop of gp120, Y173 and Y177, were mutated individually or in combination, to either phenylalanine (F) or alanine (A) in several strains of diverse subtypes. In general, these mutations increased neutralization sensitivity, with a greater impact of Y177 over Y173 single mutations, of double over single mutations, and of A over F substitutions. The Y173A Y177A double mutation in HIV-1 BaL increased sensitivity to most of the weakly neutralizing MAbs tested (2158, 447-D, 268-D, B4e8, D19, 17b, 48d, 412d) and even rendered the virus sensitive to non-neutralizing antibodies against the CD4 binding site (F105, 654-30D, and b13). In the case of V2 mAb 697-30D, residue Y173 is part of its epitope, and thus abrogates its binding and has no effect on neutralization; the Y177A mutant alone did increase neutralization sensitivity to this mAb. When the double mutant was tested against bnAbs, there was a large decrease in neutralization sensitivity compared to WT for many bnAbs that target V1, V2, or V3 (PG9, PG16, VRC26.08, VRC38, PGT121, PGT122, PGT123, PGT126, PGT128, PGT130, PGT135, VRC24, CH103). The double mutation had lesser or no effect on neutralization by one V3 bnAb (2G12) and by most bnAbs targeting the CD4 binding site (VRC01, VRC07, VRC03, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH31, 12A12, 3BNC117, N6), the gp120-gp41 interface (35O22, PGT151), or the MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8).
Guzzo2018
(antibody binding site, neutralization)
-
2158: The authors selected an optimal panel of diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to represent the antigenic diversity of HIV globally in order to be used as antigen candidates. The selection was based on genetic and geographic diversity, and experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses. The eligibility of the envelopes as vaccine candidates was evaluated against a panel of antibodies for breadth, affinity, binding and durability of vaccine-elicited responses. The antigen panel was capable of detecting the spectrum of V2-specific antibodies that target epitopes from the V2 strand C (V2p), the integrin binding motif in V2 (V2i), and the quaternary epitope at the apex of the trimer (V2q).
Yates2018
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, binding affinity)
-
2158: Env from of a highly neutralization-resistant isolate, CH120.6, was shown to be very stable and conformationally-homogeneous. Its gp140 trimer retains many antigenic properties of the intact Env, while its monomeric gp120 exposes more epitopes. Thus trimer organization and stability are important determinants for occluding epitopes and conferring resistance to antibodies. Among a panel of 21 mAbs, CH120.6 was resistant to neutralization by all non-neutralizing and strain-specific mAbs (including 2158), regardless of the location of their epitopes. It was weakly neutralized by several broadly-neutralizing mAbs (VRC01, NIH45-46, 12A12, PG9, PG16, PGT128, 4E10, and 10E8), and well neutralized by only 2 (PGT145 and 10-1074).
Cai2017
(neutralization)
-
2158: Two stable homogenous gp140 Env trimer spikes, Clade A 92UG037.8 Env and Clade C C97ZA012 Env, were identified. 293T cells stably transfected with either presented fully functional surface timers, 50% of which were uncleaved. A panel of neutralizing and non-neutralizing Abs were tested for binding to the trimers. Non-neutralizing V2 Ab 2158 did not bind cell surface or neutralize 92UG037.8 HIV-1 isolate though it did bind gp160 minus its C-terminus (gp160ΔCT) moderately, and was able to bind weakly in the presence of sCD4.
Chen2015
(neutralization, binding affinity)
-
2158: The study compared various factors affecting the accessibility of epitopes for antibodies targeting the V2 integrin (V2i) region, versus the V3 region. CD4 treament of BaL and JRFL pseudoviruses increased their neutralization sensitivity to V3 MAbs, but not to V2i MAbs. Viruses grown in a glycosidase inhibitor were more sensitive to neutralization by V3, but not V2i, MAbs. Increasing the time of virus-MAb interaction increased virus neutralization by some V2i MAbs and all V3 MAbs. The structural dynamics of V2i and V3 epitopes has important effects in neutralization. The V2i MAbs tested were: 697, 830A, 1357, 1361, 1393, 2158, and 2297.
Upadhyay2014
(glycosylation, neutralization)
-
2158: This study characterized the Elisa cross-reactivity, neutralization, and Ig variable genes of a panel of 7 anti-V2 mAbs: 1361, 1393A, 1357, 697, 830A, 2158, and 2297. Despite sequence variability, the 7 mAbs recognize conserved immunologic features of V2, with 6 of them targeting similar epitopes. The crystal structure of the mAb 697 binding site was determined.
Gorny2012
(neutralization)
-
2158: This study solved the crystal structure of mAb 2158 and -constructed a full-length model of V1V2. Structure, modeling and mutagenesis assays were used to define the conformational epitope K168, K169, A172, Y173, L193, P179, D180, V181, which includes the integrin binding site in V2.
Spurrier2014
(antibody binding site, structure)
-
2158: This study analyzed the neutralization sensitivity of sequential HIV-1 primary isolates during their natural evolution in 5 subtype B and CRF02_AG HIV-1 infected drug naive individuals to 13 anti-HIV-1 MAbs (including this MAb) directed at epitopes in the V2, V3, CD4bd and carbohydrates. Patient viruses evolved to become more sensitive to neutralization by MAbs directed at epitopes at V2, V3 and CDbd, indicating that cross sectional studies are inadequate to define the neutralization spectrum of MAb neutralization with primary HIV-1 isolates.
Haldar2011
(neutralization)
-
2158: 2158 bound very weakly to SF162 wild type and not at all to SF162 mutant, carrying only the monomeric form of the Env protein.
Kimura2009
(binding affinity)
-
2158: gp120 in complex with 2158 had higher reactivity with 694/98-D compared to the uncomplexed gp120.
