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Displaying record number 2581
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MAb ID |
12A12 (12A12d57) |
HXB2 Location |
Env |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
|
Epitope |
|
Ab Type |
gp120 CD4bs |
Neutralizing |
P View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG) |
Patient |
Patient 12 |
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody polyreactivity, antibody sequence, assay or method development, autologous responses, binding affinity, broad neutralizer, complement, computational prediction, early treatment, effector function, elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, escape, glycosylation, HIV reservoir/latency/provirus, HIV-2, immunoprophylaxis, immunotherapy, junction or fusion peptide, neutralization, polyclonal antibodies, review, structure, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses |
Notes
Showing 33 of
33 notes.
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12A12: 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. Membrane-bound DNA-expressed BG505 SOSIP.MD39 (MD39, background for Apex constructs), ApexGT5, ApexGT5.Congly and ApexGT5.Gmax, as well as membrane-bound mRNA-encoded MD39, ApexGT5 and ApexGT5Congly all had generally similar antigenic profiles and bound mAb 12A12 at high levels, though binding was lower for the last two constructs.
Willis2022
(antibody binding site)
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12A12: 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)
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12A12: N-linked glycosylation of antibodies can increase their chemical heterogeneity, complicating their manufacture. VRC01-like antibodies were assessed for the presence of light chain (LC) glycosylation, with some showing the presence of LC glycosylation (N6, VRC01, 3BNC117, VRC-CH31,) and some not (12A12, VRC18, VRC-PG04, VRC-PG20, VRC23, DRVIA7). This study developed a method to remove variable domain (Fv) glycans from nAbs, and used this method to develop engineered versions of 4 antibodies (VRC26.25, N6, PGT121, and VRC07-523).
Chuang2020
(assay or method development, glycosylation)
-
12A12: 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)
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12A12: This study inferred a high-probability unmutated common ancestor (UCA) of the VRC01 lineage and reconstructed the stages of lineage maturation, including a phylogeny of 45 naturally-paired mAbs from donor NIH45. Nine new lineage members were isolated from donor NIH45, named DH651.1 - DH561.9. The study also derived VH and VL reverted forms of several VRC01-class mAbs derived from other donors (12A12, 3BNC60, 3BNC117, VRC20, VRC23, and VRC18b). Early mutations within the VRC01 lineage defined maturation pathways toward limited or broad neutralization, suggesting that focusing the immune response is likely required to steer B-cell maturation toward the development of neutralization breadth. VRC01 lineage bnAbs with long CDR H3s overcame the HIV-1 N276 glycan barrier without shortening their CDR L1, revealing a solution for broad neutralization in which the heavy chain, not CDR L1, is the determinant to accommodate the N276 glycan. An X-ray structure and molecular dynamics simulation of VRC08 were studied to elucidate this process.
Bonsignori2018
(neutralization, antibody lineage)
-
12A12: 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. 12A12 was used for analyzing clade sensitivity, structural mapping and analyses of CD4bs Ab signatures.
Bricault2019
(antibody binding site, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, computational prediction, broad neutralizer)
-
12A12: This review summarizes current advances in antibody lineage-based design and epitope-based vaccine design. Antibody lineage-based design is described for VRC01, PGT121 and PG9 antibody classes, and epitope-based vaccine design is described for the CD4-binding site, as well as fusion peptide and glycan-V3 cites of vulnerability.
Kwong2018
(antibody binding site, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, review, antibody lineage, broad neutralizer, junction or fusion peptide)
-
12A12: This review discusses the identification of super-Abs, where and how such Abs may be best applied and future directions for the field. 12A12 was isolated from human B cell clones and is functionally similar to VRC01. Antigenic region CD4 binding site (Table:1).
