共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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Yili Li Brian G. Pierce Qian Wang Zhen-Yong Keck Thomas R. Fuerst Steven K. H. Foung Roy A. Mariuzza 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2015,290(16):10117-10125
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. A challenge for HCV vaccine development is to identify conserved epitopes able to elicit protective antibodies against this highly diverse virus. Glycan shielding is a mechanism by which HCV masks such epitopes on its E2 envelope glycoprotein. Antibodies to the E2 region comprising residues 412–423 (E2412–423) have broadly neutralizing activities. However, an adaptive mutation in this linear epitope, N417S, is associated with a glycosylation shift from Asn-417 to Asn-415 that enables HCV to escape neutralization by mAbs such as HCV1 and AP33. By contrast, the human mAb HC33.1 can neutralize virus bearing the N417S mutation. To understand how HC33.1 penetrates the glycan shield created by the glycosylation shift to Asn-415, we determined the structure of this broadly neutralizing mAb in complex with its E2412–423 epitope to 2.0 Å resolution. The conformation of E2412–423 bound to HC33.1 is distinct from the β-hairpin conformation of this peptide bound to HCV1 or AP33, because of disruption of the β-hairpin through interactions with the unusually long complementarity-determining region 3 of the HC33.1 heavy chain. Whereas Asn-415 is buried by HCV1 and AP33, it is solvent-exposed in the HC33.1-E2412–423 complex, such that glycosylation of Asn-415 would not prevent antibody binding. Furthermore, our results highlight the structural flexibility of the E2412–423 epitope, which may serve as an immune evasion strategy to impede induction of antibodies targeting this site by reducing its antigenicity. 相似文献
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Andrew L. Ferguson Emilia Falkowska Laura M. Walker Michael S. Seaman Dennis R. Burton Arup K. Chakraborty 《PloS one》2013,8(12)
Broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies effective against the majority of circulating isolates of HIV-1 have been isolated from a small number of infected individuals. Definition of the conformational epitopes on the HIV spike to which these antibodies bind is of great value in defining targets for vaccine and drug design. Drawing on techniques from compressed sensing and information theory, we developed a computational methodology to predict key residues constituting the conformational epitopes on the viral spike from cross-clade neutralization activity data. Our approach does not require the availability of structural information for either the antibody or antigen. Predictions of the conformational epitopes of ten broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibodies are shown to be in good agreement with new and existing experimental data. Our findings suggest that our approach offers a means to accelerate epitope identification for diverse pathogenic antigens. 相似文献
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Jorge Reyes-del Valle Cynthia de la Fuente Mallory A. Turner Christoph Springfeld Swapna Apte-Sengupta Marie E. Frenzke Amelie Forest Jillian Whidby Joseph Marcotrigiano Charles M. Rice Roberto Cattaneo 《Journal of virology》2012,86(21):11558-11566
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains a serious public health problem worldwide. Treatments are limited, and no preventive vaccine is available. Toward developing an HCV vaccine, we engineered two recombinant measles viruses (MVs) expressing structural proteins from the prototypic HCV subtype 1a strain H77. One virus directs the synthesis of the HCV capsid (C) protein and envelope glycoproteins (E1 and E2), which fold properly and form a heterodimer. The other virus expresses the E1 and E2 glycoproteins separately, with each one fused to the cytoplasmic tail of the MV fusion protein. Although these hybrid glycoproteins were transported to the plasma membrane, they were not incorporated into MV particles. Immunization of MV-susceptible, genetically modified mice with either vector induced neutralizing antibodies to MV and HCV. A boost with soluble E2 protein enhanced titers of neutralizing antibody against the homologous HCV envelope. In animals primed with MV expressing properly folded HCV C-E1-E2, boosting also induced cross-neutralizating antibodies against two heterologous HCV strains. These results show that recombinant MVs retain the ability to induce MV-specific humoral immunity while also eliciting HCV neutralizing antibodies, and that anti-HCV immunity can be boosted with a single dose of purified E2 protein. The use of MV vectors could have advantages for pediatric HCV vaccination. 相似文献