Hioe2009
(binding affinity)
-
2158: V1V2 was determined to be the region that conferred the neutralization phenotype differences between two R5-tropic primary HIV-1 isolates, JRFL and SF162. JRFL is resistant to neutralization by many sera and MAbs, while SF162 is sensitive. All MAbs tested, anti-V3, -V2, -CD4BS, and -CD4i, (except the broadly neutralizing MAbs IgG1b12, 2F5, and 2G12, which neutralized both strains), neutralized the SF162 pseudotype but not JRFL, and chimeras that exchanged the V1V2 loops transferred the neutralization phenotype. Three anti-V2 MAb were tested -- both 2158 and 830A bound more strongly to JRFL, but neutralized SF162, and not neutralize JRFL. Thus V2 domains are better neutralization targets in SF162.
Pinter2004
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
2158: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. V2 MAbs 830A and 2158 were decreased by trypsin, unaffected by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
2158: A pseudotyping assay showed that an X4 V3 loop peptide could enhance infectivity of X4 virus, R5 and R5X4 V3 loops peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5 virus, and R5X4 peptides could enhance infectivity of an R5X4 virus. Neither R5 nor R5X4 peptides influenced binding of CD4BS MAbs F105 and Ig1Gb12, but did increase binding of CD4i MAb 17b. Of three V2 MAbs, only 830A, not 2158 or 1357, was enhanced by V3 peptide binding.
Ling2002
(antibody binding site, co-receptor)
References
Showing 13 of
13 references.
Cai2017
Yongfei Cai, Selen Karaca-Griffin, Jia Chen, Sai Tian, Nicholas Fredette, Christine E. Linton, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Jianming Lu, Kshitij Wagh, James Theiler, Bette Korber, Michael S. Seaman, Stephen C. Harrison, Andrea Carfi, and Bing Chen. Antigenicity-Defined Conformations of an Extremely Neutralization-Resistant HIV-1 Envelope Spike. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 114(17):4477-4482, 25 Apr 2017. PubMed ID: 28396421.
Show all entries for this paper.
Chen2015
Jia Chen, James M. Kovacs, Hanqin Peng, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Jianming Lu, Donghyun Park, Elise Zablowsky, Michael S. Seaman, and Bing Chen. Effect of the Cytoplasmic Domain on Antigenic Characteristics of HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein. Science, 349(6244):191-195, 10 Jul 2015. PubMed ID: 26113642.
Show all entries for this paper.
Gorny2012
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Ruimin Pan, Constance Williams, Xiao-Hong Wang, Barbara Volsky, Timothy O'Neal, Brett Spurrier, Jared M. Sampson, Liuzhe Li, Michael S. Seaman, Xiang-Peng Kong, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Functional and Immunochemical Cross-Reactivity of V2-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies from HIV-1-Infected Individuals. Virology, 427(2):198-207, 5 Jun 2012. PubMed ID: 22402248.
Show all entries for this paper.
Haldar2011
Bijayesh Haldar, Sherri Burda, Constance Williams, Leo Heyndrickx, Guido Vanham, Miroslaw K. Gorny, and Phillipe Nyambi. Longitudinal Study of Primary HIV-1 Isolates in Drug-Naïve Individuals Reveals the Emergence of Variants Sensitive to Anti-HIV-1 Monoclonal Antibodies. PLoS One, 6(2):e17253, 2011. PubMed ID: 21383841.
Show all entries for this paper.
Hioe2009
Catarina E. Hioe, Maria Luisa Visciano, Rajnish Kumar, Jianping Liu, Ethan A. Mack, Rachel E. Simon, David N. Levy, and Michael Tuen. The Use of Immune Complex Vaccines to Enhance Antibody Responses against Neutralizing Epitopes on HIV-1 Envelope gp120. Vaccine, 28(2):352-360, 11 Dec 2009. PubMed ID: 19879224.
Show all entries for this paper.
Kimura2009
Tetsuya Kimura, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Miroslaw K. Gorny. Human Monoclonal Antibody 2909 Binds to Pseudovirions Expressing Trimers but not Monomeric HIV-1 Envelope Proteins. Hum. Antibodies, 18(1-2):35-40, 2009. PubMed ID: 19478397.
Show all entries for this paper.
Ling2002
Hong Ling, Xiao-Yan Zhang, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Activation of gp120 of Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Their V3 Loop-Derived Peptides. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 297(3):625-631, 27 Sep 2002. PubMed ID: 12270140.
Show all entries for this paper.
Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
Show all entries for this paper.
Pinter2004
Abraham Pinter, William J. Honnen, Yuxian He, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Samuel C. Kayman. The V1/V2 Domain of gp120 Is a Global Regulator of the Sensitivity of Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates to Neutralization by Antibodies Commonly Induced upon Infection. J. Virol., 78(10):5205-5215, May 2004. PubMed ID: 15113902.
Show all entries for this paper.
Spurrier2014
Brett Spurrier, Jared Sampson, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Xiang-Peng Kong. Functional Implications of the Binding Mode of a Human Conformation-Dependent V2 Monoclonal Antibody against HIV. J. Virol., 88(8):4100-4112, Apr 2014. PubMed ID: 24478429.
Show all entries for this paper.
Upadhyay2014
Chitra Upadhyay, Luzia M. Mayr, Jing Zhang, Rajnish Kumar, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Arthur Nádas, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Catarina E. Hioe. Distinct Mechanisms Regulate Exposure of Neutralizing Epitopes in the V2 and V3 Loops of HIV-1 Envelope. J. Virol., 88(21):12853-12865, Nov 2014. PubMed ID: 25165106.
Show all entries for this paper.
Yates2018
Nicole L. Yates, Allan C. deCamp, Bette T. Korber, Hua-Xin Liao, Carmela Irene, Abraham Pinter, James Peacock, Linda J. Harris, Sheetal Sawant, Peter Hraber, Xiaoying Shen, Supachai Rerks-Ngarm, Punnee Pitisuttithum, Sorachai Nitayapan, Phillip W. Berman, Merlin L. Robb, Giuseppe Pantaleo, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, S. Munir Alam, David C. Montefiori, and Georgia D. Tomaras. HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees. J. Virol., 92(8), 15 Apr 2018. PubMed ID: 29386288.
Show all entries for this paper.
