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Aberrant B cell repertoire selection associated with HIV neutralizing antibody breadth

Authors :
Kwan-Ki Hwang
M. Anthony Moody
Isabela Pedroza-Pacheco
Persephone Borrow
Ji-Yeun Lee
Ramona A. Hoh
Katherine J. L. Jackson
Scott D. Boyd
Krishna M. Roskin
Hua-Xin Liao
Andrew Fire
Mattia Bonsignori
Shilpa A. Joshi
Barton F. Haynes
Source :
Nature Immunology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Research, 2020.

Abstract

A goal of HIV vaccine development is to elicit antibodies with neutralizing breadth. Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) to HIV often have unusual sequences with long heavy-chain complementarity-determining region loops, high somatic mutation rates and polyreactivity. A subset of HIV-infected individuals develops such antibodies, but it is unclear whether this reflects systematic differences in their antibody repertoires or is a consequence of rare stochastic events involving individual clones. We sequenced antibody heavy-chain repertoires in a large cohort of HIV-infected individuals with bNAb responses or no neutralization breadth and uninfected controls, identifying consistent features of bNAb repertoires, encompassing thousands of B cell clones per individual, with correlated T cell phenotypes. These repertoire features were not observed during chronic cytomegalovirus infection in an independent cohort. Our data indicate that the development of numerous B cell lineages with antibody features associated with autoreactivity may be a key aspect in the development of HIV neutralizing antibody breadth.<br />A subset of HIV-infected individuals can develop broadly neutralizing antibodies. Boyd and colleagues studied such HIV-infected individuals and found significant perturbations in their antibody repertoires, including increased frequencies of B cells expressing antibodies with features associated with autoreactivity.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9943274d135dc96c99ff37a32bac7556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-019-0581-0