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Lin Wang Ruoke Wang Lei Wang Haijing Ben Lei Yu Fei Gao Xuanling Shi Chibiao Yin Fuchun Zhang Ye Xiang Linqi Zhang 《Cell reports》2019,26(12):3360-3368.e5
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Leopold Kong Erick Giang Travis Nieusma Justin B. Robbins Marc C. Deller Robyn L. Stanfield Ian A. Wilson Mansun Law 《Journal of virology》2012,86(23):13085-13088
We have determined the crystal structure of the broadly neutralizing antibody (bnAb) AP33, bound to a peptide corresponding to hepatitis C virus (HCV) E2 envelope glycoprotein antigenic site 412 to 423. Comparison with bnAb HCV1 bound to the same epitope reveals a different angle of approach to the antigen by bnAb AP33 and slight variation in its β-hairpin conformation of the epitope. These structures establish two different modes of binding to E2 that antibodies adopt to neutralize diverse HCV. 相似文献
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Nadja Spindler Uschi Diestel Joachim D. Stump Anna-Katharina Wiegers Thomas H. Winkler Heinrich Sticht Michael Mach Yves A. Muller 《PLoS pathogens》2014,10(10)
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections are life-threating to people with a compromised or immature immune system. Upon adhesion, fusion of the virus envelope with the host cell is initiated. In this step, the viral glycoprotein gB is considered to represent the major fusogen. Here, we present for the first time structural data on the binding of an anti-herpes virus antibody and describe the atomic interactions between the antigenic domain Dom-II of HCMV gB and the Fab fragment of the human antibody SM5-1. The crystal structure shows that SM5-1 binds Dom-II almost exclusively via only two CDRs, namely light chain CDR L1 and a 22-residue-long heavy chain CDR H3. Two contiguous segments of Dom-II are targeted by SM5-1, and the combining site includes a hydrophobic pocket on the Dom-II surface that is only partially filled by CDR H3 residues. SM5-1 belongs to a series of sequence-homologous anti-HCMV gB monoclonal antibodies that were isolated from the same donor at a single time point and that represent different maturation states. Analysis of amino acid substitutions in these antibodies in combination with molecular dynamics simulations show that key contributors to the picomolar affinity of SM5-1 do not directly interact with the antigen but significantly reduce the flexibility of CDR H3 in the bound and unbound state of SM5-1 through intramolecular side chain interactions. Thus, these residues most likely alleviate unfavorable binding entropies associated with extra-long CDR H3s, and this might represent a common strategy during antibody maturation. Models of entire HCMV gB in different conformational states hint that SM5-1 neutralizes HCMV either by blocking the pre- to postfusion transition of gB or by precluding the interaction with additional effectors such as the gH/gL complex. 相似文献
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Jessica Marcandalli Brooke Fiala Sebastian Ols Michela Perotti Willem de van der Schueren Joost Snijder Edgar Hodge Mark Benhaim Rashmi Ravichandran Lauren Carter Will Sheffler Livia Brunner Maria Lawrenz Patrice Dubois Antonio Lanzavecchia Federica Sallusto Kelly K. Lee David Veesler Neil P. King 《Cell》2019,176(6):1420-1431.e17
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We report the structural characterization of the first antibody identified to cross-neutralize multiple subtypes of influenza A viruses. The crystal structure of mouse antibody C179 bound to the pandemic 1957 H2N2 hemagglutinin (HA) reveals that it targets an epitope on the HA stem similar to those targeted by the recently identified human broadly neutralizing antibodies. C179 also inhibits the low-pH conformational change of the HA but uses a different angle of approach and both heavy and light chains. 相似文献
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Effector Function Activities of a Panel of Mutants of a Broadly Neutralizing Antibody against Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1
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Marjan Hezareh Ann J. Hessell Richard C. Jensen Jan G. J. van de Winkel Paul W. H. I. Parren 《Journal of virology》2001,75(24):12161-12168