Guzzo2018
Christina Guzzo, Peng Zhang, Qingbo Liu, Alice L. Kwon, Ferzan Uddin, Alexandra I. Wells, Hana Schmeisser, Raffaello Cimbro, Jinghe Huang, Nicole Doria-Rose, Stephen D. Schmidt, Michael A. Dolan, Mark Connors, John R. Mascola, and Paolo Lusso. Structural Constraints at the Trimer Apex Stabilize the HIV-1 Envelope in a Closed, Antibody-Protected Conformation. mBio, 9(6), 11 Dec 2018. PubMed ID: 30538178.
Show all entries for this paper.
Displaying record number 808
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record as JSON.
MAb ID |
98-6 (SZ-98.6, 98.6, 98-6D) |
HXB2 Location |
Env DNA(8154..8213) |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
gp41( HXB2) |
Research Contact |
Susan Zolla-Pazner (Zollas01@mcrcr6.med.nyu), NYU, NY |
Epitope |
(Discontinuous epitope)
|
Subtype |
B |
Ab Type |
gp41 cluster II |
Neutralizing |
no |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG2κ) |
Patient |
donor_uncoded_3 |
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, binding affinity, complement, dendritic cells, effector function, enhancing activity, immunotoxin, kinetics, neutralization, rate of progression, review, structure, subtype comparisons, vaccine antigen design, variant cross-reactivity |
Notes
Showing 44 of
44 notes.
-
98-6: Nanodiscs (discoidal lipid bilayer particles of 10-17 nm surrounded by membrane scaffold protein) were used to incorporate Env complexes for the purpose of vaccine platform generation. The Env-NDs (Env-NDs) were characterized for antigenicity and stability by non-NAbs and NAbs. Most NAb epitopes in gp41 MPER and in the gp120:gp41 interface were well exposed while non-NAb cell surface epitopes were generally masked. Anti-gp41 non-NAb 98-6, binds at a fraction of the binding of 2G12 to Env-ND, and this binding is slightly sensitive to glutaraldehyde treatment .
Witt2017
(vaccine antigen design, binding affinity)
-
98-6: This study assessed the ADCC activity of antibodies of varied binding types, including CD4bs (b6, b12, VRC01, PGV04, 3BNC117), V2 (PG9, PG16), V3 (PGT126, PGT121, 10-1074), oligomannose (2G12), MPER (2F5, 4E10, 10E8), CD4i (17b, X5), C1/C5 (A32, C11), cluster I (240D, F240), and cluster II (98-6, 126-7). ADCC activity was correlated with binding to Env on the surfaces of virus-infected cells. ADCC was correlated with neutralization, but not always for lab-adapted viruses such as HIV-1 NLA-3.
vonBredow2016
(effector function)
-
98-6: The complexity of the epitopes recognized by ADCC responses in HIV-1 infected individuals and candidate vaccine recipients is discussed in this review. 98-6 is discussed as the Cluster II (HR2)region-targeting, non-neutralizing anti-gp41 mAb exhibiting ADCC activity and having a discontinuous epitope.
Pollara2013
(effector function, review)
-
98-6: Study demonstrated that polyreactivity is common among human gp41 cluster II (98-6, 167-D and 126-6)but not cluster I (240D, 246D, 50-69D) antibodies. However, unlike 2F5, cluster II MAbs bind strongly to oligomeric forms of Env gp140 but not to gp41 peptide complexes, suggesting that polyreactivity is necessary but not sufficient for neutralization.
Dennison2011a
(antibody polyreactivity)
-
98-6: A high resolution gp41 structure, termed HR1-54Q was presented consisting of the N-terminal helical heptad repeat (HR1), the C-terminal helical heptad repeat (HR2), and the (membrane-proximal external region) MPER. HR1-54Q bound to 3 broadly neutralizing Abs that target gp41: 2F5, 4E10, Z13e1, as well as 98-6 MAb suggesting that the six-helix bundle in HR1-54Q is intact even with the shortened HR1.
Shi2010
(structure)
-
98-6: 98-6 was shown to recognize only the post-fusion conformational state of gp41, with tight binding and extremely fast on-rate. This suggest that the six-helix bundle is the immunogen inducing non-neutralizing Ab response in HIV-1 infected patients. Binding of Abs to the post-fusion form of gp41 would not obstruct the function of gp41 and thus would not lead to virus neutralization. 98-6 did not recognize GCN4-gp41-inter (intermediate) conformation and showed only barely detectable binding to gp140 trimer.
Frey2010
(antibody binding site, binding affinity, structure)
-
98-6: 98-6 recognized trimeric and dimeric forms of cross-linked sgp140(-) Env JRFL glycoprotein, but did not recognize glycoprotein from the YU2 strain. E648A mutation in HXB2 greatly diminished binding of 98-6, indicating that the epitope recognized by this Ab involves amino acid residues 648-661. 98-6 likely recognizes both prefusogenic and postfusogenic forms of gp41.
Yuan2009
(antibody binding site)
-
98.6: Significant increase in neutralization potency (16-fold) of 98.6 was observed in cells expressing FcγRI.
Perez2009
(neutralization)
-
98-6: The Ig usage for variable heavy chain of this Ab was as follows: IGHV:4-61*02, IGHD:4-23, D-RF:3, IGHJ:4. Non-V3 mAbs preferentially used the VH1-69 gene segment. In contrast to V3 mAbs, these non-V3 mAbs used several VH4 gene segments and the D3-9 gene segment. Similarly to the V3 mAbs, the non-V3 mAbs used the VH3 gene family in a reduced manner.
Gorny2009
(antibody sequence)
-
98-6: For assessment of gp41 immunogenic properties, five soluble GST-fusion proteins encompassing C-terminal 30, 64, 100, 142, or 172 (full-length) amino acids of gp41 ectodomain were generated from M group consensus env sequence. The three smaller protein fragments were not detected by 98-6, since they do not contain both heptad repeat regions required for coiled-coil structure that contains the 98-6 Ab epitope. GST-gp41-142 and -172 reacted strongly against 98-6, indicating that these protein fragments exist in post-hairpin configuration.
