Pentameric complex of viral glycoprotein H is the primary target for potent neutralization by a human cytomegalovirus vaccine

DC Freed, Q Tang, A Tang, F Li, X He… - Proceedings of the …, 2013 - National Acad Sciences
DC Freed, Q Tang, A Tang, F Li, X He, Z Huang, W Meng, L Xia, AC Finnefrock, E Durr
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013National Acad Sciences
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can cause serious morbidity/mortality in transplant
patients, and congenital HCMV infection can lead to birth defects. Developing an effective
HCMV vaccine is a high medical priority. One of the challenges to the efforts has been our
limited understanding of the viral antigens important for protective antibodies. Receptor-
mediated viral entry to endothelial/epithelial cells requires a glycoprotein H (gH) complex
comprising five viral proteins (gH, gL, UL128, UL130, and UL131). This gH complex is …
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can cause serious morbidity/mortality in transplant patients, and congenital HCMV infection can lead to birth defects. Developing an effective HCMV vaccine is a high medical priority. One of the challenges to the efforts has been our limited understanding of the viral antigens important for protective antibodies. Receptor-mediated viral entry to endothelial/epithelial cells requires a glycoprotein H (gH) complex comprising five viral proteins (gH, gL, UL128, UL130, and UL131). This gH complex is notably missing from HCMV laboratory strains as well as HCMV vaccines previously evaluated in the clinic. To support a unique vaccine concept based on the pentameric gH complex, we established a panel of 45 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) from a rabbit immunized with an experimental vaccine virus in which the expression of the pentameric gH complex was restored. Over one-half (25 of 45) of the mAbs have neutralizing activity. Interestingly, affinity for an antibody to bind virions was not correlated with its ability to neutralize the virus. Genetic analysis of the 45 mAbs based on their heavy- and light-chain sequences identified at least 26 B-cell linage groups characterized by distinct binding or neutralizing properties. Moreover, neutralizing antibodies possessed longer complementarity-determining region 3 for both heavy and light chains than those with no neutralizing activity. Importantly, potent neutralizing mAbs reacted to the pentameric gH complex but not to gB. Thus, the pentameric gH complex is the primary target for antiviral antibodies by vaccination.
National Acad Sciences