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Heterologous prime-boost vaccination drives early maturation of HIV broadly neutralizing antibody precursors in humanized mice.

Christopher A CottrellXiaozhen HuJeong Hyun LeePatrick D SkogSai LuoClaudia T FlynnKatherine R McKenneyJonathan HurtadoOleksandr KalyuzhniyAlessia LiguoriJordan R WillisElise LandaisSebastian RämischXuejun ChenSabyasachi BabooSunny HimansuJolene K DiedrichHongying DuanCheng ChengTorben SchiffnerDaniel L V BaderDaniel W KulpRyan TingleErik GeorgesonSaman EskandarzadehNushin AlaviDanny LuTroy SincombMichael KubitzTina-Marie MullenJohn Yates IiiJames C PaulsonJohn R MascolaFrederick W AltBryan BrineyDevin SokWilliam R Schief
Published in: Science translational medicine (2024)
A protective human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine will likely need to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). Vaccination with the germline-targeting immunogen eOD-GT8 60mer adjuvanted with AS01 B was found to induce VRC01-class bnAb precursors in 97% of vaccine recipients in the IAVI G001 phase 1 clinical trial; however, heterologous boost immunizations with antigens more similar to the native glycoprotein will be required to induce bnAbs. Therefore, we designed core-g28v2 60mer, a nanoparticle immunogen to be used as a first boost following eOD-GT8 60mer priming. We found, using a humanized mouse model approximating human conditions of VRC01-class precursor B cell diversity, affinity, and frequency, that both protein- and mRNA-based heterologous prime-boost regimens induced VRC01-class antibodies that gained key mutations and bound to near-native HIV envelope trimers lacking the N276 glycan. We further showed that VRC01-class antibodies induced by mRNA-based regimens could neutralize pseudoviruses lacking the N276 glycan. These results demonstrated that heterologous boosting can drive maturation toward VRC01-class bnAb development and supported the initiation of the IAVI G002 phase 1 trial testing mRNA-encoded nanoparticle prime-boost regimens.
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