Penn-Nicholson2008
-
98-6: 98-6 blocked 2F5 and 13H11 binding to gp41 epitopes to variable degrees; the combination of 98-6 and 13H11 completely blocked 2F5 binding. MAb 98-6 showed strong binding to HIV-1-positive infected cells.
Alam2008
(antibody interactions)
-
98-6: To test the immunogenicity of three molecularly engineered gp41 variants on the cell surface their reactivity with 98-6 Ab was assessed. The reactivity of 4cSSL24 and gp41d4mt variants was detected while the BAFF-C56 variant was not recognized by this Ab.
Kim2007
(binding affinity)
-
98.6: 98.6 was found to bind to both monomeric and oligomeric gp41. Binding of this Ab to H9/IIIB-infected cells gave a strong signal which was increased by sCD4 pretreatment. Binding to H9/MN-infected cells gave no signal regardless of sCD4 pretreatment, indicating that the seven amino acids of the C34, which differ between the MN and IIIB strains, are possibly responsible in determining whether 98.6 binds to gp41 or not. Sera from both long-term survivors and AIDS patients inhibited binding of 98.6 to H9/IIIB-infected cells.
Usami2005
(antibody binding site, rate of progression)
-
98-6D: This Ab did not inhibit HIV-1 BaL replication in macrophages or in PHA-stimulated PBMCs.
Holl2006
(neutralization, dendritic cells)
-
98-6: The role of serine proteases on HIV infection was explored. Trypsin decreased the binding of most Env MAb tested and diminished cell fusion of H9 cells infected with HIV-1 LAI virus (H9/IIIB) to MAGI cells. In contrast, thrombin increased the binding of MAbs to gp120 epitopes near the CD4 and CCR5 binding sites, and increased cell fusion. Binding of 17b and F105 was decreased by trypsin, but increased by thrombin. gp41 MAbs 246D, 98.6, 50-69, were decreased by trypsin, unaltered by thrombin, while NAb 2F5 binding was increased by thrombin. Thrombin may increase HIV-induced cell fusion in blood by causing a conformational activating shift in gp120.
Ling2004
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: One of 19 MAbs and Fabs in this database that bind to the highly immunogenic gp41 cluster II region (aa 644-663); none have any neutralizing activity.
Gorny2003
(review)
-
98-6: Anti-gp41 MAbs were tested in a cell-cell fusion system to investigate the antigenic changes in gp41 during binding and fusion. Cluster I MAbs 50-69, F240, 240-D,3D6, and 246-D recognize a nonhelical hydrophobic region, positions 598-604, that forms a disulfide loop in the six-helix bundle. Cluster II MAbs 98-6 and 126-6 recognized residues 644-663 of gp41, a portion of the second heptad repeat. These MAbs were found to behave similarly, so 50-69 and 98-6 were used as representatives. Exposure of cluster I and cluster II epitopes required CD4 expression on HIV HXB2 Env expressing HeLa target cells, but not the CXCR4 co-receptor. Binding to CD4 exposed hidden cluster I and II epitopes. The MAbs were found to bind to gp120/gp41 complexes, not to gp41 after shedding of gp120, and were localized to at fusing-cell interfaces. Kinetic and binding results indicate that these MAbs are exposed in transitional structures during the fusion process, possibly the prehairpin intermediate prior to co-receptor binding, although other intermediate structures may be involved. They do not bind once syncytia begin to show extensive cytoplasmic mixing. These MAbs failed to inhibit fusion. The NAb 2F5 has a very different behavior in this study.
Finnegan2002
(antibody binding site, kinetics)
-
98-6: Called 98-6D. Alanine mutations were introduced into the N- and C-terminal alpha-helices of gp41 to destabilize interhelical packing interactions in order to study their inhibitory effect on viral infectivity. These mutations were shown to inhibit viral replication though affecting the conformational transition to the fusion-active form of gp41, and allow increased inhibition by gp41 peptides. 2F5 sensitivity is increased in the mutated viruses, presumably because 2F5s neutralization activity is focused on the transition to the fusion active state. No other gp41 MAb against tested, including NC-1, 50-69D, 1281, 98-6D, 246-D and F240, neutralized the parental or the fusion-deficient mutated viruses.
Follis2002
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program: 1240.
-
98-6: The fusion process was slowed by using a suboptimal temperature (31.5 C) to re-evaluate the potential of Abs targeting fusion intermediates to block HIV entry -- preincubation of E/T cells at 31.5 C enabled polyclonal anti-N-HR Ab and anti-six-helix bundle Abs to inhibit fusion, indicating six-helix bundles form prior to fusion -- 98-6 binds to a C-HR hairpin epitope and blocks fusion when added to a 2 hour E/T preincubation at 31.5 C, but if added after 1 hour, doesn't inhibit -- this is in contrast to six-helix bundle Abs 167-D and 1281 that inhibit more efficiently when added after one hour of incubation. Database note: First author "GoldingH" is distinct from another author found as both "GoldingB" & "Golding" on annotated papers in this database.
GoldingH2002
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: A panel of 12 MAbs was used to identify those that could neutralize the dual-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 89.6---six gave significant neutralization at 2 to 10 ug/ml: 2F5, 50-69, IgG1b12, 447-52D, 2G12, and 670-D, while six did not have neutralizing activity: 654-D, 4.8D, 450-D, 246-D, 98-6, and 1281 -- no synergy, only additive effects were seen for pairwise combinations of MAbs, and antagonism was noted between gp41 MAbs 50-69 and 98-6, as well as 98-6 and 2F5.
Verrier2001
(antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
98-6: The fusogenic form of gp41 is recognized by 98-6, and the epitope is a conformational epitope formed by the interaction of two regions of gp41 which form an alpha-helical bundle.
