Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 elite neutralizers: individuals with broad and potent neutralizing activity identified by using a high-throughput neutralization …

MD Simek, W Rida, FH Priddy, P Pung… - Journal of …, 2009 - Am Soc Microbiol
MD Simek, W Rida, FH Priddy, P Pung, E Carrow, DS Laufer, JK Lehrman, M Boaz…
Journal of virology, 2009Am Soc Microbiol
The development of a rapid and efficient system to identify human immunodeficiency virus
type 1 (HIV-1)-infected individuals with broad and potent HIV-1-specific neutralizing
antibody responses is an important step toward the discovery of critical neutralization targets
for rational AIDS vaccine design. In this study, samples from HIV-1-infected volunteers from
diverse epidemiological regions were screened for neutralization responses using
pseudovirus panels composed of clades A, B, C, and D and circulating recombinant forms …
Abstract
The development of a rapid and efficient system to identify human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected individuals with broad and potent HIV-1-specific neutralizing antibody responses is an important step toward the discovery of critical neutralization targets for rational AIDS vaccine design. In this study, samples from HIV-1-infected volunteers from diverse epidemiological regions were screened for neutralization responses using pseudovirus panels composed of clades A, B, C, and D and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs). Initially, 463 serum and plasma samples from Australia, Rwanda, Uganda, the United Kingdom, and Zambia were screened to explore neutralization patterns and selection ranking algorithms. Samples were identified that neutralized representative isolates from at least four clade/CRF groups with titers above prespecified thresholds and ranked based on a weighted average of their log-transformed neutralization titers. Linear regression methods selected a five-pseudovirus subset, representing clades A, B, and C and one CRF01_AE, that could identify top-ranking samples with 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) neutralization titers of ≥100 to multiple isolates within at least four clade groups. This reduced panel was then used to screen 1,234 new samples from the Ivory Coast, Kenya, South Africa, Thailand, and the United States, and 1% were identified as elite neutralizers. Elite activity is defined as the ability to neutralize, on average, more than one pseudovirus at an IC50 titer of 300 within a clade group and across at least four clade groups. These elite neutralizers provide promising starting material for the isolation of broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies to assist in HIV-1 vaccine design.
American Society for Microbiology