Overview
Publication
J Am Chem Soc. 2018 Apr 18; 140(15):5202-5210.
PubMed ID: 29578688
Title
Unprecedented role of hybrid N-glycans as ligands for HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies
Authors
Shivatare VS, Shivatare SS, Lee CD, Liang CH, Liao KS, Cheng YY, Saidachary G, Wu CY, Lin NH, Kwong PD, Burton DR, Wu CY, Wong CH
Abstract
The development of an HIV vaccine has been hampered by the extraordinary mutability and genetic diversity of the virus, particularly the substantial sequence diversity of gp120 and gp 41 envelope glycoproteins existing in more than 2000 HIV variants. The highly diverse glycans on HIV spikes are commonly considered as immunologically silent self-antigens; however, the discovery of highly potent broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) from HIV patients targeting the viral surface glycans has raised a major question about the origin of their antigens. Recent epitope mapping studies of the bNAb PG9 indicated a requirement of a properly spaced high mannose and a complex type glycan connected by a short peptide spacer. We have recently discovered that a 1:1 mixture of Man5 and sialyl biantennary glycan with well-defined distance and without the peptide spacer is well recognized by PG9 with high avidity and, thus, proposed that a hybrid glycan with oligomannose and complex-type arm could be the proper ligand of PG9. To verify this proposition, we first designed and chemo-enzymatically synthesized a series of unusual hybrid-type N-glycan structures, which may exist on HIV surface glycoproteins through the host-guided N-glycosylation pathway. The synthetic hybrid glycans were then used to prepare glycan arrays for the binding studies of PG9 and several other highly potent bNAbs, including PG16, PGT121, PGT128-3C, 2G12, VRC13, VRC-PG05, VRC26.25, VRC26.09, PGDM1400, 35O22, and 10-1074. Our results demonstrated that PG9 and some other bNAbs bind with strong avidity (subnanomolar Kd) to certain hybrid structures, suggesting that these unusual glycans may serve as epitopes for the design of vaccines against HIV.
With the publicly available data in the CAVD DataSpace we can Learn about studies, products, assays, antibodies, and publications, Find subjects with common characteristics, Plot assay results across studies and years of research, and Compare monoclonal antibodies and their neutralization curves. Data are also accessible via DataSpaceR, our R API.
Sign in to see full information about this publication and to download study data when available.
Related Studies
No related studies