Taniguchi2000
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: 26 HIV-1 group M isolates (clades A to H) were tested for binding to 47 MAbs, including 6 cluster II anti-gp41 MAbs -- of these 2F5, 167-D, 126-6, and 1281 bound across clades, but usually weakly, while 98-6 and 1342 had poor cross reactivity -- Clade D isolates bound most consistently to cluster II MAbs -- no neutralizing activity was observed when tested against 5 isolates, but 98-6 did not bind to these isolates.
Nyambi2000
(subtype comparisons)
-
98-6: Binding of panel of 21 MAbs to soluble oligomeric gp140 versus gp41 or gp120 monomers was compared -- no MAb was oligomer specific, but gp41 MAb 50-69 bound with a 5 fold preference for the oligomer, while other gp41 MAbs (1367, 98-6, 167-D, 1281, 1342, and 1379) did not show a preference.
Gorny2000b
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: 98-6 and 2F5 both bind to a peptide N51-C43 complex trimer of heterodimers that approximates the core of the fusogenic form of gp41, and to C43 alone but not to N51 alone -- 98-6 and 2F5 have comparable affinities for C43, but 98-6 has a higher affinity for the complex and the binding of 98-6 is not inhibited by N51.
Gorny2000a
(antibody binding site, binding affinity)
-
98-6: Using a whole virion-ELISA method, 18 human MAbs were tested for their ability to bind to a panel of 9 viruses from clades A, B, D, F, G, and H -- anti-gp41 Abs 98-6, 1367 and 1342 were not able to bind detectably with any of the viruses from any clade.
Nyambi1998
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
98-6: Four primary isolates showed distinct patterns of sensitivity to neutralization by polyclonal sera or plasma and MAbs -- BZ167 was the only isolate inhibited by all polyclonal sera and plasma tested, and was also neutralized by 8/17 MAbs, in particular anti-V3 loop (419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, and 838-D), anti-CD4bd (559/64-D, 654-D and 830-D and a cluster II of gp41 directed MAb (98-6) -- isolates 92HT593 and 91US056 were neutralized by V3 loop (419-D, and 447-52D)and cluster II gp41 (98-6) MAbs at higher concentrations -- US4 was neutralized by some of the polyclonal sera/plasma tested and not at all by MAbs individually or by a cocktail of ten MAbs consisting of 419-D, 447-52D, 782-D, 838-D, 559/64-D, 654-D, 450-D, 670-D, 1281-D and 98-6.
Hioe1997b
(variant cross-reactivity)
-
98-6: 98-6 is V H4 -- V-region heavy chain usage was examined and a bias of enhanced V H1 and V H4, and reduced V H3, was noted among HIV infected individuals.
Wisnewski1996
(antibody sequence)
-
98-6: Preferentially recognizes oligomeric form of gp41 -- enhanced binding to HIV-1 infected cells at 37 degrees relative to 4 degrees -- addition of sCD4 enhances binding.
Sattentau1995
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: Virions complexed to gp41 Ab facilitate presentation of p66 RT epitopes to Th cells.
Manca1995
-
98-6: No neutralizing activity, positive ADCC activity, and no viral enhancing activity. Epitope numbering is provided as gp160 644-663, but no details are given.
Forthal1995
(effector function, enhancing activity, neutralization)
-
98-6: One of several anti-gp41 MAbs that bind to a gp41-maltose binding fusion protein designed to study the leucine zipper domain of gp41, showing that the construct has retained aspects of normal gp41 conformation.
Chen1995
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: Epitope described as cluster II, 644-663, conformational -- does not neutralize IIIB or synergize neutralization by anti-V3 MAb 447-52D or by CD4 BS MAbs.
Laal1994
(antibody binding site, antibody interactions, variant cross-reactivity)
-
98-6: This MAb was expressed as a surface anti-gp41 monoclonal antibody receptor for gp41 on a CD4-negative B-cell line. Transfected cells could bind HIV Envelope, but could not be infected by HIV-1. When CD4 delivered by retroviral constructs was expressed on these cells, they acquired the ability to replicate HIV-1, and sIg/gp41 specifically enhanced viral replication.
Tani1994
-
98-6: Did not mediate deposition of complement component C3 on HIV infected cells, binding enhanced by sCD4.
Spear1993
(complement)
-
98-6: Called SZ-98.6 -- binds to a conformational domain within aa 644-663 of gp41, and reacts with astrocytes, as do 167-7 and ND-15G1.
Eddleston1993
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: Appeared to be specific for a conformational or discontinuous epitope.
Xu1991
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: No neutralizing or enhancing activity.
Robinson1991
(enhancing activity)
-
98-6: Two fold increase in binding to gp120 in the presence of bound sCD4.
Sattentau1991
(antibody binding site)
-
98-6: Directed antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, ADCC.
Tyler1990
(effector function)
-
98-6: No neutralizing or enhancing activity for HIV-1 IIIB.
Robinson1990a
(enhancing activity)
-
98-6: Toxic to HIV-infected T cells (H9) and monocytes (U937) when coupled to deglycosylated A chain of ricin.
Till1989
(immunotoxin)
-
98-6: Kills HIV-infected cells when coupled to deglycosylated ricin A chain. Antibody generation paper. Antibodies were derived from 58 HIV+ patients. Synthesized by immortalization of peripheral blood cells with Epstein-Barr virus. Ab showed binding to gp41 at AA 644-663.
Gorny1989
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, immunotoxin)
-
98-6: Reacts preferentially with gp160 oligomer, compared to gp41 monomer.
Pinter1989
(antibody binding site)
References
Showing 44 of
44 references.
Isolation Paper
Gorny1989
M. K. Gorny, V. Gianakakos, S. Sharpe, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Generation of human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 86:1624-1628, 1989. This paper described immortalization of B-cells from HIV-1 positive individuals with Epstein-Barr virus, to produce seven stable antibody producing cell lines. PubMed ID: 2922401.