The human antibody immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) b12 neutralizes a broad range of human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) isolates in vitro and is able to protect against viral challenge in animal models. Neutralization of free virus, which is an antiviral activity of antibody that generally does not require the antibody Fc fragment, likely plays an important role in the protection observed. The role of Fc-mediated effector functions, which may reduce infection by inducing phagocytosis and lysis of virions and infected cells, however, is less clear. To investigate this role, we constructed a panel of IgG1 b12 mutants with point mutations in the second domain of the antibody heavy chain constant region (CH2). These mutations, as expected, did not affect gp120 binding or HIV-1 neutralization. IgG1 b12 mediated strong antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) of HIV-1-infected cells, but these activities were reduced or abrogated for the antibody mutants. Two mutants were of particular interest. K322A showed a twofold reduction in FcgammaR binding affinity and ADCC, while C1q binding and CDC were abolished. A double mutant (L234A, L235A) did not bind either FcgammaR or C1q, and both ADCC and CDC functions were abolished. In this study, we confirmed that K322 forms part of the C1q binding site in human IgG1 and plays an important role in the molecular interactions leading to complement activation. Less expectedly, we demonstrate that the lower hinge region in human IgG1 has a strong modulating effect on C1q binding and CDC. The b12 mutants K322A and L234A, L235A are useful tools for dissecting the in vivo roles of ADCC and CDC in the anti-HIV-1 activity of neutralizing antibodies. 相似文献
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Identification and Characterization of a Peptide That Specifically Binds the Human, Broadly Neutralizing Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibody b12
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Michael B. Zwick Lori L. C. Bonnycastle Alfredo Menendez Melita B. Irving Carlos F. Barbas III Paul W. H. I. Parren Dennis R. Burton Jamie K. Scott 《Journal of virology》2001,75(14):6692-6699
Human monoclonal antibody (MAb) b12 recognizes a conformational epitope that overlaps the CD-4-binding site of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope. MAb b12 neutralizes a broad range of HIV-1 primary isolates and protects against primary virus challenge in animal models. We report here the discovery and characterization of B2.1, a peptide that binds specifically to MAb b12. B2.1 was selected from a phage-displayed peptide library by using immunoglobulin G1 b12 as the selecting agent. The peptide is a homodimer whose activity depends on an intact disulfide bridge joining its polypeptide chains. Competition studies with gp120 indicate that B2.1 occupies the b12 antigen-binding site. The affinity of b12 for B2.1 depends on the form in which the peptide is presented; b12 binds best to the homodimer as a recombinant polypeptide fused to the phage coat. Originally, b12 was isolated from a phage-displayed Fab library constructed from the bone marrow of an HIV-1-infected donor. The B2.1 peptide is highly specific for b12 since it selected only phage bearing b12 Fab from this large and diverse antibody library. 相似文献
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S. Kyle Austin Kimberly A. Dowd Bimmi Shrestha Christopher A. Nelson Melissa A. Edeling Syd Johnson Theodore C. Pierson Michael S. Diamond Daved H. Fremont 《PLoS pathogens》2012,8(10)
We previously developed a panel of neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against Dengue virus (DENV)-1, of which few exhibited inhibitory activity against all DENV-1 genotypes. This finding is consistent with reports observing variable neutralization of different DENV strains and genotypes using serum from individuals that experienced natural infection or immunization. Herein, we describe the crystal structures of DENV1-E111 bound to a novel CC′ loop epitope on domain III (DIII) of the E protein from two different DENV-1 genotypes. Docking of our structure onto the available cryo-electron microscopy models of DENV virions revealed that the DENV1-E111 epitope was inaccessible, suggesting that this antibody recognizes an uncharacterized virus conformation. While the affinity of binding between DENV1-E111 and DIII varied by genotype, we observed limited correlation with inhibitory activity. Instead, our results support the conclusion that potent neutralization depends on genotype-dependent exposure of the CC′ loop epitope. These findings establish new structural complexity of the DENV virion, which may be relevant for the choice of DENV strain for induction or analysis of neutralizing antibodies in the context of vaccine development. 相似文献
