Broad and Potent Neutralizing Antibodies from an African Donor Reveal a New HIV-1 Vaccine Target.
Broadly neutralizing antibodies, which develop over time in some HIV-1-infected individuals, define critical epitopes for HIV vaccine design. Using a systematic approach, Walker and colleagues examined neutralization breadth in the sera of about 1800 HIV-1-infected individuals, primarily infected with non-clade B viruses, and selected donors for monoclonal antibody generation. They used a high-throughput neutralization screen of antibody-containing culture supernatants from approximately 30,000 activated memory B cells from a clade A-infected African donor to isolate two potent monoclonal antibodies that target a broadly neutralizing epitope. This epitope is preferentially expressed on trimeric Envelope protein and spans conserved regions of variable loops of the gp120 subunit. The results provide a framework for the design of new vaccine candidates for the elicitation of broadly neutralizing antibody responses.
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