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Alam2008
S. Munir Alam, Richard M. Scearce, Robert J. Parks, Kelly Plonk, Steven G. Plonk, Laura L. Sutherland, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Stacie VanLeeuwen, M. Anthony Moody, Shi-Mao Xia, David C. Montefiori, Georgia D. Tomaras, Kent J. Weinhold, Salim Abdool Karim, Charles B. Hicks, Hua-Xin Liao, James Robinson, George M. Shaw, and Barton F. Haynes. Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41 Antibodies That Mask Membrane Proximal Region Epitopes: Antibody Binding Kinetics, Induction, and Potential for Regulation in Acute Infection. J. Virol., 82(1):115-125, Jan 2008. PubMed ID: 17942537.
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Andris1991
J. S. Andris, S. Johnson, S. Zolla-Pazner, and J. D. Capra. Molecular characterization of five anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 antibody heavy chains reveals extensive somatic mutation typical of an antigen-driven immune response. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 88:7783-7788, 1992. PubMed ID: 1909030.
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Chen1995
C. H. Chen, T. J. Matthews, C. B. McDanal, D. P. Bolognesi, and M. L. Greenberg. A Molecular Clasp in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Type 1 TM Protein Determines the Anti-HIV Activity of gp41 Derivatives: Implication for Viral Fusion. J. Virol., 69:3771-3777, 1995. PubMed ID: 7538176.
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Dennison2011a
S. Moses Dennison, Kara Anasti, Richard M. Scearce, Laura Sutherland, Robert Parks, Shi-Mao Xia, Hua-Xin Liao, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Barton F. Haynes, and S. Munir Alam. Nonneutralizing HIV-1 gp41 Envelope Cluster II Human Monoclonal Antibodies Show Polyreactivity for Binding to Phospholipids and Protein Autoantigens. J. Virol., 85(3):1340-1347, Feb 2011. PubMed ID: 21106741.
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Eddleston1993
M. Eddleston, J. C. de la Torre, J.-Y. Xu, N. Dorfman, A. Notkins, S. Zolla-Pazner, and M. B. A. Oldstone. Molecular Mimicry Accompanying HIV-1 Infection: Human Monoclonal Antibodies That Bind to gp41 and to Astrocytes. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 10:939-944, 1993. In this paper, three anti-HIV-1 gp41 specific MAbs were found to react with astrocytes: 98-6, 167-7 and 15G1. Reactive astrocytes in the hippocampus were most prominently involved, and the antibodies stained no other cell type in the brain, kidney or liver. All three mapped to a conformationally dependent epitope between aa 644-663. PubMed ID: 7506553.
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Finnegan2002
Catherine M. Finnegan, Werner Berg, George K. Lewis, and Anthony L. DeVico. Antigenic Properties of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmembrane Glycoprotein during Cell-Cell Fusion. J. Virol., 76(23):12123-12134, Dec 2002. PubMed ID: 12414953.
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Follis2002
Kathryn E. Follis, Scott J. Larson, Min Lu, and Jack H. Nunberg. Genetic Evidence that Interhelical Packing Interactions in the gp41 Core Are Critical for Transition of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein to the Fusion-Active State. J. Virol., 76(14):7356-7362, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12072535.
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Forthal1995
D. N. Forthal, G. Landucci, M. K. Gorny, S. Zolla-Pazner, and W. E. Robinson, Jr. Functional Activities of 20 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 11:1095-1099, 1995. A series of tests were performed on 20 human monoclonal antibodies to assess their potential therapeutic utility. Antibodies were tested for potentially harmful complement-mediated antibody enhancing activity (C-ADE), and for potentially beneficial neutralizing activity and antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity ADCC. PubMed ID: 8554906.
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Frey2010
Gary Frey, Jia Chen, Sophia Rits-Volloch, Michael M. Freeman, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Bing Chen. Distinct Conformational States of HIV-1 gp41 Are Recognized by Neutralizing and Non-Neutralizing Antibodies. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 17(12):1486-1491, Dec 2010. PubMed ID: 21076402.
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GoldingH2002
Hana Golding, Marina Zaitseva, Eve de Rosny, Lisa R. King, Jody Manischewitz, Igor Sidorov, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dimiter S. Dimitrov, and Carol D. Weiss. Dissection of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Entry with Neutralizing Antibodies to gp41 Fusion Intermediates. J. Virol., 76(13):6780-6790, Jul 2002. PubMed ID: 12050391.
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Gorny2000a
M. K. Gorny and S. Zolla-Pazner. Recognition by Human Monoclonal Antibodies of Free and Complexed Peptides Representing the Prefusogenic and Fusogenic Forms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 gp41. J. Virol., 74:6186-6192, 2000. PubMed ID: 10846104.
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Gorny2000b
M. K. Gorny, T. C. VanCott, C. Williams, K. Revesz, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Effects of oligomerization on the epitopes of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoproteins. Virology, 267:220-8, 2000. PubMed ID: 10662617.
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Gorny2003
Miroslaw K. Gorny and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies that Neutralize HIV-1. In Bette T. M. Korber and et. al., editors, HIV Immunology and HIV/SIV Vaccine Databases 2003. pages 37--51. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Theoretical Biology \& Biophysics, Los Alamos, N.M., 2004. URL: http://www.hiv.lanl.gov/content/immunology/pdf/2003/zolla-pazner_article.pdf. LA-UR 04-8162.
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Gorny2009
Miroslaw K. Gorny, Xiao-Hong Wang, Constance Williams, Barbara Volsky, Kathy Revesz, Bradley Witover, Sherri Burda, Mateusz Urbanski, Phillipe Nyambi, Chavdar Krachmarov, Abraham Pinter, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Arthur Nadas. Preferential Use of the VH5-51 Gene Segment by the Human Immune Response to Code for Antibodies against the V3 Domain of HIV-1. Mol. Immunol., 46(5):917-926, Feb 2009. PubMed ID: 18952295.
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Hioe1997b
C. E. Hioe, S. Xu, P. Chigurupati, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Neutralization of HIV-1 Primary Isolates by Polyclonal and Monoclonal Human Antibodies. Int. Immunol., 9(9):1281-1290, Sep 1997. PubMed ID: 9310831.
