Abstract
Understanding the interplay between systemic and mucosal anti-HIV antibodies can provide important insights to develop new prevention strategies. We used passive immunization via systemic and/or mucosal routes to establish cause-and-effect between well-characterized monoclonal antibodies and protection against intrarectal (i.r.) SHIV challenge. In a pilot study, for which we re-used animals previously exposed to SHIV but completely protected from viremia by different classes of anti-HIV neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), we made a surprise finding: low-dose intravenous (i.v.) HGN194-IgG1, a human neutralizing mAb against the conserved V3-loop crown, was ineffective when given alone but protected 100% of animals when combined with i.r. applied HGN194-dIgA2 that by itself had only protected 17% of the animals. Here we sought to confirm the unexpected synergy between systemically administered IgG1 and mucosally applied dIgA HGN194 forms using six groups of naïve macaques (n=6/group). Animals received i.v. HGN194-IgG1 alone or combined with i.r.-administered dIgA forms; controls remained untreated. HGN194-IgG1 i.v. doses were given 24 hours before – and all i.r. dIgA doses 30 min before – i.r. exposure to a single high-dose of SHIV-1157ipEL-p. All controls became viremic. Among passively immunized animals, the combination of IgG1+dIgA2 again protected 100% of the animals. In contrast, single-agent i.v. IgG1 protected only one of six animals (17%) – consistent with our pilot data. IgG1 combined with dIgA1 or dIgA1+dIgA2 protected 83% (5/6) of the animals. The dIgA1+dIgA2 combination without the systemically administered dose of IgG1 protected 67% (4/6) of the macaques. We conclude that combining suboptimal antibody defenses at systemic and mucosal levels can yield synergy and completely prevent virus acquisition.
Highlights
Worldwide, most new HIV-1 infections occur through mucosal exposures, including sexual transmission as well as perinatally acquired infections
A Minimally Protective Dose of HGN194IgG1 Given i.v., Combined With Weakly Protective HGN194-dimeric IgA2 (dIgA2), Prevented Viremia After High-Dose SHIV-C Challenge In SHIV-exposed but uninfected animals, we had observed a strong synergy between two forms of HGN-194: IgG1 and dIgA2 [16]
HGN194-dIgA2 alone had protected only one out of six naïve rhesus macaques (RMs) in the past [12], the strong protection of the combination seen in the current study suggests synergy between systemically applied HGN194-IgG1 and topically administered HGN194-dIgA2
Summary
Most new HIV-1 infections occur through mucosal exposures, including sexual transmission as well as perinatally acquired infections. Mucosal fluids and epithelial barriers represent portals of entry for HIV-1 for more than 90% of newly acquired infections. Mucosal fluids contain different classes of immunoglobulins: IgM, IgG, and IgA. While IgG can be synthesized by the subepithelial plasma cells, it originates from the systemic circulation after crossing blood vessels, tissue dissemination, and transepithelial transport by the Fc neonatal receptor (FcRn). IgM and IgA destined for mucosal fluids are generated by subepithelial plasma cells as polymers. IgA is produced by subepithelial plasma cells as dimer - incorporating the J chain, which permits the transepithelial transport of dimeric IgAs (dIgAs). The human body generates more IgA per day than all other classes of immunoglobulins combined [4]; most of this IgA is destined for transepithelial transport and entry into mucosal fluids. SIgA needs to be replaced on an ongoing basis
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