Walker2018
(antibody binding site, review, broad neutralizer)
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12A12: 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)
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12A12: Libraries of BG505 gp120 containing mutations were displayed on yeast and screened for binding to a panel of VRC01-class mAbs. Boosted VRC01 gH mice showed broad neutralization on a panel of N276A viruses, neutralization of fully native virus containing the N276 glycan site was limited to a single heterologous tier 2 isolate and was substantially less potent. The progress of vaccine-induced somatic hyper mutation, SHM, toward mature VRC01 was tested. For each VH1-2 sequence, the total number of amino-acid mutations and the number of amino-acid mutations shared with a panel of VRC01-class mAbs like VRC01, PGV04, PGV20, VRC-CH31, 3BNC60, and 12A12 were determined. Extremely deep Ab repertoire sequencing on two healthy HIV-naive individuals were performed to compute the frequency of randomly incorporated VRC01-class mutations in human VH1-2 Ab sequence.
Briney2016
(HIV-2, neutralization, vaccine antigen design)
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12A12: 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, 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)
-
12A12: 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)
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12A12: This review classified and mapped the binding regions of 32 bNAbs isolated 2010-2016.
Wu2016
(review)
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12A12: This study produced Env SOSIP trimers for clades A (strain BG505), B (strain JR-FL), and G (strain X1193). Based on simulations, the MAb-trimer structures of all MAbs tested needed to accommodate at least one glycan, including both antibodies known to require specific glycans (PG9, PGT121, PGT135, 8ANC195, 35O22) and those that bind the CD4-binding site (b12, CH103, HJ16, VRC01, VRC13). A subset of monoclonal antibodies bound to glycan arrays assayed on glass slides (VRC26.09, PGT121, 2G12, PGT128, VRC13, PGT151, 35O22), while most of the antibodies did not have affinity for oligosaccharide in the context of a glycan array (PG9, PGT145, PGDM1400, PGT135, b12, CH103, HJ16, VRC16, VRC01, VRC-PG04, VRC-CH31, VRC-PG20, 3BNC60, 12A12, VRC18b, VRC23, VRC27, 1B2530, 8ANC131, 8ANC134, 8ANC195).
Stewart-Jones2016
(antibody binding site, glycosylation, structure)
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12A12: 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. Consistent with CD4bs bNAbs, 12A12 bound cell surface tightly whether the trimer contained its C-terminal or not, and was competed out by sCD4. It was able to neutralize the 92UG037.8 HIV-1 isolate.
Chen2015
(neutralization, binding affinity)
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12A12: 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 bNAb 12A12 neutralized BG505.T332N, the pseudoviral equivalent of the immunogen BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140, and was shown to recognize and bind the immunogen too.
Sanders2013
(assay or method development, neutralization, binding affinity)
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12A12: This study presented structures of germline-reverted VRC01-class bNAbs alone and complexed with 426c-based gp120 immunogens. Germline bNAb–426c gp120 complexes showed preservation of VRC01-class signature residues and gp120 contacts, but detectably different binding modes compared to mature bNAb-gp120 complexes. It reported that unlike most antibodies, the overall final structures of VRC01 class antibodies are formed before the antibodies mature. Two versions of germline-binding gp120s were expressed as gp120 cores with N/C termini and V1-V2 and V3 loop truncations. Perhaps to compensate for net LC negative charges post-maturation of the KV1-33–derived VRC01-class bNAb 12A12, the portion of the VL domain encoded by the KV1-33 has a net charge of +6.
Scharf2016
(structure)
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12A12: A panel of antibodies was tested for binding, stability, and ADCC activity on HIV-infected cells. The differences in killing efficiency were linked to changes in binding of the antibody and the accessibility of the Fc region when bound to infected cells. Ab 12A12 lacked ADCC activity.
Bruel2016
(binding affinity)
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12A12: The rate of maturation and extent of diversity for the VRC01 lineage were characterized through longitudinal sampling of peripheral B cell transcripts from donor 45 over 15 years and co-crystal structures. VRC01-lineage clades underwent continuous evolution, with rates of ˜2 substitutions per 100 nucleotides per year, comparable with HIV-1 evolution. 39 VRC01-lineage Abs segregated into three major clades, and all Abs from donor 45 contained a cysteine at position 98 (99 in some sequences due to a 1-aa insertion) which was used as a signature to assess membership in the VRC01 lineage. Of 1,041 curated NGS sequences assigned to the VRC01 lineage, six did not contain the cysteine while 1,035 did (99.4%). Structural comparison of 12A12 heavy and light chains and binding surfaces were reported (Table-S5).
