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MAb ID |
PGT122 (PGT-122) |
HXB2 Location |
Env |
Env Epitope Map
|
Author Location |
|
Epitope |
|
Subtype |
A |
Ab Type |
gp120 V3 // V3 glycan (V3g) |
Neutralizing |
P View neutralization details |
Contacts and Features |
View contacts and features |
Species
(Isotype)
|
human(IgG) |
Patient |
Donor 17 |
Immunogen |
HIV-1 infection |
Keywords |
antibody binding site, antibody gene transfer, antibody generation, antibody interactions, antibody lineage, antibody sequence, assay or method development, binding affinity, broad neutralizer, chimeric antibody, computational epitope prediction, escape, glycosylation, immunoprophylaxis, neutralization, review, structure, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, variant cross-reactivity |
Notes
Showing 21 of
21 notes.
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PGT122: This review discusses the identification of super-Abs, where and how such Abs may be best applied and future directions for the field. PGT122 was isolated from human B cell clones and is functionally similar to super-Abs PGT121, PGT128 and PGT135. Antigenic region V3 glycan (Table:1).
Walker2018
(antibody binding site, review, broad neutralizer)
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PGT122: 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 uccessfully bound to target bNAbs with enhanced and selective antigenicity.
Yu2018
(glycosylation, vaccine antigen design)
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PGT122: Env trimers were engineered with selective deglycosylation around the CD4 binding site to see if they could be useful vaccine antigens. The neutralization of glycan-deleted trimers was tested for a set of bnAbs (PG9, PGT122, PGT135, b12, CH103, HJ16, VRC01, VRC13, PGT151, 8ANC195, 35O22), and the antigens elicited potent neutralization based on the CD4 supersite. A crystal structure was made of one of these Env trimers bound to Fabs 35O22 and 3H+109L. Guinea pigs vaccinated with these antigens achieved neutralization of deglycosylated Envs. Glycan-deleted Env trimers may be useful as priming antigens to increase the frequency of CD4 site-directed antibodies.
Zhou2017
(glycosylation, neutralization, vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses)
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PGT122: Crystal structures of the HIV-1 Env trimer with fully processed and native glycosylation are presented, complexed with the V3-loop bNAb 10-1074 and IOMA, a new CD4bs bNAb. There were fine specificity differences between bNAb 10-1074 and PGT121-family members. PGT122 was two-fold more potent against strains including the N156 PNGS, whereas 10-1074 was four-fold more potent against strains lacking the N156 PNGS.
Gristick2016
(glycosylation)
-
PGT122: HIV-1 bNAb eptiope networks were predicted using 4 algorithms informed by neutralization assays using 282 Env from multiclade viruses. Patch clusters of possible Ab epitope regions were tested for significant sensitivity by site-directed mutagenesis. Epitope (Ab binding site) networks of critical Env residues for 21 bNAb (b12, PG9, PG16, PGT121, PGT122, PGT123, PGT125, PGT126, PGT127, PGT128, PGT130, PGT131, PGT135, PGT136, PGT137, PGT141, PGT142, PGT143, PGT144, PGT145 and PGV04) were delineated and found to be located mostly in variable loops of gp120, particularly in V1/V2.
Evans2014
(antibody binding site, computational epitope prediction)
-
PGT122: 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. PGT122, PGT121, PGT123, PGT125, PGT126 and PGT128, all N332-V3 glycan oligomannose patch-binding bNAbs, were strongly, reciprocally competitive with one another. PGT122 inhibited binding of V1/V2 glycan cluster-Abs like PG9 strongly, but in a non-reciprocal manner and markedly but incompletely inhibited CD4-IgG2.
Derking2015
(antibody interactions, neutralization, binding affinity, structure)
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PGT122: 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 glycan bNAb PGT122, 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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PGT122: X-ray and EM structures of inferred precursors of the PGT121 family were generated (inferred intermediate heavy chains 3H, 9H, and 32H were paired with the intermediate light chain 3L). The N137 glycan was determined to be a major factor in affinity maturation of the PGT121 family (affinity maturation was primarily focused on avoiding, accommodating, or binding the N137 glycan). The antibody approach angle differed in the two main branches of the PGT121 lineage. A 3.0 Å crystal structure of a recombinant BG505 SOSIP.664 HIV-1 trimer with a PGT121 family member (3H+109L Ab) was determined.
