Abstract

Studies in animal models are essential prerequisites for clinical trials of candidate HIV vaccines. Small animals, such as rabbits, are used to evaluate promising strategies prior to further immunogenicity and efficacy testing in nonhuman primates. Our goal was to determine how HIV-specific vaccine-elicited antibody responses, epitope specificity, and Fc-mediated functions in the rabbit model can predict those in the rhesus macaque (RM) model. Detailed comparisons of the HIV-1-specific IgG response were performed on serum from rabbits and RM given identical modified vaccinia virus Ankara-prime/gp120-boost immunization regimens. We found that vaccine-induced neutralizing antibody, gp120-binding antibody levels and immunodominant specificities, antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis of HIV-1 virions, and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) responses against gp120-coated target cells were similar in rabbits and RM. However, we also identified characteristics of humoral immunity that differed across species. ADCC against HIV-infected target cells was elicited in rabbits but not in RM, and we observed differences among subdominantly targeted epitopes. Human Fc receptor binding assays and analysis of antibody-cell interactions indicated that rabbit vaccine-induced antibodies effectively recruited and activated human natural killer cells, while vaccine-elicited RM antibodies were unable to activate either human or RM NK cells. Thus, our data demonstrate that both Fc-independent and Fc-dependent functions of rabbit antibodies can be measured with commonly used in vitro assays; however, the ability of immunogenicity studies performed in rabbits to predict responses in RM will vary depending on the particular immune parameter of interest.IMPORTANCE Nonneutralizing antibody functions have been associated with reduced infection risk, or control of virus replication, for HIV-1 and related viruses. It is therefore critical to evaluate development of these responses throughout all stages of preclinical testing. Rabbits are conventionally used to evaluate the ability of vaccine candidates to safely elicit antibodies that bind and neutralize HIV-1. However, it remained unexplored how effectively rabbits model the development of nonneutralizing antibody responses in primates. We administered identical HIV-1 vaccine regimens to rabbits and rhesus macaques and performed detailed comparisons of vaccine-induced antibody responses. We demonstrated that nonneutralizing HIV-specific antibody responses can be studied in the rabbit model and have identified aspects of these responses that are common, and those that are unique, to rabbits and rhesus macaques. Our findings will help determine how to best utilize preclinical rabbit and rhesus macaque models to accelerate HIV vaccine candidate testing in human trials.

Highlights

  • Studies in animal models are essential prerequisites for clinical trials of candidate HIV vaccines

  • Results of immune correlate analyses for the RV144 human clinical trial and preclinical studies conducted in rhesus macaques (RM) have demonstrated that nonneutralizing Fc receptor-dependent antiviral activities of antibodies, including antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) and antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP), are important components of immune responses associated with reduced risk of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV), or HIV infection or control of viremia [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]

  • Evidence from preclinical studies conducted in nonhuman primates and from the RV144 clinical trial have implicated Fc-dependent antibody functions as components of the immune responses associated with reduced risk of SIV, SHIV, and HIV infection or control of viremia [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17], making it critical to monitor the elicitation of antibodies with these functions throughout preclinical vaccine development

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Summary

Introduction

Studies in animal models are essential prerequisites for clinical trials of candidate HIV vaccines. Assessments of vaccine-induced humoral immunity in small-animal studies of candidate human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccines are most often limited to quantifying antibody responses capable of binding to the HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) and of neutralizing the virus by preventing infection of susceptible target cells. These antiviral activities of antibodies are solely dependent on interactions between the antibody and cognate antigen; they do not require other immunoproteins or immune cells. We find that sera of vaccinated rabbits mediate potent killing of HIV-1-infected cells, while almost no infected cell ADCC is observed for sera

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