One of the most crucial and elusive goals of an effective HIV vaccine is to stimulate antibodies that can attack the virus even as it relentlessly mutates.
Now a research team, led by investigators at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute and the Vaccine Research Center of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), has tracked rare potent antibodies in an HIV-infected individual and determined sequential structures that point to how they developed.
The details form a blueprint that will help guide researchers as they try to build an experimental vaccine that recreates the pathway that gives rise to the important broadly neutralizing antibodies.
The findings are reported online March 3 in the journal Cell.
"We have followed a less potent neutralizing lineage in this particular individual before, but now we have found a far more potent antibody and have been able to study its development over six years," said first author Mattia Bonsignori, M.D., of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute. "With sequential structures, we can see the changes that occurred in both antibody and virus."
The work was aided by the identification six years ago of a person in Africa whose HIV was diagnosed within weeks of infection and who provided blood samples to researchers periodically from the time of diagnosis, allowing researchers to examine in real time the co-evolution of the virus and the body's immune response.
Using high-resolution electron microscopes and building structural models, the scientists were able to see the antibodies binding to the HIV envelope and the complicated structural changes that occurred in the antibody and the virus.
"We could visualize this complex dance between the virus and the antibody and understand exactly how the virus was teaching the antibody to be a broadly neutralizing antibody," said Peter D. Kwong, Ph.D., chief of the Structural Biology Section at the NIAID Vaccine Research Center.
Kwong said understanding that interaction has been an important piece of the puzzle for vaccine development, because HIV mutates so rapidly. Broadly neutralizing HIV antibodies have been isolated from chronically infected people, giving HIV vaccine developers hope that they could stimulate production of such antibodies in healthy people as protection against the virus.
"Now we've been able to go back and see what happened," said senior author Barton F. Haynes, director of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute. "We hope we can recreate this pathway but because it is so tortuous, it will be difficult."
Haynes said the research team's insights would be tested in animal models. He said a second key to creating an effective vaccine is understanding how the body's immune system often thwarts development of broadly neutralizing antibodies. Work to solve that is ongoing.