Abstract

BackgroundWe previously described a potent recombinant HIV-1 neutralizing protein, sCD4-17b, composed of soluble CD4 attached via a flexible polypeptide linker to an SCFv of the 17b human monoclonal antibody directed against the highly conserved CD4-induced bridging sheet of gp120 involved in coreceptor binding. The sCD4 moiety of the bifunctional protein binds to gp120 on free virions, thereby enabling the 17b SCFv moiety to bind and block the gp120/coreceptor interaction required for entry. The previous studies using the MAGI-CCR5 assay system indicated that sCD4-17b (in concentrated cell culture medium, or partially purified) potently neutralized several genetically diverse HIIV-1 primary isolates; however, at the concentrations tested it was ineffective against several other strains despite the conservation of binding sites for both CD4 and 17b. To address this puzzle, we designed variants of sCD4-17b with different linker lengths, and tested the neutralizing activities of the immunoaffinity purified proteins over a broader concentration range against a large number of genetically diverse HIV-1 primary isolates, using the TZM-bl Env pseudotype assay system. We also examined the sCD4-17b sensitivities of isogenic viruses generated from different producer cell types.ResultsWe observed that immunoaffinity purified sCD4-17b effectively neutralized HIV-1 pseudotypes, including those from HIV-1 isolates previously found to be relatively insensitive in the MAGI-CCR5 assay. The potencies were equivalent for the original construct and a variant with a longer linker, as observed with both pseudotype particles and infectious virions; by contrast, a construct with a linker too short to enable simultaneous binding of the sCD4 and 17b SCFv moieties was much less effective. sCD4-17b displayed potent neutralizing activity against 100% of nearly 4 dozen HIV-1 primary isolates from diverse genetic subtypes (clades A, B, C, D, F, and circulating recombinant forms AE and AG). The neutralization breadth and potency were superior to what have been reported for the broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies IgG b12, 2G12, 2F5, and 4E10. The activity of sCD4-17b was found to be similar against isogenic virus particles from infectious molecular clones derived either directly from the transfected producer cell line or after a single passage through PBMCs; this contrasted with the monoclonal antibodies, which were less potent against the PMBC-passaged viruses.ConclusionsThe results highlight the extremely potent and broad neutralizing activity of sCD4-17b against genetically diverse HIV-1 primary isolates. The bifunctional protein has potential applications for antiviral approaches to combat HIV infection.

Highlights

  • We previously described a potent recombinant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 neutralizing protein, sCD4-17b, composed of soluble CD4 attached via a flexible polypeptide linker to an SCFv of the 17b human monoclonal antibody directed against the highly conserved CD4-induced bridging sheet of gp120 involved in coreceptor binding

  • We previously reported the design of a bifunctional HIV-1 neutralizing protein that exploits the two-step receptor interaction mechanism to circumvent the conformational masking and steric hindrance mechanisms that impede antibody access to the conserved bridging sheet on gp120 [29]. sCD4-17b is a recombinant single chain protein consisting of the first 2 domains of human CD4 attached by a flexible polypeptide linker to a single chain variable region construct (SCFv) of the 17b monoclonal antibodies (MAbs)

  • The neutralization assay employed infectious HIV-1 virions from several primary isolates, using the MAGI-CCR5 system based on microscopic visualization and counting of infected cells after in situ staining for b-galactosidase-positive nuclei [35,36]

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Summary

Introduction

We previously described a potent recombinant HIV-1 neutralizing protein, sCD4-17b, composed of soluble CD4 attached via a flexible polypeptide linker to an SCFv of the 17b human monoclonal antibody directed against the highly conserved CD4-induced bridging sheet of gp120 involved in coreceptor binding. Particular attention has been given to a “conformational masking” mechanism [9] whereby the highly conserved “bridging sheet” of gp120 [10,11], a critical component of the coreceptor binding site [12,13], is hidden or unformed on free virions, and becomes exposed/ formed/stabilized only after gp120 undergoes major conformation changes induced by CD4 binding [9,14,15]. These structural complexities have profound implications for HIV neutralization by antibody. A tempting but vexing challenge arises, namely how to design a strategy whereby an anti-bridging sheet antibody can access its highly conserved epitope on the free virion prior to its engagement with CD4 on the target cell, neutralizing infectivity for genetically diverse HIV-1 variants

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