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Broadly neutralizing antibodies with few somatic mutations and hepatitis C virus clearance
Justin R. Bailey, Andrew I. Flyak, Valerie J. Cohen, Hui Li, Lisa N. Wasilewski, Anna E. Snider, Shuyi Wang, Gerald H. Learn, Nurgun Kose, Leah Loerinc, Rebecca Lampley, Andrea L. Cox, Jennifer M. Pfaff, Benjamin J. Doranz, George M. Shaw, Stuart C. Ray, James E. Crowe Jr.
Justin R. Bailey, Andrew I. Flyak, Valerie J. Cohen, Hui Li, Lisa N. Wasilewski, Anna E. Snider, Shuyi Wang, Gerald H. Learn, Nurgun Kose, Leah Loerinc, Rebecca Lampley, Andrea L. Cox, Jennifer M. Pfaff, Benjamin J. Doranz, George M. Shaw, Stuart C. Ray, James E. Crowe Jr.
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Research Article Infectious disease

Broadly neutralizing antibodies with few somatic mutations and hepatitis C virus clearance

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Abstract

Here, we report the isolation of broadly neutralizing mAbs (bNAbs) from persons with broadly neutralizing serum who spontaneously cleared hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. We found that bNAbs from two donors bound the same epitope and were encoded by the same germline heavy chain variable gene segment. Remarkably, these bNAbs were encoded by antibody variable genes with sparse somatic mutations. For one of the most potent bNAbs, these somatic mutations were critical for antibody neutralizing breadth and for binding to autologous envelope variants circulating late in infection. However, somatic mutations were not necessary for binding of the bNAb unmutated ancestor to envelope proteins of early autologous transmitted/founder viruses. This study identifies a public B cell clonotype favoring early recognition of a conserved HCV epitope, proving that anti-HCV bNAbs can achieve substantial neutralizing breadth with relatively few somatic mutations, and identifies HCV envelope variants that favored selection and maturation of an anti-HCV bNAb in vivo. These data provide insight into the molecular mechanisms of immune-mediated clearance of HCV infection and present a roadmap to guide development of a vaccine capable of stimulating anti-HCV bNAbs with a physiologic number of somatic mutations characteristic of vaccine responses.

Authors

Justin R. Bailey, Andrew I. Flyak, Valerie J. Cohen, Hui Li, Lisa N. Wasilewski, Anna E. Snider, Shuyi Wang, Gerald H. Learn, Nurgun Kose, Leah Loerinc, Rebecca Lampley, Andrea L. Cox, Jennifer M. Pfaff, Benjamin J. Doranz, George M. Shaw, Stuart C. Ray, James E. Crowe Jr.

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Figure 3

Cross-genotypic neutralizing breadth of anti-HCV mAbs.

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Cross-genotypic neutralizing breadth of anti-HCV mAbs.
Neutralizing brea...
Neutralizing breadth of mAbs against a panel of genotype 1–6 replication competent hepatitis C viruses (HCVcc). The 4 mAbs with greatest neutralizing breadth in Figure 2 were tested. The name of each HCVcc strain is indicated, with the viral subtype in parenthesis. Values shown are the means of two independent experiments, each performed in triplicate, and error bars represent standard deviations between experiments. The half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of each mAb/HCVcc combination is shown. Curves with neutralization exceeding 50% at only the highest mAb concentration (50 μg/ml) were assigned an IC50 of 50 μg/ml.

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