Browsing by Author "Mason, Rosemarie D"
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Item Open Access Immunological and virological mechanisms of vaccine-mediated protection against SIV and HIV.(Nature, 2014-01-23) Roederer, Mario; Keele, Brandon F; Schmidt, Stephen D; Mason, Rosemarie D; Welles, Hugh C; Fischer, Will; Labranche, Celia; Foulds, Kathryn E; Louder, Mark K; Yang, Zhi-Yong; Todd, John-Paul M; Buzby, Adam P; Mach, Linh V; Shen, Ling; Seaton, Kelly E; Ward, Brandy M; Bailer, Robert T; Gottardo, Raphael; Gu, Wenjuan; Ferrari, Guido; Alam, S Munir; Denny, Thomas N; Montefiori, David C; Tomaras, Georgia D; Korber, Bette T; Nason, Martha C; Seder, Robert A; Koup, Richard A; Letvin, Norman L; Rao, Srinivas S; Nabel, Gary J; Mascola, John RA major challenge for the development of a highly effective AIDS vaccine is the identification of mechanisms of protective immunity. To address this question, we used a nonhuman primate challenge model with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). We show that antibodies to the SIV envelope are necessary and sufficient to prevent infection. Moreover, sequencing of viruses from breakthrough infections revealed selective pressure against neutralization-sensitive viruses; we identified a two-amino-acid signature that alters antigenicity and confers neutralization resistance. A similar signature confers resistance of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 to neutralization by monoclonal antibodies against variable regions 1 and 2 (V1V2), suggesting that SIV and HIV share a fundamental mechanism of immune escape from vaccine-elicited or naturally elicited antibodies. These analyses provide insight into the limited efficacy seen in HIV vaccine trials.Item Open Access Recapitulation of HIV-1 Env-antibody coevolution in macaques leading to neutralization breadth.(Science (New York, N.Y.), 2020-11-19) Roark, Ryan S; Li, Hui; Williams, Wilton B; Chug, Hema; Mason, Rosemarie D; Gorman, Jason; Wang, Shuyi; Lee, Fang-Hua; Rando, Juliette; Bonsignori, Mattia; Hwang, Kwan-Ki; Saunders, Kevin O; Wiehe, Kevin; Moody, M Anthony; Hraber, Peter T; Wagh, Kshitij; Giorgi, Elena E; Russell, Ronnie M; Bibollet-Ruche, Frederic; Liu, Weimin; Connell, Jesse; Smith, Andrew G; DeVoto, Julia; Murphy, Alexander I; Smith, Jessica; Ding, Wenge; Zhao, Chengyan; Chohan, Neha; Okumura, Maho; Rosario, Christina; Ding, Yu; Lindemuth, Emily; Bauer, Anya M; Bar, Katharine J; Ambrozak, David; Chao, Cara W; Chuang, Gwo-Yu; Geng, Hui; Lin, Bob C; Louder, Mark K; Nguyen, Richard; Zhang, Baoshan; Lewis, Mark G; Raymond, Donald D; Doria-Rose, Nicole A; Schramm, Chaim A; Douek, Daniel C; Roederer, Mario; Kepler, Thomas B; Kelsoe, Garnett; Mascola, John R; Kwong, Peter D; Korber, Bette T; Harrison, Stephen C; Haynes, Barton F; Hahn, Beatrice H; Shaw, George MNeutralizing antibodies elicited by HIV-1 coevolve with viral envelope proteins (Env) in distinctive patterns, in some cases acquiring substantial breadth. We report that primary HIV-1 envelope proteins-when expressed by simian-human immunodeficiency viruses in rhesus macaques-elicited patterns of Env-antibody coevolution strikingly similar to those in humans. This included conserved immunogenetic, structural and chemical solutions to epitope recognition and precise Env-am ino acid substitutions, insertions and deletions leading to virus persistence. The structure of one rhesus antibody, capable of neutralizing 49% of a 208-strain panel, revealed a V2-apex mode of recognition like that of human bNAbs PGT145/PCT64-35S. Another rhesus antibody bound the CD4-binding site by CD4 mimicry mirroring human bNAbs 8ANC131/CH235/VRC01. Virus-antibody coevolution in macaques can thus recapitulate developmental features of human bNAbs, thereby guiding HIV-1 immunogen design.