Garces2015
(vaccine antigen design, structure, antibody lineage)
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PGT122: The IGHV region is central to Ag binding and consists of 48 functional genes. IGHV repertoire of 28 HIV-infected South African women, 13 of whom developed bNAbs, was sequenced. Novel IGHV repertoires were reported, including 85 entirely novel sequences and 38 sequences that matched rearranged sequences in non-IMGT databases. There were no significant differences in germline IGHV repertoires between individuals who do and do not develop bNAbs. IGHV gene usage of multiple well known HIV-1 bNAbs was also analyzed and 14 instances were identified where the novel non-IMGT alleles identified in this study, provided the same or a better match than their currently defined IMGT allele. For PGT122 the published IMGT predicted allele was IGHV4-59*01 and alternate allele predicted from IGHV alleles in 28 South African individuals was IGHV4-59*1m2, with T94C nucleotide and Y32H amino acid change.
Scheepers2015
(antibody lineage)
-
PGT122: This study describes a new level of complexity in antibody recognition of the mixed glycan-protein epitopes of the N332 region of HIV gp120. A combination of three antibody families that target the high-mannose patch can lead to 99% neutralization coverage of a large panel of viruses containing the N332/334 glycan site and up to 66% coverage for viruses that lack the N332/334 glycan site. PGT122 neutralized N334 viruses to an intermediate degree.
Sok2014a
(antibody interactions, glycosylation)
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PGT122: 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)
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PGT122: Vectored Immuno Prophylaxis (VIP), involves passive immunization by viral vector-mediated delivery of genes encoding bnAbs for in vivo expression. Robust protection against virus infection was observed in preclinical settings when animals were given VIP to express monoclonal neutralizing Abs. This review article surveyed the status of antibody gene transfer, VIP experiments against HIV and its related virus conduced in humanized mice and macaque monkeys, and discuss the pros and cons of VIP and its opportunities and challenges towards clinical applications to control HIV/AIDS endemics.
Yang2014
(immunoprophylaxis, review, antibody gene transfer)
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PGT122: Structural studies were performed for bNAbs PGT121, PGT122, and PGT123. The 3 bNAbs have very similar structures, but are divergent in their variable domain sequences. Binding by PGT122 depends on the N332 glycan PGT122 interacts with the gp120 outer domain at a more vertical angle than the previously-characterized PGT128.
Julien2013b
(antibody sequence, structure)
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PGT122: 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. PGT122 showed very high neutralization titer against BG505 pseudovirus in a competitive binding assay as shown in Table 1. Reduced PGT122 binding to mutated BG505 T332 was rescued by a glycosylated N residue, revealing a glycan binding epitope.
Hoffenberg2013
(antibody interactions, glycosylation, neutralization)
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PGT122: To identify bNAbs that have lower mutation frequencies of known bNAbs, but maintain high potency and moderate breadth, linage evolution of bNAbs PGT121-134 was studied with a novel phylogenetic method ImmuniTree. This Ab showed partial loss of neutralization potency when used without FRL3 insertion against a cross-lade 6 virus panel.
Sok2013
(antibody lineage)
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PGT122: Diversity of Ab recognition at the N332 site was assessed using chimeric antibodies made of heavy and light chains of N332-directed bNAbs PGT121-137. Recognition was good when heavy and light chains came from the same donor, and poor when they came from different donors, indicating multiple modes of recognition.
Pancera2013a
(chimeric antibody)
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PGT122: 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. IgH encoding PGT Abs are likely generated from multiple rounds of VH replacements. The details of PGT122 VH replacement products in IgH gene and mutations and amino acid sequence analysis are described in Table 1, Table 2 and Fig 4.
Liao2013a
(antibody sequence)
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PGT122: 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 glycan-V3 site, type not yet determined, PGT121 class, PGT121 family.
Kwong2012
(review, structure, broad neutralizer)
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PGT122: This review discusses how analysis of infection and vaccine candidate-induced antibodies and their genes may guide vaccine design. This MAb is listed as V3 epitope involving carbohydrates bnAb, isolated after 2009 by neutralization screening of cultured, unselected IgG+ memory B cells.
Bonsignori2012b
(vaccine antigen design, vaccine-induced immune responses, review)
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PGT122: Glycan Asn332-targeting broadly cross-neutralizing (BCN) antibodies were studied in 2 C-clade infected women. The ASn332 glycan was absent on infecting virus, but the BCN epitope with Asn332 evolved within 6 months though immune escape from earlier antibodies. Plasma from the subject CAP177 neutralized 88% of a large multi-subtype panel of 225 heterologous viruses, whereas CAP 314 neutralized 46% of 41 heterologous viruses but failed to neutralize viruses that lack glycan at 332. PGT122 targets Asn332 to neutralize.