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Holl2006
Vincent Holl, Maryse Peressin, Thomas Decoville, Sylvie Schmidt, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Anne-Marie Aubertin, and Christiane Moog. Nonneutralizing Antibodies Are Able To Inhibit Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in Macrophages and Immature Dendritic Cells. J. Virol., 80(12):6177-6181, Jun 2006. PubMed ID: 16731957.
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Kim2007
Mikyung Kim, Zhisong Qiao, Jessica Yu, David Montefiori, and Ellis L. Reinherz. Immunogenicity of Recombinant Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Like Particles Expressing gp41 Derivatives in a Pre-Fusion State. Vaccine, 25(27):5102-5114, 28 Jun 2007. PubMed ID: 17055621.
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Laal1994
Suman Laal, Sherri Burda, Miroslav K. Gorny, Sylwia Karwowska, Aby Buchbinder, and Susan Zolla-Pazner. Synergistic Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Combinations of Human Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 68(6):4001-4008, Jun 1994. PubMed ID: 7514683.
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Ling2004
Hong Ling, Peng Xiao, Osamu Usami, and Toshio Hattori. Thrombin Activates Envelope Glycoproteins of HIV Type 1 and Enhances Fusion. Microbes Infect., 6(5):414-420, Apr 2004. PubMed ID: 15109955.
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Manca1995
F. Manca, D. Fenoglio, M. T. Valle, G. L. Pira, A. Kunkl, R. S. Balderas, R. G. Baccala, D. H. Kono, A. Ferraris, D. Saverino, F. Lancia, L. Lozzi, and A. N. Theofilopoulos. Human T helper cells specific for HIV reverse transcriptase: possible role in intrastructural help for HIV envelope-specific antibodies. Eur. J. Immunol., 25:1217-1223, 1995. PubMed ID: 7539750.
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Nyambi1998
P. N. Nyambi, M. K. Gorny, L. Bastiani, G. van der Groen, C. Williams, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Mapping of Epitopes Exposed on Intact Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Virions: A New Strategy for Studying the Immunologic Relatedness of HIV-1. J. Virol., 72:9384-9391, 1998. 18 human MAbs binding to gp120 and gp41 were tested using a novel assay to test binding to intact HIV-1 virions. The new method involves using MAbs to the host proteins incorporated into virions to bind them to ELIZA plates. Antigenic conservation in epitopes of HIV-1 in clades A, B, D, F, G, and H was studied. MAbs were selected that were directed against V2, V3, CD4bd, C5 or gp41 regions. Antibodies against V2, the CD4BS, and sp41 showed weak and sporadic reactivities, while binding strongly to gp120, suggesting these epitopes are hidden when gp120 is in its native, quaternary structure. PubMed ID: 9765494.
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Nyambi2000
P. N. Nyambi, H. A. Mbah, S. Burda, C. Williams, M. K. Gorny, A. Nadas, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Conserved and Exposed Epitopes on Intact, Native, Primary Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions of Group M. J. Virol., 74:7096-7107, 2000. PubMed ID: 10888650.
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Penn-Nicholson2008
Adam Penn-Nicholson, Dong P. Han, Soon J. Kim, Hanna Park, Rais Ansari, David C. Montefiori, and Michael W. Cho. Assessment of Antibody Responses against gp41 in HIV-1-Infected Patients Using Soluble gp41 Fusion Proteins and Peptides Derived from M Group Consensus Envelope. Virology, 372(2):442-456, 15 Mar 2008. PubMed ID: 18068750.
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Perez2009
Lautaro G. Perez, Matthew R. Costa, Christopher A. Todd, Barton F. Haynes, and David C. Montefiori. Utilization of Immunoglobulin G Fc Receptors by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: A Specific Role for Antibodies against the Membrane-Proximal External Region of gp41. J. Virol., 83(15):7397-7410, Aug 2009. PubMed ID: 19458010.
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Pinter1989
A. Pinter, W. J. Honnen, S. A. Tilley, C. Bona, H. Zaghouani, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Oligomeric Structure of gp41, the Transmembrane Protein of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1. J. Virol., 63:2674-2679, 1989. PubMed ID: 2786089.
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Pollara2013
Justin Pollara, Mattia Bonsignori, M. Anthony Moody, Marzena Pazgier, Barton F. Haynes, and Guido Ferrari. Epitope Specificity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Antibody Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity (ADCC) Responses. Curr. HIV Res., 11(5):378-387, Jul 2013. PubMed ID: 24191939.
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Robinson1990a
W. E. Robinson, Jr., T. Kawamura, M. K. Gorny, D. Lake, J.-Y. Xu, Y. Matsumoto, T. Sugano, Y. Masuho, W. M. Mitchell, E. Hersh, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Human Monoclonal Antibodies to the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Transmembrane Glycoprotein gp41 Enhance HIV-1 Infection In Vitro. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 87:3185-3189, 1990. Three gp41 MAbs out of 16 Env and Gag MAbs tested enhanced HIV-1 IIIB infection of MT-2 cells. The enhancing antibodies were competitive with the immunodominant epitopes of gp41 recognized by sera from HIV-1 infected subjects. PubMed ID: 2326277.
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Robinson1991
W. E. Robinson, M. K. Gorny, J.-Y. Xu, W. M. Mitchell, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Two Immunodominant Domains of gp41 Bind Antibodies Which Enhance Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection In Vitro. J. Virol., 65:4169-4176, 1991. PubMed ID: 2072448.
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Sattentau1991
Q. J. Sattentau and J. P. Moore. Conformational Changes Induced in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Envelope Glycoprotein by Soluble CD4 Binding. J. Exp. Med., 174:407-415, 1991. sCD4 binding to gp120 induces conformational changes within envelope oligomers. This was measured on HIV-1-infected cells by the increased binding of gp120/V3 loop specific MAbs, and on the surface of virions by increased cleavage of the V3 loop by an exogenous proteinase. PubMed ID: 1713252.
