HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees.

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Yates, Nicole L

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deCamp, Allan C

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Korber, Bette T

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Liao, Hua-Xin

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Irene, Carmela

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Pinter, Abraham

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Peacock, James

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Harris, Linda J

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Sawant, Sheetal

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Hraber, Peter

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Shen, Xiaoying

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Rerks-Ngarm, Supachai

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Pitisuttithum, Punnee

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Nitayapan, Sorachai

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Berman, Phillip W

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Robb, Merlin L

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Pantaleo, Giuseppe

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Zolla-Pazner, Susan

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Haynes, Barton F

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Alam, S Munir

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Montefiori, David C

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Tomaras, Georgia D

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Silvestri, Guido

dc.date.accessioned

2018-11-27T16:58:36Z

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2018-11-27T16:58:36Z

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2018-04

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2018-11-27T16:58:30Z

dc.description.abstract

Induction of broadly cross-reactive antiviral humoral responses with the capacity to target globally diverse circulating strains is a key goal for HIV-1 immunogen design. A major gap in the field is the identification of diverse HIV-1 envelope antigens to evaluate vaccine regimens for binding antibody breadth. In this study, we define unique antigen panels to map HIV-1 vaccine-elicited antibody breadth and durability. Diverse HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins were selected based on genetic and geographic diversity to cover the global epidemic, with a focus on sexually acquired transmitted/founder viruses with a tier 2 neutralization phenotype. Unique antigenicity was determined by nonredundancy (Spearman correlation), and antigens were clustered using partitioning around medoids (PAM) to identify antigen diversity. Cross-validation demonstrated that the PAM method was better than selection by reactivity and random selection. Analysis of vaccine-elicited V1V2 binding antibody in longitudinal samples from the RV144 clinical trial revealed the striking heterogeneity among individual vaccinees in maintaining durable responses. These data support the idea that a major goal for vaccine development is to improve antibody levels, breadth, and durability at the population level. Elucidating the level and durability of vaccine-elicited binding antibody breadth needed for protection is critical for the development of a globally efficacious HIV vaccine.IMPORTANCE The path toward an efficacious HIV-1 vaccine will require characterization of vaccine-induced immunity that can recognize and target the highly genetically diverse virus envelope glycoproteins. Antibodies that target the envelope glycoproteins, including diverse sequences within the first and second hypervariable regions (V1V2) of gp120, were identified as correlates of risk for the one partially efficacious HIV-1 vaccine. To build upon this discovery, we experimentally and computationally evaluated humoral responses to define envelope glycoproteins representative of the antigenic diversity of HIV globally. These diverse envelope antigens distinguished binding antibody breadth and durability among vaccine candidates, thus providing insights for advancing the most promising HIV-1 vaccine candidates.

dc.identifier

JVI.01843-17

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0022-538X

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1098-5514

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17674

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eng

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American Society for Microbiology

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Journal of virology

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10.1128/JVI.01843-17

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Animals

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Macaca mulatta

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Humans

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HIV-1

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HIV Infections

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HIV Envelope Protein gp120

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AIDS Vaccines

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HIV Antibodies

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Genetic Variation

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HIV-1 Envelope Glycoproteins from Diverse Clades Differentiate Antibody Responses and Durability among Vaccinees.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Shen, Xiaoying|0000-0001-8076-1931|0000-0002-8387-3952

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Alam, S Munir|0000-0003-0941-0703

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Montefiori, David C|0000-0003-0856-6319

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Tomaras, Georgia D|0000-0001-8076-1931

pubs.issue

8

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School of Medicine

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Duke

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Duke Human Vaccine Institute

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Institutes and Centers

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Pathology

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Clinical Science Departments

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Medicine, Duke Human Vaccine Institute

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Medicine

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Immunology

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Basic Science Departments

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Duke Global Health Institute

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University Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Surgery, Surgical Sciences

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Surgery

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Molecular Genetics and Microbiology

pubs.publication-status

Published

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92

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