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Zhen-yong Keck Sophia H. Li Jinming Xia Thomas von Hahn Peter Balfe Jane A. McKeating Jeroen Witteveldt Arvind H. Patel Harvey Alter Charles M. Rice Steven K. H. Foung 《Journal of virology》2009,83(12):6149-6160
Broadly neutralizing antibodies are commonly present in the sera of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. To elucidate possible mechanisms of virus escape from these antibodies, retrovirus particles pseudotyped with HCV glycoproteins (HCVpp) isolated from sequential samples collected over a 26-year period from a chronically infected patient, H, were used to characterize the neutralization potential and binding affinity of a panel of anti-HCV E2 human monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs). Moreover, AP33, a neutralizing murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) to a linear epitope in E2, was also tested against selected variants. The HMAbs used were previously shown to broadly neutralize HCV and to recognize a cluster of highly immunogenic overlapping epitopes, designated domain B, containing residues that are also critical for binding of viral E2 glycoprotein to CD81, a receptor essential for virus entry. Escape variants were observed at different time points with some of the HMAbs. Other HMAbs neutralized all variants except for the isolate 02.E10, obtained in 2002, which was also resistant to MAb AP33. The 02.E10 HCVpp that have reduced binding affinities for all antibodies and for CD81 also showed reduced infectivity. Comparison of the 02.E10 nucleotide sequence with that of the strain H-derived consensus variant, H77c, revealed the former to have two mutations in E2, S501N and V506A, located outside the known CD81 binding sites. Substitution A506V in 02.E10 HCVpp restored binding to CD81, but its antibody neutralization sensitivity was only partially restored. Double substitutions comprising N501S and A506V synergistically restored 02.E10 HCVpp infectivity. Other mutations that are not part of the antibody binding epitope in the context of N501S and A506V were able to completely restore neutralization sensitivity. These findings showed that some nonlinear overlapping epitopes are more essential than others for viral fitness and consequently are more invariant during earlier years of chronic infection. Further, the ability of the 02.E10 consensus variant to escape neutralization by the tested antibodies could be a new mechanism of virus escape from immune containment. Mutations that are outside receptor binding sites resulted in structural changes leading to complete escape from domain B neutralizing antibodies, while simultaneously compromising viral fitness by reducing binding to CD81.Over 170 million people worldwide are infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). While acute infection is usually silent, the majority of infected individuals develop persistent infections. Approximately 30% of acute infections are spontaneously resolved. Cellular immunity is clearly necessary, as robust and sustained CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses are temporally associated with virus clearance leading to disease resolution (7). Persistent infection is associated with an inability to sustain a vigorous CD4+ response. The role of antibodies in disease resolution is increasingly recognized but less understood. Clinical trials with gamma globulin administration prior to the discovery of HCV achieved prophylactic effects on transfusion-associated non-A, non-B hepatitis cases, most of which were subsequently shown to be HCV related (28, 46). Animal studies showed that gamma globulin therapy delayed the onset of acute HCV infection (29). Preincubation of the infectious inoculum with pooled gamma globulin from HCV-positive donors prevented infection in challenged chimpanzees (55). The protection afforded by gamma globulin preparations correlated with antibody titers blocking infection of target cells with retroviral pseudotype particles expressing HCV E1E2 glycoproteins (HCVpp) (4). In addition, chimpanzees vaccinated with recombinant HCV E2 glycoproteins were protected against infection in a manner that correlated with serum antibody titers inhibiting binding of E2 to CD81 (19, 40, 41), a receptor required for entry by both HCVpp and cell culture infectious HCV (HCVcc) (5, 17, 33, 53, 56). Two recent studies observed that patients with strong and progressive neutralizing antibody responses demonstrated decreasing viremia and control of viral replication (31, 39). A third study, however, reported the lack of neutralizing antibodies to heterologous HCVpp isolates in the sera of patients who eventually controlled their viremia during acute HCV infection (21). Furthermore, 104 to 106 virions per milliliter of serum are usually