1. Anti-V2 antibody deficiency in individuals infected with HIV-1 in Cameroon.
- Author
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Liu, Lily, Li, Liuzhe, Nanfack, Aubin, Mayr, Luzia M., Soni, Sonal, Kohutnicki, Adam, Agyingi, Lucy, Wang, Xiao-Hong, Tuen, Michael, Shao, Yongzhao, Totrov, Maxim, Zolla-Pazner, Susan, Kong, Xian-Peng, Duerr, Ralf, and Gorny, Miroslaw K.
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AIDS vaccines , *VACCINE effectiveness , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *SEQUENCE analysis , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
The results of the RV144 vaccine clinical trial showed a correlation between high level of anti-V1V2 antibodies (Abs) and a decreased risk of acquiring HIV-1 infection. This turned the focus of HIV vaccine design to the induction of elevated levels of anti-V2 Abs to increase vaccine efficacy. In plasma samples from HIV-1 infected Cameroonian individuals, we observed broad variations in levels of anti-V2 Abs, and 6 of the 79 plasma samples tested longitudinally displayed substantial deficiency of V2 Abs. Sequence analysis of the V2 region from plasma viruses and multivariate analyses of V2 characteristics showed a significant difference in several features between V2-deficient and V2-reactive plasma Abs. These results suggest that HIV vaccine immunogens containing a shorter V2 region with fewer glycosylation sites and higher electrostatic charges can be beneficial for induction of a higher level of anti-V2 Abs and thus contribute to HIV vaccine efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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