Researchers
Report on the Early Development
of Anti-HIV Neutralizing Antibodies
New
findings are bringing scientists closer to an effective
HIV vaccine. Researchers from Seattle Biomedical Research
Institute (Seattle BioMed), Vanderbilt University and the
Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard report findings
showing new evidence about broadly-reactive neutralizing
antibodies, which block HIV infection. Details are published
January 13 in the open-access journal PLoS Pathogens.
According to author Leo Stamatatos, PhD, director of the
Viral Vaccines Program at Seattle BioMed, a major stumbling
block in the development of an effective vaccine against
HIV is the inability to elicit, by immunization, broadly
reactive neutralizing antibodies (NAbs). These antibodies
bind to the surface of HIV and prevent it from attaching
itself to a cell and infecting it. However, a fraction of
people infected with HIV develop broadly neutralizing antibodies
(bNAbs) capable of preventing cell-infection by diverse
HIV isolates, which are the type of antibodies researchers
wish to elicit by vaccination.
"We've found that the people who develop broadly-reactive
neutralizing antibodies -- which are about 30% of those
infected -- tend to have a healthier immune system that
differs from others who don't develop those antibodies,"
Stamatatos explained, saying that these antibodies target
only a few regions of HIV which is good from the standpoint
of vaccine development. "It gives us less to target,"
he said.
In addition, the new findings show that these antibodies
are generated much sooner than previously thought, in some
cases as soon as a year after infection.
"These studies provide a strong rationale to begin
teasing out the early immunological signals that allow some
individuals, but not others, to mount broadly reactive neutralizing
antibody responses," adds co-author Galit Alter, PhD.
"Now we know that these broadly-reactive neutralizing
antibodies don't develop simply by chance and we can work
to understand what makes this 30% of the HIV-infected population
different," Stamatatos explained. By understanding
that, we can hopefully use that information to design new
immunogens and immunization protocols that can mimic the
early events that lead to the development of such antibodies
during natural infection."
Investigator
affiliations: Seattle BioMed, Seattle, WA; Department of Global
Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; Division of Infectious
Diseases, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School
of Medicine, Nashville, TN; Ragon Institute of Massachusetts
General Hospital, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
Harvard University, Boston, MA.
1/25/11
Reference
I Mikell, DN Sather, SA Kalams, and others. Characteristics
of the Earliest Cross-Neutralizing Antibody Response to HIV-1.
PLoS Pathogens 7(1): e1001251 (Abstract).
January 13, 2011.
Other
Source
Public
Library of Science. Researchers Report on the Early Development
of Anti-HIV Neutralizing Antibodies. Press release. January
13, 2011.
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