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Sattentau1995
Q. J. Sattentau, S. Zolla-Pazner, and P. Poignard. Epitope Exposure on Functional, Oligomeric HIV-1 gp41 Molecules. Virology, 206:713-717, 1995. Most gp41 epitopes are masked when associated with gp120 on the cell surface. Weak binding of anti-gp41 MAbs can be enhanced by treatment with sCD4. MAb 2F5 binds to a membrane proximal epitope which binds in the presence of gp120 without sCD4. PubMed ID: 7530400.
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Shi2010
Wuxian Shi, Jen Bohon, Dong P. Han, Habtom Habte, Yali Qin, Michael W. Cho, and Mark R. Chance. Structural Characterization of HIV gp41 with the Membrane-Proximal External Region. J. Biol. Chem., 285(31):24290-24298, 30 Jul 2010. PubMed ID: 20525690.
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Spear1993
G. T. Spear, D. M. Takefman, B. L. Sullivan, A. L. Landay, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Complement activation by human monoclonal antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus. J. Virol., 67:53-59, 1993. This study looked at the ability of 16 human MAbs to activate complement. MAbs directed against the V3 region could induce C3 deposition on infected cells and virolysis of free virus, but antibodies to the CD4BS and C-terminal region and two regions in gp41 could induce no complement mediated effects. Pre-treatment with sCD4 could increase complement-mediated effects of anti-gp41 MAbs, but decreased the complement-mediated effects of V3 MAbs. Anti-gp41 MAbs were able to affect IIIB but not MN virolysis, suggesting spontaneous shedding of gp120 on IIIB virions exposes gp41 epitopes. IgG isotype did not appear to have an effect on virolysis or C3 deposition. PubMed ID: 7677959.
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Tani1994
Y. Tani, E. Donoghue, S. Sharpe, E. Boone, H. C. Lane, S. Zolla-Pazner, and D. I. Cohen. Enhanced In Vitro Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication in B Cells Expressing Surface Antibody to the TM Env Protein. J. Virol., 68:1942-1950, 1994. The MAb 98-6 was expressed as a surface anti-gp41 monoclonal antibody receptor for gp41 (sIg/gp41) by transfection into a CD4-negative B-cell line. Transfected cells could bind HIV envelope, but could not be infected by HIV-1. When CD4 delivered by retroviral constructs was expressed on these cells, they acquired the ability to replicate HIV-1, and sIg/gp41 specifically enhanced viral replication. PubMed ID: 8107254.
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Taniguchi2000
Y. Taniguchi, S. Zolla-Pazner, Y. Xu, X. Zhang, S. Takeda, and T. Hattori. Human monoclonal antibody 98-6 reacts with the fusogenic form of gp41. Virology, 273(2):333--40, 1 Aug 2000. PubMed ID: 10915604.
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Till1989
M. A. Till, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, J. W. Uhr, and E. S. Vitetta. Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected T Cells and Monocytes Are Killed by Monoclonal Human Anti-gp41 Antibodies Coupled to Ricin A Chain. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 86:1987-1991, 1989. PubMed ID: 2538826.
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Tyler1990
D. S. Tyler, S. D. Stanley, S. Zolla-Pazner, M. K. Gorny, P. P. Shadduck, A. J. Langlois, T. J. Matthews, D. P. Bolognesi, T. J. Palker, and K. J. Weinhold. Identification of sites within gp41 that serve as targets for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity by using human monoclonal antibodies. J. Immunol., 145:3276-3282, 1990. PubMed ID: 1700004.
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Usami2005
Osamu Usami, Peng Xiao, Hong Ling, Yi Liu, Tadashi Nakasone, and Toshio Hattori. Properties of Anti-gp41 Core Structure Antibodies, Which Compete with Sera of HIV-1-Infected Patients. Microbes Infect., 7(4):650-657, Apr 2005. PubMed ID: 15823513.
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Verrier2001
F. Verrier, A. Nadas, M. K. Gorny, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Additive effects characterize the interaction of antibodies involved in neutralization of the primary dualtropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolate 89.6. J. Virol., 75(19):9177--86, Oct 2001. URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/full/75/19/9177. PubMed ID: 11533181.
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vonBredow2016
Benjamin von Bredow, Juan F. Arias, Lisa N. Heyer, Brian Moldt, Khoa Le, James E. Robinson, Susan Zolla-Pazner, Dennis R. Burton, and David T. Evans. Comparison of Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity and Virus Neutralization by HIV-1 Env-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies. J. Virol., 90(13):6127-6139, 1 Jul 2016. PubMed ID: 27122574.
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Wisnewski1996
A. Wisnewski, L. Cavacini, and M. Posner. Human antibody variable region gene usage in HIV-1 infection. J. Acquir. Immune Defic. Syndr. Hum. Retrovirol., 11:31-38, 1996. PubMed ID: 8528730.
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Witt2017
Kristen C. Witt, Luis Castillo-Menendez, Haitao Ding, Nicole Espy, Shijian Zhang, John C. Kappes, and Joseph Sodroski. Antigenic Characterization of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) Envelope Glycoprotein Precursor Incorporated into Nanodiscs. PLoS One, 12(2):e0170672, 2017. PubMed ID: 28151945.
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Xu1991
J.-Y. Xu, M. K. Gorny, T. Palker, S. Karwowska, and S. Zolla-Pazner. Epitope mapping of two immunodominant domains of gp41, the transmembrane protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1, using ten human monoclonal antibodies. J. Virol., 65:4832-4838, 1991. The immunodominance of linear epitope in the region 590-600 of gp41 (cluster I) was established, and a second conformational epitope was mapped that reacted with a region between amino acids 644 and 663 (cluster II). Titration experiments showed that there was 100-fold more antibody to cluster I than cluster II in patient sera. PubMed ID: 1714520.
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Yuan2009
Wen Yuan, Xing Li, Marta Kasterka, Miroslaw K. Gorny, Susan Zolla-Pazner, and Joseph Sodroski. Oligomer-Specific Conformations of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-1) gp41 Envelope Glycoprotein Ectodomain Recognized by Human Monoclonal Antibodies. AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses, 25(3):319-328, Mar 2009. PubMed ID: 19292593.
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