HIV uses several strategies to escape immune pressureSeptember 21, 2009ATLANTA - A study of how HIV mutates in response to immune system pressure by Emory Vaccine Center researchers shows that the virus can take several escape routes, not one preferred route. The results are online and scheduled for publication in the September issue of the journal Public Library of Science Pathogens. The human immune system has the ability to temporarily overpower HIV in early infection. Recent research has shown that most newly infected patients develop neutralizing antibodies. These are blood proteins that glob onto the virus and would allow patients to defend themselves - if they were facing only one target. The problem: HIV's ability to mutate, disguising itself enough to get away from the antibodies. HIV eventually wears down the immune system into exhaustion. The Emory team's results suggest that if researchers succeed in identifying a vaccine component that can stimulate neutralizing antibodies, HIV's capacity for rapid mutation could still be a confounding factor. A single type of neutralizing antibody may not be enough to contain HIV, says senior author Cynthia Derdeyn, PhD, associate professor of pathology at Emory University School of Medicine, Emory Vaccine Center and Yerkes National Primate Research Center. "These neutralizing antibodies work really well - they hit the virus fast and hard," she says. "But so far, every time we look, the virus escapes." Derdeyn and her colleagues collaborated with a public health program directed by Susan Allen, PhD, professor of global health at Emory's Rollins School of Public Health, that enrolls heterosexual couples with one HIV-positive partner in Zambia. The program provides thousands of couples counseling and condom supplies every three months. Despite these measures, a low level of HIV transmission still occurs. The collaboration allowed the team to take blood samples a few weeks after infection occurred and then later as two participants' immune responses continued. Senior researchers Rong Rong and Bing Li isolated individual viruses over the first two years of HIV infection and tested how well the patients' own antibodies could neutralize them. "In one patient where we had very early samples, there was evidence that neutralizing antibody came up within weeks, and that's earlier than what was previously thought," Derdeyn says. The initially infecting virus starts off homogenous because of a "genetic bottleneck" effect: http://whsc.emory.edu/home/news/releases/2009/01/stds-disrupt-genetic-bottleneck.html In both patients, some viruses mutated part of their outer proteins so that after the mutation, an enzyme would be likely to attach a sugar molecule to it. The sugar interferes with antibody attack. However this tactic, known as the "glycan shield," was not observed in all cases. Other viruses mutated the part of the outer protein that the neutralizing antibodies stick to directly. In both patients, many changes in the virus' genetic code were necessary for escape. "We need to understand early events in the immune response if we are going to figure out what a potential vaccine should have in it," Derdeyn says. "What we can show is that even in one patient, several escape strategies are going on." That means that in order to be immune to HIV infection, someone may need to have several types of neutralizing antibodies ready to go. Seeing how the virus mutates will allow researchers to choose the best parts to put in a vaccine, she says. A companion paper in the same issue of PLOS Pathogens from South African researchers demonstrates similar cycles of neutralizing antibody attack and escape. Emory University |
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| Related Neutralizing Antibodies Current Events and Neutralizing Antibodies News Articles New findings suggest strategy to help generate HIV-neutralizing antibodies New discoveries about anti-HIV antibodies may bring researchers a step closer to creating an effective HIV vaccine, according to a new paper co-authored by scientists at the Vaccine Research Center of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. Scientists explain binding action of 2 key HIV antibodies; could lead to new vaccine design A very close and detailed study of how the most robust antibodies work to block the HIV virus as it seeks entry into healthy cells has revealed a new direction for researchers hoping to design an effective vaccine. New chemically-activated antigen could expedite development of HIV vaccine Scientists working to develop a vaccine for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) report they have created the first antigen that induces protective antibodies capable of blocking infection of human cells by genetically-diverse strains of HIV. Researchers induce HIV-neutralizing antibodies that recognize HIV-1 envelope protein, lipids For the first time, researchers have experimentally induced antibodies that neutralize HIV-1 and simultaneously recognize both HIV-1 envelope protein and lipids. Penn-Wistar team gains insight into HIV vaccine failure A team of researchers from The Wistar Institute and the University of Pennsylvania reports new evidence refuting a popular hypothesis about the highly publicized failure in 2007 of the Merck STEP HIV vaccine study that cast doubt on the feasibility of HIV-1 vaccines. Study offers insights into failed HIV-1 vaccine trial Following the disbandment of the STEP trial to test the efficacy of the Merck HIV-1 vaccine candidate in 2007, the leading explanation for why the vaccine was ineffective - and may have even increased susceptibility to acquiring the virus - centered on the hypothesis that high levels of baseline Ad5-specific neutralizing antibodies may have increased HIV-1 acquisition among the study subjects who received the vaccine by increasing Ad5-specific CD4+ T-cells that were susceptible to HIV-1 infection. NIAID media availability: New strategy proposed for designing antibody-based HIV vaccine Most vaccines that protect against viruses generate infection-fighting proteins called antibodies that either block infection or help eliminate the virus before it can cause disease. New images may improve vaccine design for deadly rotavirus Howard Hughes Medical Institute researchers are reporting the first detailed molecular snapshots of a deadly gastrointestinal virus as it is caught in the grasp of an immune system molecule with the capacity to destroy it. New technology opens gateway to studying HIV-specific neutralizing antibodies Many scientists believe a vaccine that prevents HIV infection will need to stimulate the body to make neutralizing antibodies, infection-fighting proteins that prevent HIV from entering immune cells. Scientists identify human monoclonal antibodies effective against bird and seasonal flu viruses Researchers at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Dana-Farber), Burnham Institute for Medical Research (Burnham) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have reported the identification of human monoclonal antibodies (mAb) that neutralize an unprecedented range of influenza A viruses, including avian influenza A (H5N1) virus, previous pandemic influenza viruses, and some seasonal influenza viruses. More Neutralizing Antibodies Current Events and Neutralizing Antibodies News Articles |
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