detected during chronic infection in the presence of high titers of serum neutralizing antibodies.A driver of persistent viremia is a high degree of viral variants, or “quasispecies.” Owing to a high viral replication rate (1012 copies per day) and an error-prone viral RNA-dependent polymerase, the estimated mutation rate is 2.0 × 10−3 base substitutions per genome per year (9, 34). This high rate of quasispecies formation contributes to the emergence of escape viral variants from immune surveillance. Mutations within major histocompatibility complex class I-restricted HCV epitopes lead to escape from cytotoxic T-cell responses (7). Mutations leading to escape from humoral immunity, particularly in E2 hypervariable region 1 (HVR1), known to be the target of host neutralizing antibodies, are also documented (10, 22, 30, 45). Protection in chimpanzees is achieved following challenge with an inoculum that had been preincubated with antibodies to autologous HVR1 (10). Yet over time, these isolate-specific antibodies drive the emergence of new viral variants that the concurrent immune response poorly recognizes. A study of sequential HCV isolates obtained from a patient, H, who was meticulously followed for a 26-year period starting 3 weeks after exposure to the virus, showed that the serial HCV variants were poorly neutralized by the concurrent serum antibodies (52). Escape was associated in part with mutations in HVR1 leading to decreased binding and neutralization by monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to HVR1 that were produced against the first isolate obtained from this patient.Broadly neutralizing antibodies are usually directed against conformational epitopes within E2 (2, 8, 13, 14, 44). We previously described a panel of neutralizing and nonneutralizing human MAbs (HMAbs) to conformational epitopes on HCV E2 that were derived from peripheral B cells of individuals infected with either genotype 1a or 1b HCV. Cross-competition analyses delineated at least three immunogenic clusters of overlapping epitopes with distinct functions and properties (23-25). All nonneutralizing antibodies fell within one cluster, designated domain A (24). Neutralizing HMAbs segregated into two clusters, designated domains B and C, with domain B HMAbs having greater potency than domain C HMAbs in blocking infection with the strain JFH1 genotype 2a HCVcc (23, 25).The epitopes of increasing numbers of anti-HCV E2 neutralizing antibodies include residues that are also critical for binding of E2 to CD81. All of our domain B HMAbs inhibit binding of E2 to CD81. Alanine scanning mutagenesis of E2 regions implicated in binding to CD81 identified two highly conserved residues, G530 and D535, that are needed for all domain B antibodies, with a subset also requiring W529 (25, 26, 36). Other laboratories have isolated similar neutralizing antibodies to epitopes containing these residues (20, 32, 38). A similar panel of E2 mutants was previously used to identify five amino acid residues, W420, Y527, W529, G530, and D535, that are essential for interaction with CD81 (37, 42). These findings show that domain B antibodies exert their potent neutralization of HCV infectivity by directly competing with CD81 for binding to E2. It also explains the breadth of neutralization against different HCV genotypes and subtypes for many of these antibodies, since any changes in their epitopes could affect CD81 binding and virus entry. The conserved nature of this cluster of overlapping epitopes makes them of interest for vaccine and immunotherapeutic development. A critical question involves the likelihood that immune selection could lead to escape from neutralization by domain B HMAbs. The series of sequential HCVpp variants derived from patient H over a span of 26 years (52) provide a unique resource for studying the extent and mechanisms of virus escape from broadly neutralizing antibodies. This report describes evidence of escape from immune containment of some but not other domain B HMAbs. Interestingly, a single H variant with reduced HCVpp infectivity and diminished CD81 binding was resistant to neutralization by all domain B antibodies as well as MAb AP33, recognizing a highly conserved linear epitope spanning residues 413 to 420 (35, 47). Sequence analysis revealed multiple mutations on E2 at a considerable distance from CD81 binding residues that could account for the immune escape, although it is unlikely that they are part of the domain B HMAb or the AP33 epitopes. Site-directed substitutions at these mutations restored neutralization sensitivity to all antibodies and CD81 dependency. 相似文献
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