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Selection of HIV Envelope strains for standardized assessments of vaccine-elicited antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC)-mediating antibodies.

Dieter MielkeSherry Stanfield-OakleyBhavesh BorateLeigh H FisherKatelyn FairclothMarina TuyishimeKelli GreeneHongmei GaoCarolyn WilliamsonLynn MorrisChristina OchsenbauerGeorgia TomarasBarton F HaynesDavid MontefioriJustin PollaraAllan C deCampGuido Ferrari
Published in: Journal of virology (2021)
Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) has been correlated with reduced risk of HIV-1 infection in several preclinical vaccine trials and the RV144 clinical trial, indicating this is a relevant antibody function to study. Given the diversity of HIV-1, the breadth of vaccine-induced antibody responses is a critical parameter to understand if a universal vaccine is to be realised. Moreover, breadth of ADCC responses can be influenced by different vaccine strategies and regimens, including adjuvants. Therefore, to accurately evaluate ADCC and to compare vaccine regimens, it is important to understand the range of HIV Envelope susceptibility to these responses. These evaluations have been limited because of the complexity of the assay and the lack of a comprehensive panel of viruses for the assessment of these humoral responses. Here, we used twenty-nine HIV-1 infectious molecular clones (IMCs) representing different Envelope subtypes and circulating recombinant forms to characterise susceptibility to ADCC from antibodies in plasma from infected individuals, including thirteen viraemic individuals, ten controllers and six with broadly neutralizing antibody responses. We found in our panel that ADCC susceptibility of the IMCs in our panel did not cluster by subtype, infectivity, level of CD4 downregulation, level of shedding, or neutralization sensitivity. Using partition-around-medoids (PAM) clustering to distinguish smaller groups of IMCs with similar ADCC susceptibility, we identified nested panels of four to eight IMCs that broadly represent the ADCC susceptibility of the entire 29 IMC panel. These panels, together with reagents developed to specifically accommodate circulating viruses at the geographical sites of vaccine trials, will provide a powerful tool to harmonise ADCC data generated across different studies, and detect common themes of ADCC responses elicited by various vaccines. IMPORTANCE Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) responses were found to correlate with reduced risk of infection in the RV144 trial, the only human HIV-1 vaccine to show any efficacy to date. However, reagents to understand the breadth and magnitude of these responses across preclinical and clinical vaccine trials remain underdeveloped. In this study, we characterise HIV-1 infectious molecular clones encoding 29 distinct envelope strains (Env-IMCs) to understand factors which impact virus susceptibility to ADCC and use statistical methods to identify smaller nested panels of four to eight Env-IMCs which accurately represent the full set. These reagents can be used as standardized reagents across studies to fully understand how ADCC may affect efficacy of future vaccine studies, and how studies differed in the breadth of responses developed.
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