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Towards an AIDS Vaccine: Unusual Antibody That Targets HIV Described by
Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
La Jolla, CA. June 23, 2003 - A group of scientists from The Scripps Research
Institute (TSRI) and several other institutions has solved the structure of an
antibody that effectively neutralizes human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the
virus that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
The antibody binds to sugars on the surface of HIV and effectively
neutralizes the virus because of its unique structure, which is described in
the latest issue of the journal Science.
"What we found was an unusual configuration of the antibody
in which its two Fab domains - the antigen recognition units - are 'interdigitating'
with each other," says TSRI Professor Ian Wilson, D.Phil., one of two TSRI professors
who led the research. "Nothing like this has ever been seen before."
This new structure is an important step toward the goal of designing an effective
vaccine against HIV, and it gives the researchers a new way to design antibodies
in general.
"It may enable us to make antibodies that recognize whole new
sets of molecules," says TSRI Professor Dennis Burton, Ph.D., the other TSRI
professor who led the research.
The Problem of HIV and Antibodies
HIV causes AIDS by binding to, entering and ultimately, killing T helper
cells, immune cells that are necessary to fight off infections by common bacteria
and other pathogens. As HIV depletes the body of T helper cells, common pathogens
can become potentially lethal.
The latest statistics are grim. The World Health Organization
estimates that around 40 million people are living with HIV worldwide. During
2001 alone, more than four million men, women, and children succumbed to the
disease, and by the end of that year, the disease had made orphans of 14 million
children. In the United States, 40,000 people are infected with HIV each year.
One of the most compelling medical challenges today is to develop
a vaccine that will provide complete prophylactic protection to someone who is
later exposed to this virus. An important part of such a vaccine will be a component
that elicits or induces effective neutralizing antibodies against HIV in the
blood of the vaccinated person.
Also called immunoglobins, antibodies are the basis for many
existing vaccines, including those against measles, polio, hepatitis B, and hepatitis
A. HIV antibodies are produced by the body's B cells after HIV enters the bloodstream.
During such an immune response, the antibodies circulate through the blood. Good
antibodies bind to and "neutralize" the virus, making it unable to invade cells.
Because neutralizing antibodies attack the virus before it enters cells, they
could conceivably be used to prevent HIV infection if they were present prior
to virus exposure. A vaccine would seek to elicit these neutralizing antibodies.
This is easier said than done. The body makes lots of antibodies
against HIV, but they are almost always unable to neutralize the virus. Much
of the viral surface is coated with carbohydrates (sugars), which are hard for
the immune system to attack because these sugars are made by human cells and
attached by human proteins. In other words, they are "self" and should not be
recognized by antibodies.
However, in rare instances some people have produced antibodies
that broadly neutralize HIV. One such antibody, called 2G12, was isolated from
an HIV-positive individual about a decade ago by Hermann Katinger, a doctor at
the Institute for Applied Microbiology of the University of Agriculture in Vienna,
Austria and one of the authors on the paper. This antibody is not like ordinary
antibodies.
"The Fab [antigen recognition] arms are interlocked," says
Burton. "That is a unique arrangement, and it is good for recognizing a cluster
of shapes like sugars on a virus."
The 2G12 antibody forms an unusual "dimer" interface where two antibodies
create an unusual multivalent binding interface with multiple binding sites that
recognizes an unusual arrangement of 2-3 "oligomannose" sugars on the surface
of protein spikes called gp120 that decorate the coat of HIV. This allows the
antibody to properly target HIV virions as foreign pathogens. The sugars are
human but their arrangement is foreign - and it is this arrangement that the
antibodies recognize.
These results are a step in the direction of designing an effective
AIDS vaccine because it reveals what these neutralizing antibodies should look
like. The next step is to use the structure of the antibody as a template to
design an "antigen" that would stimulate the human immune system to make 2G12
or similar broadly neutralizing antibodies against HIV.
The results are also important because the structure of the
antibody is something that has never been seen before. "Can we now," asks Wilson, "use
this [knowledge] to engineer antibodies with higher affinity against other antigens
or clusters of antigens?"
The TSRI study combined experts from several institutions besides TSRI, including
Pauline M. Rudd, Ph.D., and Raymond A. Dwek, D.Phil., D.Sc., FRS, from the Glycobiology
Institute at Oxford University in the United Kingdom. Also involved in the study
were researchers in the Department of Biological Science and Structural Biology
at Florida State University in Tallahassee.
The research article, "Antibody Domain Exchange is an Immunological
Solution to Carbohydrate Cluster Recognition" is authored by Daniel A. Calarese,
Christopher N. Scanlan, Michael B. Zwick, Songpon Deechongkit, Yusuke Mimura,
Renate Kunert, Ping Zhu, Mark R.Wormald, Robyn L. Stanfield, Kenneth H.
Roux, Jeffery W. Kelly, Pauline M. Rudd, Raymond A. Dwek, Hermann
Katinger, Dennis R. Burton, and Ian A. Wilson and appears in the June 27, 2003
issue of the journal Science.
The research was supported by The Skaggs Institute for Research,
which funds The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology at TSRI. TSRI is one of
the world's largest, private, non-profit biomedical research organizations and
is internationally recognized for its research into immunology, molecular and
cellular biology, chemistry, neurosciences, autoimmune diseases, cardiovascular
diseases and synthetic vaccine development. It is dedicated to the creation of
basic knowledge in the biosciences for medical application and the betterment
of human health, to the pursuit of fundamental scientific advances through interdisciplinary
programs and collaborations, and to the education and training of researchers
from around the world preparing to meet the scientific challenges of the future.
Grants from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
also supported this research. NIGMS is part of the National Institutes of Health
(NIH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and supports basic biomedical
research that lays the foundation for advances in disease diagnosis, treatment,
and prevention. NIGMS also trains tomorrow's scientists and makes special efforts
to increase the number of minority researchers. A component of the NIH, NIAID
conducts and supports research that strives to understand, treat, and ultimately
prevent the myriad infectious, immunologic, and allergic diseases that threaten
hundreds of millions of people worldwide. NIAID's mission is driven by a strong
commitment to basic research and the understanding that the fields of immunology,
microbiology, and infectious disease are related and complementary.
The research is further supported by the International AIDS
Vaccine Initiative (IAVI). Burton and Wilson are part of the multi-million-dollar
Neutralizing Antibody Consortium launched last year by IAVI, a global nonprofit
organization working to speed scientific progress toward developing safe and
effective vaccines to prevent HIV/AIDS that will be accessible worldwide. IAVI's
work focuses on four areas: mobilizing support through advocacy and education,
accelerating scientific progress, encouraging industrial participation in AIDS
vaccine development, and assuring global access. Burton is the director of the
Neutralizing Antibody Consortium.
For more information contact:
Jason Bardi
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.9254
Fax: 858.784.8118
jasonb@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2003 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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