Title
Passive immunization of macaques with polyclonal anti-SHIV IgG against a heterologous tier 2 SHIV: Outcome depends on IgG dose
Date Issued
20 January 2014
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sholukh A.M.
Byrareddy S.N.
Shanmuganathan V.
Hemashettar G.
Lakhashe S.K.
Rasmussen R.A.
Watkins J.D.
Vyas H.K.
Thorat S.
Brandstoetter T.
Mukhtar M.M.
Yoon J.K.
Novembre F.J.
Villinger F.
Landucci G.
Forthal D.N.
Ratcliffe S.
Robert-Guroff M.
Polonis V.R.
Bilska M.
Montefiori D.C.
Johnson W.E.
Ertl H.C.
Ruprecht R.M.
Instituto Nacional del Cáncer
Publisher(s)
Springer Nature
Abstract
Background: A key goal for HIV-1 envelope immunogen design is the induction of cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies (nAbs). As AIDS vaccine recipients will not be exposed to strains exactly matching any immunogens due to multiple HIV-1 quasispecies circulating in the human population worldwide, heterologous SHIV challenges are essential for realistic vaccine efficacy testing in primates. We assessed whether polyclonal IgG, isolated from rhesus monkeys (RMs) with high-titer nAbs (termed SHIVIG), could protect RMs against the R5-tropic tier-2 SHIV-2873Nip, which was heterologous to the viruses or HIV-1 envelopes that had elicited SHIVIG.Results: SHIVIG demonstrated binding to HIV Gag, Tat, and Env of different clades and competed with the broadly neutralizing antibodies b12, VRC01, 4E10, and 17b. SHIVIG neutralized tier 1 and tier 2 viruses, including SHIV-2873Nip. NK-cell depletion decreased the neutralizing activity of SHIVIG 20-fold in PBMC assays. Although SHIVIG neutralized SHIV-2873Nip in vitro, this polyclonal IgG preparation failed to prevent acquisition after repeated intrarectal low-dose virus challenges, but at a dose of 400 mg/kg, it significantly lowered peak viremia (P = 0.001). Unexpectedly, single-genome analysis revealed a higher number of transmitted variants at the low dose of 25 mg/kg, implying increased acquisition at low SHIVIG levels. In vitro, SHIVIG demonstrated complement-mediated Ab-dependent enhancement of infection (C'-ADE) at concentrations similar to those observed in plasmas of RMs treated with 25 mg/kg of SHIVIG.Conclusion: Our primate model data suggest a dual role for polyclonal anti-HIV-1 Abs depending on plasma levels upon virus encounter. © 2014 Sholukh et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Volume
11
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
VirologÃa
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84892466891
PubMed ID
Source
Retrovirology
ISSN of the container
1742-4690
Sponsor(s)
We thank Dr. J. Mascola for providing mAb VRC01, Dr. S.-L. Hu for providing SHIV-1157ip Env proteins, Dr. W. Marasco for providing mAb Fm-6, Dr. C. Ochsenbauer for providing pNL-LucR.T2A plasmid, P. Ehrenberg for production of the infectious molecular clones (GS 014 and GS 020), Dr. J. Hoxie for providing SupT1.R5 cells, and Juan Esquivel for technical help with the manuscript. This work was supported by NIH grants P01 AI082282 to RMR, SR and HCE, R37 AI034266, R01 DE023049 and P01 AI048240 to RMR, R01 AI083118 to WEJ, and HHSN27201100016C to DCM as well as by a cooperative agreement (W81XWH-07-2-0067) between the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Inc., and the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) to VRP. This project was also funded in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH, National Cancer Institute, to MR-G and by the Office of Research Infrastructure Programs/OD P51OD11107 to the YNPRC. The authors have no conflicting financial interests.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción CientÃfica
Scopus