Document
Repeated exposure to heterologous hepatitis C viruses associates with enhanced neutralizing antibody breadth and potency
Linked Agent
Figueroa, Alexis, Author
Wang, Tingchang , Author
Zahid, Muhammad N. , Author
Wang, Shuyi, Author
Massaccesi, Guido, Author
Stavrakis, Georgia , Author
Crowe Jr, James E., Author
Flyak, Andrew I. , Author
Ji, Hongkai, Author
Ray, Stuart C., Author
Shaw, George M., Author
Cox, Andrea L. , Author
Bailey, Justin R., Author
Title of Periodical
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Country of Publication
USA
Place Published
The Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publisher
author, Frumento
Language
English
English Abstract
Abstract:
A prophylactic hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine that elicits neutralizing antibodies could be key to HCV eradication.
However, the genetic and antigenic properties of HCV envelope (E1E2) proteins capable of inducing anti-HCV broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) in humans have not been defined. Here, we investigated the development of bNAbs in longitudinal plasma of HCV-infected persons with persistent infection or spontaneous clearance of multiple reinfections.
By measuring plasma antibody neutralization of a heterologous virus panel, we found that the breadth and potency of the antibody response increased upon exposure to multiple genetically distinct infections and with longer duration of viremia. Greater genetic divergence between infecting strains was not associated with enhanced neutralizing breadth.
Rather, repeated exposure to antigenically related, antibody-sensitive E1E2s was associated with potent bNAb induction.
These data reveal that a prime-boost vaccine strategy with genetically distinct, antibody-sensitive viruses is a promising approach to inducing potent bNAbs in humans.
Member of
Identifier
https://digitalrepository.uob.edu.bh/id/593e6aa1-ccb9-477d-80d2-fa6e7ae7a901