Wu2015
(structure, antibody lineage)
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12A12: A subset of bNAbs that inhibit both cell-free and cell-mediated infection in primary CD4+ lymphocytes have been identified. These antibodies target either the CD4-binding site or the glycan/V3 loop on HIV-1 gp120 and act at low concentrations by inhibiting multiple steps of viral cell to cell transmission. This property of blocking viral transmission to plasmacytoid DCs and interfering with type-I IFN production should be considered an important characteristic defining the potency for therapeutic or prophylactic antiviral strategies. 12A12 was not effective in blocking cell to cell transmission of virus.
Malbec2013
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12A12d57: TThe ontogeny of VRC01 class Abs was determined by enumerating VRC01-class characteristics in many donors by next-gen sequencing and X-ray crystallography. Analysis included VRC01 (donor NIH 45), VRC-PG04 (donor IAVI 74), VRC-CH31 (donor 0219), 3BNC117 (donor RU3), 12A21 (donor IAVI 57), and somatically related VRC-PG19,19b, 20, 20b MAbs from donor IAVI 23. Despite the sequence differences of VRC01-class Abs, exceeding 50%, Ab-gp120 cocrystal structures showed VRC01-class recognition to be remarkably similar.
Zhou2013a
(antibody sequence, structure, antibody lineage)
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12A12: Next generation sequencing was applied to a new donor C38 (different from donor NIH45) to identify VRC01 class bNAbs. VRC01 class heavy chains were selected through a cross-donor phylogenetic analysis. VRC01 class light chains were identified through a five-amino-acid sequence motif. (CDR L3 length of 5 amino acids and Q or E at position 96 (Kabat numbering) or position 4 within the CDR L3 sequence.) 12A12 was used to compare the heavy & light chain sequences as a template of VRC01 class Ab.
Zhu2013a
(antibody sequence)
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12A12: "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. This mAb belongs to 10E8-like cluster.
Georgiev2013
(neutralization)
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12A12: Neutralizing antibody response was studied in elite controller. Subject VC10042 is an African American male, infected with clade B for 2 decades (since 1984) without any signs of disease and no antiretroviral treatment. The neutralizing activity of autologous CD4bs NAbs was very similar to that of NIH45-46W, but very different from other anti-CD4bs MAbs tested. The viral autologous variants that were resistant to neutralization by autologous and most bnMAbs tested had an extremely rare R272/N368 combination. This mutation was shown in the study to impart a fitness cost to the virus.
Sather2012
(autologous responses, elite controllers and/or long-term non-progressors, neutralization, escape, polyclonal antibodies)
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12a12: 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)
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12A12: 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: gp120 CD4-binding site, CD4-mimicry by heavy chain, VRC01 class, 3BNC117 family.
Kwong2012
(review, structure, broad neutralizer)
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12A12: This review discusses how analysis of infection and vaccine candidate-induced antibodies and their genes may guide vaccine design. This MAb is listed as CD4 binding site bnAb, isolated after 2009 by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) and 454 deep sequencing.
Bonsignori2012b
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, review)
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12A12: 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. 12A12, a CD4bs Ab, was among the 17 bnAbs which were used in studying the mutations in FWR.
Klein2013
(neutralization, structure, antibody lineage)
-
12A12: Computational and crystallographic analysis and in vitro screening were employed to design a gp120 outer domain immunogen (eOD-GT6) that could bind to VRC01-class bNAbs and to their germline precursors. When multimerized on nanoparticles, eOD-GT6 activated germline and mature VRC01-class B cells and thus can be a promising vaccine prime. eOD-GT6 had 10 mutations relative to HXB2. Removal of glycans at positions 276 and 463 was necessary for GL affinity and removal of glycans at positions 386 and 403 also improved affinity. T278R, I371F, N460V are involved in the binding interface. L260F, K357R, G471S stabilize loops involved in the interface. eOD-GT6 bound both 12A12 mature and germline antibodies.
Jardine2013
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design, structure, antibody lineage)
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12A12: 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. 12A12 has been referred as a PVL in discussing the breadth and potency of antiCD4 abs.
