A generalized HIV vaccine design strategy for priming of broadly neutralizing antibody responses

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Abstract

Vaccine induction of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to HIV remains a major challenge. Germline-targeting immunogens hold promise for initiating the induction of certain bnAb classes; yet for most bnAbs, a strong dependence on antibody heavy chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) is a major barrier. Exploiting ultradeep human antibody sequencing data, we identified a diverse set of potential antibody precursors for a bnAb with dominant HCDR3 contacts. We then developed HIV envelope trimer–based immunogens that primed responses from rare bnAb-precursor B cells in a mouse model and bound a range of potential bnAb-precursor human naïve B cells in ex vivo screens. Our repertoire-guided germline-targeting approach provides a framework for priming the induction of many HIV bnAbs and could be applied to most HCDR3-dominant antibodies from other pathogens.

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Steichen, J. M., Lin, Y. C., Havenar-Daughton, C., Pecetta, S., Ozorowski, G., Willis, J. R., … Schief, W. R. (2019). A generalized HIV vaccine design strategy for priming of broadly neutralizing antibody responses. Science, 366(6470). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aax4380

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