Scientists have thought for some time that multiple immunizations, each tailored to specific stages of the immune response, could be used to generate a special class of
«As HIV mutates in a patient, the immune system continually adapts. In some patients, this process produces broadly neutralizing antibodies, which are unusual antibodies that can bind to and neutralize a wide range of globally occurring HIV variants. These are the antibodies we want to try to elicit with a vaccine," says
«Our experiments suggest that by stimulating the immune response with tailored immunizations at specific stages, it may be possible to successfully mimic this process," says
HIV is a pernicious virus precisely because its continual mutations make it a difficult target for antibodies, immune proteins that recognize foreign molecules called antigens. But one part of the virus cannot mutate: the binding site on the spike protein with which the virus attacks immune cells known as CD4 T cells. This part of the virus can’t change because without it, HIV would not be able to attach to and infect the T cells. As a result, it is a key part of the antigen targeted by some broadly neutralizing antibodies, which overcome attempts by the virus to protect this vulnerable site.
A small number of HIV patients develop broadly neutralizing antibodies naturally, as a result of infection. Like all other antibodies, they are produced by a type of immune cell, known as a B cell, which undergoes rounds of mutations that refine its antibodies’ ability to precisely target a specific antigen. As compared with antibodies against other pathogens, such as flu, these broadly neutralizing antibodies are distinctive, in part because they have undergone a great deal of mutation. Researchers have been working to find a shortcut to the process, but so far these broadly neutralizing antibodies have proven difficult to elicit with a vaccine.
But where one vaccine has failed, perhaps two or more can succeed. The Rockefeller research team tested how two variations of the crucial HIV antigen affected the B cells’ response when administered either early in the progression of the immune system’s initial response to HIV, or later during the process. The work was conducted in mice genetically engineered to produce antibodies resembling those of humans.
One group of mice had antibodies with no
For each scenario, they tested both types of antigens. The first, an antigen engineered to make the crucial CD4 binding site easily accessible, was made by William Schief and colleagues at Scripps. The second, designed by John Moore and Rogier Sanders at Weill Cornell, closely resembled the natural version found in HIV.
For the
«The engineered antigen made it possible for the mice’s hybrid immune system to get the response started. However, the more natural antigen is better at fine tuning the antibodies," von Boehmer says.
The implication is that by delivering specifically tailored antigens at specific times, the body’s natural immune response can be guided, stepwise, through the process of developing broadly neutralizing antibodies.
«While our results suggest sequential immunizations may make it possible to vaccinate against HIV, we have only just begun to understand how this sequence would work," Dosenovic says. «We know the beginning and the end, but we don’t know what should happen in the middle.»
This research was led by Nussenzweig, Zanvil A. Cohn and Ralph M. Steinman Professor, a senior physician at The Rockefeller University Hospital and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, and Schief, a professor at The Scripps Research Institute and director, Vaccine Design of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative Neutralizing Antibody Center at Scripps.
In two papers published June 18 in Science, the researchers who generated the antigens used in this study tested them individually for potential use in vaccines. With the engineered antigen made in Schief’s lab at Scripps, this team found they could induce the production of antibody «precursors» with some of the traits necessary to recognize and block HIV infection. Like the Cell paper, this study suggests the engineered antigen could be a good candidate as the first in a series of immunizations against HIV. Likewise, in a separate Science paper, Sanders, at Weill Cornell, and his colleagues describe using the native antigens to induce the production of antibodies against a single strain of the virus, an important first step toward a vaccine.
http://newswire.rockefeller.edu/2015/06/18/sequential-immunizations-could-be-the-key-