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
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 S. Abdool Karim,Kunxue Hong,Kelli Greene,Miroslawa Bilska,Jintao Zhou,Susan Allen,Elwyn N. Chomba,Joseph Mulenga,Cheswa Vwalika,Feng Gao,Ming Zhang,Bette T. Korber,Eric Hunter,Beatrice H. Hahn,David C. Montefiori +25 more
TL;DR: Key genetic and antigenic properties of subtype C HIV-1 that might impact the design and testing of candidate vaccines are illustrated.
read more
Abstract: A standard panel of subtype C human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Env-pseudotyped viruses was created by cloning, sequencing, and characterizing functional gp160 genes from 18 acute and early heterosexually acquired infections in South Africa and Zambia. In general, the gp120 region of these clones was shorter (most evident in V1 and V4) and less glycosylated compared to newly transmitted subtype B viruses, and it was underglycosylated but no different in length compared to chronic subtype C viruses. The gp120s also exhibited low amino acid sequence variability (12%) in V3 and high variability (39%) immediately downstream of V3, a feature shared with newly transmitted subtype B viruses and chronic viruses of both subtypes. When tested as Env-pseudotyped viruses in a luciferase reporter gene assay, all clones possessed an R5 phenotype and resembled primary isolates in their sensitivity to neutralization by HIV-1-positive plasmas. Results obtained with a multisubtype plasma panel suggested partial subtype preference in the neutralizing antibody response to infection. The clones were typical of subtype C in that all were resistant to 2G12 (associated with loss of N-glycosylation at position 295) and most were resistant to 2F5, but all were sensitive to 4E10 and many were sensitive to immunoglobulin G1b12. Finally, conserved neutralization epitopes in the CD4-induced coreceptor binding domain of gp120 were poorly accessible and were difficult to induce and stabilize with soluble CD4 on Env-pseudotyped viruses. These results illustrate key genetic and antigenic properties of subtype C HIV-1 that might impact the design and testing of candidate vaccines. A subset of these gp160 clones are suitable for use as reference reagents to facilitate standardized assessments of vaccine-elicited neutralizing antibody responses.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Sensitivity to Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies of Recently Transmitted HIV-1 Clade CRF02_AG Viruses with a Focus on Evolution over Time.
Karl Stefic,Mélanie Bouvin-Pley,Asma Essat,Clara Visdeloup,Alain Moreau,Cécile Goujard,Marie-Laure Chaix,Martine Braibant,Laurence Meyer,Francis Barin +9 more
TL;DR: The sensitivity to bnAbs of a panel of 33 early transmitted CRF02_AG viruses, the most frequent genotype circulating in West Africa and the second most frequent found in several European countries, is assessed over a 15-year period of the French epidemic.
Glycosylation site-specific analysis of clade C HIV-1 envelope proteins.
Eden P. Go,Qing Chang,Hua-Xin Liao,Laura L. Sutherland,S. Munir Alam,Barton F. Haynes,Heather Desaire +6 more
TL;DR: A mass spectrometry-based approach is described to characterize the glycosylation profiles of two rVV-expressed clade C Envs by identifying the glycan motifs on each glyCosylation site and determining the degree of glycosYLation site occupancy.
Characterization of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Variants Anatomically Compartmentalized in Plasma and Milk in Chronically Infected African Green Monkeys.
Jonathon E. Himes,Carrie Ho,Quang N. Nguyen,Joshua D. Amos,Haolin Xu,Cliburn Chan,Shein-Chung Chow,Christina Ochsenbauer,Zhanna Kaidarova,Sheila M. Keating,Genevieve G. Fouda,Sallie R. Permar +11 more
TL;DR: The findings imply the potential importance of nonviral factors in natural SIV host species, such as innate SIV/HIV immune factors in milk, as a means of naturally preventing vertical transmission.
Comparisons of the genetic and neutralization properties of HIV-1 subtype C and CRF07/08_BC env molecular clones isolated from infections in China.
TL;DR: The genetic and neutralization properties of HIV CRF07/08_BC Env isolates predominating in China show different properties than those of subtype C, likely to provide useful information for the design and evaluation of HIV-1 neutralizing antibody-based vaccine development in China.
Cross-Subtype Antibody and Cellular Immune Responses Induced by A Polyvalent Dna Prime-Protein Boost Hiv-1 Vaccine in Healthy Human Volunteers (vol 26, Pg 1098, 2008)
Shixia Wang,Jeffrey S. Kennedy,Kim West,David C. Montefiori,Scott Coley,John Lawrence,Siyuan Shen,Sharone Green,Alan L. Rothman,Francis A. Ennis,James Arthos,Ranajit Pal,Phillip Markham,Shan Lu +13 more
References
Clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice
TL;DR: The sensitivity of the commonly used progressive multiple sequence alignment method has been greatly improved and modifications are incorporated into a new program, CLUSTAL W, which is freely available.
The neighbor-joining method: a new method for reconstructing phylogenetic trees.
Naruya Saitou,Masatoshi Nei +1 more
TL;DR: The neighbor-joining method and Sattath and Tversky's method are shown to be generally better than the other methods for reconstructing phylogenetic trees from evolutionary distance data.
Confidence limits on phylogenies: an approach using the bootstrap.
TL;DR: The recently‐developed statistical method known as the “bootstrap” can be used to place confidence intervals on phylogenies and shows significant evidence for a group if it is defined by three or more characters.
43.1K
A simple method for estimating evolutionary rates of base substitutions through comparative studies of nucleotide sequences.
TL;DR: Some examples were worked out using reported globin sequences to show that synonymous substitutions occur at much higher rates than amino acid-altering substitutions in evolution.
29K
•Book
Current protocols in immunology
E John Coligan
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: Current Protocols in Immunology is a three-volume looseleaf manual that provides comprehensive coverage of immunological methods from classic to the most cutting edge, including antibody detection and preparation, assays for functional activities of mouse and human cells involved in immune responses, and animal models of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.
7.5K
Related Papers (5)
[...]
Laura M. Walker,Sanjay Phogat,Po-Ying Chan-Hui,Denise Wagner,Pham Phung,Julie L. Goss,Terri Wrin,Melissa Simek,Steven P. Fling,Jennifer L. Mitcham,Jennifer Lehrman,Frances Priddy,Ole A. Olsen,Steven Frey,Phillip W. Hammond,Protocol G. Principal Investigators,Stephen M. Kaminsky,Timothy J. Zamb,Matthew Moyle,Wayne C. Koff,Pascal Poignard,Dennis R. Burton,Dennis R. Burton +22 more
[...]
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 Wycuff,Yu Feng,Martha Nason,Nicole A. Doria-Rose,Mark Connors,Peter D. Kwong,Mario Roederer,Richard T. Wyatt,Gary J. Nabel,John R. Mascola +23 more
Brandon F. Keele,Elena E. Giorgi,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 Delwart,Michael P. Busch,Myron S. Cohen,David C. Montefiori,Barton F. Haynes,Brian Gaschen,Gayathri Athreya,Ha Y. Lee,Natasha T. Wood,Cathal Seoighe,Alan S. Perelson,Tanmoy Bhattacharya,Tanmoy Bhattacharya,Bette T. Korber,Bette T. Korber,Beatrice H. Hahn,George M. Shaw +39 more