Back to Search Start Over

Multivalent display of engineered HIV-1 envelope trimers on silica nanoparticles for targeting and in vitro activation of germline VRC01 B cells.

Authors :
Peterhoff, David
Thalhauser, Stefanie
Neckermann, Patrick
Barbey, Clara
Straub, Kristina
Nazet, Julian
Merkl, Rainer
Laengst, Gernot
Breunig, Miriam
Wagner, Ralf
Source :
European Journal of Pharmaceutics & Biopharmaceutics. Dec2022, Vol. 181, p88-101. 14p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

[Display omitted] Selective targeting of germline B cells with specifically designed germline-targeting HIV-1 envelope immunogens (GT-Env) is considered a feasible vaccination strategy to elicit broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). BnAbs are extremely valuable because they neutralize genetically distant viral strains at the same time. To overcome its inherently low affinity to germline B cells, the aim of the study was to present GT-Env via different immobilization strategies densely arrayed on the surface of nanoparticles. We engineered a prefusion-stabilized GT-Env trimer with affinity to VRC01 germline B cells using a bioinformatics-supported design approach. Distinct glycan modifications and amino acid substitutions yielded a GT-Env trimer which bound to the receptor with a K D of 11.5 µM. Silica nanoparticles with 200 nm diameter (SiNPs) were used for the multivalent display of the novel GT-Env with a 15 nm mean centre-to-centre spacing either by site-specific, covalent conjugation or at random, non-specific adsorption. Oriented, covalent GT-Env conjugation revealed better binding of structure dependent bnAbs as compared to non-specifically adsorbed GT-Env. In addition, GT-Env covalently attached activated a B cell line expressing the germline VRC01 receptor at an EC 50 value in the nanomolar range (4 nM), while soluble GT-Env required 1,000-fold higher concentrations to induce signalling. The significantly lower GT-Env concentration was likely required due to avidity effects, which were in the picomolar range. Thus, low affinity antigens may particularly benefit from a particulate and multivalent delivery. In future, SiNPs are ideal to be modified in a modular design with various GT-Env variants that target different stages of germline and bnAb precursor B cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09396411
Volume :
181
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Pharmaceutics & Biopharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160584436
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpb.2022.10.007