West2012a
(antibody lineage)
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12A12: 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. 12A12 was used as a control. Detail information on the binding and neutralization assays are described in the figures S2-S11.
Mouquet2012a
(glycosylation, neutralization, binding affinity)
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12A12: 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. 12A12 bound very strongly to the gp120 core and RSC3, strongly bound to gp120 core D368R, weakly bound to RSC3/G367R, very weakly to RSC3 Δ3711 but did not bind to RSC3 Δ3711/P363N.
Lynch2012
(binding affinity)
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12A12: 576 new HIV antibodies were cloned from 4 unrelated individuals producing expanded clones of potent broadly neutralizing CD4bs antibodies that bind to 2CC core. In order to amplify highly somatically mutated immunoglobulin genes, new primer set with 5' primer set further upstream from the potentially mutated region was used. Despite extensive hypermutation, the new antibodies shared a consensus sequence of 68 IgH chain amino acids and arose independently from two related IgH genes. 12A12 arises from IgVH1-2 and IgVK1D-33 germline genes. It showed binding pattern similar to VRC01’s and neutralized 100% of 118 isolates representing major HIV-1 clades, with IC50<50μg/ml. 12A12 was polyreactive - strongly reacted with dsDNA, LPS, ssDNA and insulin.
Scheid2011
(antibody generation, neutralization, antibody sequence, antibody polyreactivity, broad neutralizer)
References
Showing 33 of
33 references.
Isolation Paper
Scheid2011
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Bricault2019
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Briney2016
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Bruel2016
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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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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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Gwo-Yu Chuang, Mangaiarkarasi Asokan, Vera B. Ivleva, Amarendra Pegu, Eun Sung Yang, Baoshan Zhang, Rajoshi Chaudhuri, Hui Geng, Bob C. Lin, Mark K. Louder, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Hairong Wang, Tongqing Zhou, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Lisa A. Kueltzo, Q. Paula Lei, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Removal of Variable Domain N-Linked Glycosylation as a Means To Improve the Homogeneity of HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. mAbs, 12(1):1836719, 2020. PubMed ID: 33121334.
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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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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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Jardine2013
Joseph Jardine, Jean-Philippe Julien, Sergey Menis, Takayuki Ota, Oleksandr Kalyuzhniy, Andrew McGuire, Devin Sok, Po-Ssu Huang, Skye MacPherson, Meaghan Jones, Travis Nieusma, John Mathison, David Baker, Andrew B. Ward, Dennis R. Burton, Leonidas Stamatatos, David Nemazee, Ian A. Wilson, and William R. Schief. Rational HIV Immunogen Design to Target Specific Germline B Cell Receptors. Science, 340(6133):711-716, 10 May 2013. PubMed ID: 23539181.
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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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Kwong2012
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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Kwong2018
Peter D. Kwong and John R. Mascola. HIV-1 Vaccines Based on Antibody Identification, B Cell Ontogeny, and Epitope Structure. Immunity, 48(5):855-871, 15 May 2018. PubMed ID: 29768174.
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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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Malbec2013
Marine Malbec, Françoise Porrot, Rejane Rua, Joshua Horwitz, Florian Klein, Ari Halper-Stromberg, Johannes F. Scheid, Caroline Eden, Hugo Mouquet, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Olivier Schwartz. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies That Inhibit HIV-1 Cell to Cell Transmission. J. Exp. Med., 210(13):2813-2821, 16 Dec 2013. PubMed ID: 24277152.
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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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Prigent2018
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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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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Sather2012
D. Noah Sather, Sara Carbonetti, Jenny Kehayia, Zane Kraft, Iliyana Mikell, Johannes F. Scheid, Florian Klein, and Leonidas Stamatatos. Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Developed by an HIV-Positive Elite Neutralizer Exact a Replication Fitness Cost on the Contemporaneous Virus. J. Virol., 86(23):12676-12685, Dec 2012. PubMed ID: 22973035.