Moore2012
(neutralization, escape)
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PGT122: Neutralizing antibody repertoires of 4 HIV-infected donors with remarkably broad and potent neutralizing responses were probed. 17 new monoclonal antibodies that neutralize broadly across clades were rescued. These MAbs were not polyreactive. All MAbs exhibited broad cross-clade neutralizing activity, but several showed exceptional potency. PGT122 neutralized 65% of 162 isolates from major HIV clades at IC50<50 μg/ml, which was lower than 93% by VRC01, but the median antibody concentration required to inhibit HIV activity by 50% or 90% (IC50 and IC90 values) was almost 10-fold lower (that is, more potent) that of PG9, VRC01 and PGV04, and 100-fold lower than that of b12, 2G12 and 4E10. PGT MAbs 121-123, 130, 131 and 135-137 bound to monomeric gp120 and competed with glycan-specific 2G12 MAb and all MAbs except PGT 135-137 also competed with a V3-loop-specific antibody and did not bind to gp120ΔV3, suggesting that their epitopes are in proximity to or contiguous with V3. Glycan array analysis and alanine substitution analysis suggested that that PGT122 binds to a protein epitope along the gp120 polypeptide backbone that is conformationally dependent on the N332 glycan or that the glycan contributes more strongly to binding in the context of the intact protein.
Walker2011
(antibody binding site, antibody generation, variant cross-reactivity, broad neutralizer)
References
Showing 21 of
21 references.
Isolation Paper
Walker2011
Laura M. Walker, Michael Huber, Katie J. Doores, Emilia Falkowska, Robert Pejchal, Jean-Philippe Julien, Sheng-Kai Wang, Alejandra Ramos, Po-Ying Chan-Hui, Matthew Moyle, Jennifer L. Mitcham, Phillip W. Hammond, Ole A. Olsen, Pham Phung, Steven Fling, Chi-Huey Wong, Sanjay Phogat, Terri Wrin, Melissa D. Simek, Protocol G. Principal Investigators, Wayne C. Koff, Ian A. Wilson, Dennis R. Burton, and Pascal Poignard. Broad Neutralization Coverage of HIV by Multiple Highly Potent Antibodies. Nature, 477(7365):466-470, 22 Sep 2011. PubMed ID: 21849977.
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Bonsignori2012b
Mattia Bonsignori, S. Munir Alam, Hua-Xin Liao, Laurent Verkoczy, Georgia D. Tomaras, Barton F. Haynes, and M. Anthony Moody. HIV-1 Antibodies from Infection and Vaccination: Insights for Guiding Vaccine Design. Trends Microbiol., 20(11):532-539, Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 22981828.
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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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Evans2014
Mark C. Evans, Pham Phung, Agnes C. Paquet, Anvi Parikh, Christos J. Petropoulos, Terri Wrin, and Mojgan Haddad. Predicting HIV-1 Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Epitope Networks Using Neutralization Titers and a Novel Computational Method. BMC Bioinformatics, 15:77, 19 Mar 2014. PubMed ID: 24646213.
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Garces2015
Fernando Garces, Jeong Hyun Lee, Natalia de Val, Alba Torrents de la Pena, Leopold Kong, Cristina Puchades, Yuanzi Hua, Robyn L. Stanfield, Dennis R. Burton, John P. Moore, Rogier W. Sanders, Andrew B. Ward, and Ian A. Wilson. Affinity Maturation of a Potent Family of HIV Antibodies Is Primarily Focused on Accommodating or Avoiding Glycans. Immunity, 43(6):1053-1063, 15 Dec 2015. PubMed ID: 26682982.
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Gristick2016
Harry B. Gristick, Lotta von Boehmer, Anthony P. West, Jr., Michael Schamber, Anna Gazumyan, Jovana Golijanin, Michael S. Seaman, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Florian Klein, Michel C. Nussenzweig, and Pamela J. Bjorkman. Natively Glycosylated HIV-1 Env Structure Reveals New Mode for Antibody Recognition of the CD4-Binding Site. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol., 23(10):906-915, Oct 2016. PubMed ID: 27617431.
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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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Julien2013b
Jean-Philippe Julien, Devin Sok, Reza Khayat, Jeong Hyun Lee, Katie J. Doores, Laura M. Walker, Alejandra Ramos, Devan C. Diwanji, Robert Pejchal, Albert Cupo, Umesh Katpally, Rafael S. Depetris, Robyn L. Stanfield, Ryan McBride, Andre J. Marozsan, James C. Paulson, Rogier W. Sanders, John P. Moore, Dennis R. Burton, Pascal Poignard, Andrew B. Ward, and Ian A. Wilson. Broadly Neutralizing Antibody PGT121 Allosterically Modulates CD4 Binding via Recognition of the HIV-1 gp120 V3 Base and Multiple Surrounding Glycans. PLoS Pathog., 9(5):e1003342, 2013. PubMed ID: 23658524.
