[HTML][HTML] Naturally selected hepatitis C virus polymorphisms confer broad neutralizing antibody resistance

JR Bailey, LN Wasilewski, AE Snider… - The Journal of …, 2015 - Am Soc Clin Investig
JR Bailey, LN Wasilewski, AE Snider, R El-Diwany, WO Osburn, Z Keck, SKH Foung…
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2015Am Soc Clin Investig
For hepatitis C virus (HCV) and other highly variable viruses, broadly neutralizing mAbs are
an important guide for vaccine development. The development of resistance to anti-HCV
mAbs is poorly understood, in part due to a lack of neutralization testing against diverse,
representative panels of HCV variants. Here, we developed a neutralization panel
expressing diverse, naturally occurring HCV envelopes (E1E2s) and used this panel to
characterize neutralizing breadth and resistance mechanisms of 18 previously described …
For hepatitis C virus (HCV) and other highly variable viruses, broadly neutralizing mAbs are an important guide for vaccine development. The development of resistance to anti-HCV mAbs is poorly understood, in part due to a lack of neutralization testing against diverse, representative panels of HCV variants. Here, we developed a neutralization panel expressing diverse, naturally occurring HCV envelopes (E1E2s) and used this panel to characterize neutralizing breadth and resistance mechanisms of 18 previously described broadly neutralizing anti-HCV human mAbs. The observed mAb resistance could not be attributed to polymorphisms in E1E2 at known mAb-binding residues. Additionally, hierarchical clustering analysis of neutralization resistance patterns revealed relationships between mAbs that were not predicted by prior epitope mapping, identifying 3 distinct neutralization clusters. Using this clustering analysis and envelope sequence data, we identified polymorphisms in E2 that confer resistance to multiple broadly neutralizing mAbs. These polymorphisms, which are not at mAb contact residues, also conferred resistance to neutralization by plasma from HCV-infected subjects. Together, our method of neutralization clustering with sequence analysis reveals that polymorphisms at noncontact residues may be a major immune evasion mechanism for HCV, facilitating viral persistence and presenting a challenge for HCV vaccine development.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation