[PDF][PDF] Human antibodies that neutralize HIV-1: identification, structures, and B cell ontogenies

PD Kwong, JR Mascola - Immunity, 2012 - cell.com
PD Kwong, JR Mascola
Immunity, 2012cell.com
Antibodies that neutralize diverse strains of HIV-1 develop in∼ 20% of HIV-1-infected
individuals, and isolation and structural characterization of these antibodies are revealing
how they recognize the envelope glycoprotein spike. Broadly reactive neutralizing
antibodies utilize just a few sites of spike vulnerability and converge on select modes of
recognition. These antibodies have unusual features: uncommonly long complementarity-
determining loops, extensive somatic mutation, or both. Recent advances in next-generation …
Antibodies that neutralize diverse strains of HIV-1 develop in ∼20% of HIV-1-infected individuals, and isolation and structural characterization of these antibodies are revealing how they recognize the envelope glycoprotein spike. Broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies utilize just a few sites of spike vulnerability and converge on select modes of recognition. These antibodies have unusual features: uncommonly long complementarity-determining loops, extensive somatic mutation, or both. Recent advances in next-generation sequencing of antibody-gene transcripts are providing genetic records of the development of neutralizing antibodies. These records inform an understanding of the naive B cell repertoire, of somatic mutation, and of the resulting antibody features that are critical to effective HIV-1 neutralization; based on these, we propose an ontogeny and structure-based system of antibody classification. The human immune system is capable of developing antibodies that broadly neutralize HIV-1—and an increasingly detailed view is accumulating for how effective immunity against HIV-1 can be generated.
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