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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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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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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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Moore2012
Penny L. Moore, Elin S. Gray, C. Kurt Wibmer, Jinal N. Bhiman, Molati Nonyane, Daniel J. Sheward, Tandile Hermanus, Shringkhala Bajimaya, Nancy L. Tumba, Melissa-Rose Abrahams, Bronwen E. Lambson, Nthabeleng Ranchobe, Lihua Ping, Nobubelo Ngandu, Quarraisha Abdool Karim, Salim S. Abdool Karim, Ronald I. Swanstrom, Michael S. Seaman, Carolyn Williamson, and Lynn Morris. Evolution of an HIV Glycan-Dependent Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Epitope through Immune Escape. Nat. Med., 18(11):1688-1692, Nov 2012. PubMed ID: 23086475.
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Pancera2013a
Marie Pancera, Yongping Yang, Mark K. Louder, Jason Gorman, Gabriel Lu, Jason S. McLellan, Jonathan Stuckey, Jiang Zhu, Dennis R. Burton, Wayne C. Koff, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. N332-Directed Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies Use Diverse Modes of HIV-1 Recognition: Inferences from Heavy-Light Chain Complementation of Function. PLoS One, 8(2):e55701, 2013. PubMed ID: 23431362.
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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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Scheepers2015
Cathrine Scheepers, Ram K. Shrestha, Bronwen E. Lambson, Katherine J. L. Jackson, Imogen A. Wright, Dshanta Naicker, Mark Goosen, Leigh Berrie, Arshad Ismail, Nigel Garrett, Quarraisha Abdool Karim, Salim S. Abdool Karim, Penny L. Moore, Simon A. Travers, and Lynn Morris. Ability to Develop Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibodies Is Not Restricted by the Germline Ig Gene Repertoire. J. Immunol., 194(9):4371-4378, 1 May 2015. PubMed ID: 25825450.
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Sok2013
Devin Sok, Uri Laserson, Jonathan Laserson, Yi Liu, Francois Vigneault, Jean-Philippe Julien, Bryan Briney, Alejandra Ramos, Karen F. Saye, Khoa Le, Alison Mahan, Shenshen Wang, Mehran Kardar, Gur Yaari, Laura M. Walker, Birgitte B. Simen, Elizabeth P. St. John, Po-Ying Chan-Hui, Kristine Swiderek, Steven H. Kleinstein, Galit Alter, Michael S. Seaman, Arup K. Chakraborty, Daphne Koller, Ian A. Wilson, George M. Church, Dennis R. Burton, and Pascal Poignard. The Effects of Somatic Hypermutation on Neutralization and Binding in the PGT121 Family of Broadly Neutralizing HIV Antibodies. PLoS Pathog, 9(11):e1003754, 2013. PubMed ID: 24278016.
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Sok2014a
Devin Sok, Katie J. Doores, Bryan Briney, Khoa M. Le, Karen L. Saye-Francisco, Alejandra Ramos, Daniel W. Kulp, Jean-Philippe Julien, Sergey Menis, Lalinda Wickramasinghe, Michael S. Seaman, William R. Schief, Ian A. Wilson, Pascal Poignard, and Dennis R. Burton. Promiscuous Glycan Site Recognition by Antibodies to the High-Mannose Patch of gp120 Broadens Neutralization of HIV. Sci. Transl. Med., 6(236):236ra63, 14 May 2014. PubMed ID: 24828077.
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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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Zhou2017
Tongqing Zhou, Nicole A. Doria-Rose, Cheng Cheng, Guillaume B. E. Stewart-Jones, Gwo-Yu Chuang, Michael Chambers, Aliaksandr Druz, Hui Geng, Krisha McKee, Young Do Kwon, Sijy O'Dell, Mallika Sastry, Stephen D. Schmidt, Kai Xu, Lei Chen, Rita E. Chen, Mark K. Louder, Marie Pancera, Timothy G. Wanninger, Baoshan Zhang, Anqi Zheng, S. Katie Farney, Kathryn E. Foulds, Ivelin S. Georgiev, M. Gordon Joyce, Thomas Lemmin, Sandeep Narpala, Reda Rawi, Cinque Soto, John-Paul Todd, Chen-Hsiang Shen, Yaroslav Tsybovsky, Yongping Yang, Peng Zhao, Barton F. Haynes, Leonidas Stamatatos, Michael Tiemeyer, Lance Wells, Diana G. Scorpio, Lawrence Shapiro, Adrian B. McDermott, John R. Mascola, and Peter D. Kwong. Quantification of the Impact of the HIV-1-Glycan Shield on Antibody Elicitation. Cell Rep., 19(4):719-732, 25 Apr 2017. PubMed ID: 28445724.
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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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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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