Broadly reactive antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxic response to HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins precedes broad neutralizing response in human infection
Koup, Richard A. ; Pikora, Cheryl A. ; Mazzara, Gail ; Panicali, Dennis ; Sullivan, John L.
Citations
Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
UMass Chan Affiliations
Document Type
Publication Date
Subject Area
Embargo Expiration Date
Link to Full Text
Abstract
To determine if and when the antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxic (ADCC) response of human serum exhibits broad reactivity across HIV-1 strains, multiple sera were tested for their ability to mediate ADCC against target cells infected with recombinant vaccinia vectors expressing envelope genes of HTLV-IIIB or HTLV-IIIRF. These vectors were found to express the envelope glycoproteins of the two HIV-1 strains and so were appropriate targets for ADCC assays. All the HIV-1-positive sera were able to mediate ADCC against both HTLV-IIIB and HTLV-IIIRF envelope-expressing targets at similar titer. In sera from early seroconverters, the ADCC response was again broadly reactive, even in those sera that exhibited strain-specific neutralizing antibody responses. The ADCC response to natural infection with HIV-1 is therefore broadly reactive and precedes the development of a broad neutralizing antibody response. The broad reactivity of HIV-1-specific ADCC responses may be important for protection against cell-associated virus in vaccine development.
Source
Viral Immunol. 1991 Winter;4(4):215-23.