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Scharf2016
Louise Scharf, Anthony P. West, Jr., Stuart A. Sievers, Courtney Chen, Siduo Jiang, Han Gao, Matthew D. Gray, Andrew T. McGuire, Johannes F. Scheid, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Leonidas Stamatatos, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Structural Basis for Germline Antibody Recognition of HIV-1 Immunogens. Elife, 5, 21 Mar 2016. PubMed ID: 26997349.
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Stewart-Jones2016
Guillaume B. E. Stewart-Jones, Cinque Soto, Thomas Lemmin, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Aliaksandr Druz, Rui Kong, Paul V. Thomas, Kshitij Wagh, Tongqing Zhou, Anna-Janina Behrens, Tatsiana Bylund, Chang W. Choi, Jack R. Davison, Ivelin S. Georgiev, M. Gordon Joyce, Young Do Kwon, Marie Pancera, Justin Taft, Yongping Yang, Baoshan Zhang, Sachin S. Shivatare, Vidya S. Shivatare, Chang-Chun D. Lee, Chung-Yi Wu, Carole A. Bewley, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, Mark Connors, Max Crispin, Ulrich Baxa, Bette T. Korber, Chi-Huey Wong, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Trimeric HIV-1-Env Structures Define Glycan Shields from Clades A, B, and G. Cell, 165(4):813-826, 5 May 2016. PubMed ID: 27114034.
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Walker2018
Laura M. Walker and Dennis R. Burton. Passive Immunotherapy of Viral Infections: `Super-Antibodies' Enter the Fray. Nat. Rev. Immunol., 18(5):297-308, May 2018. PubMed ID: 29379211.
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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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Wu2015
Xueling Wu, Zhenhai Zhang, Chaim A. Schramm, M. Gordon Joyce, Young Do Kwon, Tongqing Zhou, Zizhang Sheng, Baoshan Zhang, Sijy O'Dell, Krisha McKee, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Nancy S. Longo, Rebecca M. Lynch, Kevin O. Saunders, Cinque Soto, Sanjay Srivatsan, Yongping Yang, Robert T. Bailer, Mark K. Louder, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, James C. Mullikin, Mark Connors, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Lawrence Shapiro. Maturation and Diversity of the VRC01-Antibody Lineage over 15 Years of Chronic HIV-1 Infection. Cell, 161(3):470-485, 23 Apr 2015. PubMed ID: 25865483.
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Wu2016
Xueling Wu and Xiang-Peng Kong. Antigenic Landscape of the HIV-1 Envelope and New Immunological Concepts Defined by HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies. Curr. Opin. Immunol., 42:56-64, Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27289425.
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Zhou2013a
Tongqing Zhou, Jiang Zhu, Xueling Wu, Stephanie Moquin, Baoshan Zhang, Priyamvada Acharya, Ivelin S. Georgiev, Han R. Altae-Tran, Gwo-Yu Chuang, M. Gordon Joyce, Young Do Kwon, Nancy S. Longo, Mark K. Louder, Timothy Luongo, Krisha McKee, Chaim A. Schramm, Jeff Skinner, Yongping Yang, Zhongjia Yang, Zhenhai Zhang, Anqi Zheng, Mattia Bonsignori, Barton F. Haynes, Johannes F. Scheid, Michel C. Nussenzweig, Melissa Simek, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, James C. Mullikin, Mark Connors, Lawrence Shapiro, Gary J. Nabel, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Multidonor Analysis Reveals Structural Elements, Genetic Determinants, and Maturation Pathway for HIV-1 Neutralization by VRC01-Class Antibodies. Immunity, 39(2):245-258, 22 Aug 2013. PubMed ID: 23911655.
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Zhu2013a
Jiang Zhu, Xueling Wu, Baoshan Zhang, Krisha McKee, Sijy O'Dell, Cinque Soto, Tongqing Zhou, Joseph P. Casazza, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, James C. Mullikin, Peter D. Kwong, John R. Mascola, and Lawrence Shapiro. De Novo Identification of VRC01 Class HIV-1-Neutralizing Antibodies by Next-Generation Sequencing of B-Cell Transcripts. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 110(43):E4088-E4097, 22 Oct 2013. PubMed ID: 24106303.
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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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