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Structure-based design of native-like HIV-1 envelope trimers to silence non-neutralizing epitopes and eliminate CD4 binding.

Daniel W KulpJon M SteichenMatthias G PauthnerXiaozhen HuTorben SchiffnerAlessia LiguoriChristopher A CottrellColin Havenar-DaughtonGabriel OzorowskiErik GeorgesonOleksandr KalyuzhniyJordan R WillisMichael KubitzYumiko AdachiSamantha M ReissMia ShinNatalia de ValAndrew B WardShane CrottyDennis R BurtonWilliam R Schief
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
Elicitation of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) is a primary HIV vaccine goal. Native-like trimers mimicking virion-associated spikes present nearly all bnAb epitopes and are therefore promising vaccine antigens. However, first generation native-like trimers expose epitopes for non-neutralizing antibodies (non-nAbs), which may hinder bnAb induction. We here employ computational and structure-guided design to develop improved native-like trimers that reduce exposure of non-nAb epitopes in the V3-loop and trimer base, minimize both CD4 reactivity and CD4-induced non-nAb epitope exposure, and increase thermal stability while maintaining bnAb antigenicity. In rabbit immunizations with native-like trimers of the 327c isolate, improved trimers suppress elicitation of V3-directed and tier-1 neutralizing antibodies and induce robust autologous tier-2 neutralization, unlike a first-generation trimer. The improved native-like trimers from diverse HIV isolates, and the design methods, have promise to assist in the development of a HIV vaccine.
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