Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6140144 | Virology | 2014 | 15 Pages |
â¢Rabbits are animal model superior to guinea pigs in eliciting neutralizing responses against native trimers.â¢High VLP doses required to elicit neutralizing responses against native trimers.â¢Protease-treated VLPs to remove non-functional Env improves neutralizing responses.
Virus-like particles (VLPs) offer a platform to test the hypothesis that, since antibody binding to native envelope glycoprotein (Env) trimers results in HIV-1 neutralization, that native Env trimers presented in membranes may be useful for inducing neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) in a vaccine setting. So far, VLPs have not fulfilled this potential. Here, using a “shotgun” approach, we evaluated a wide cross-section of variables in a series of VLP immunizations. We identified 3 tentative leads. First, that VLP doses may not have been sufficient for optimal nAb induction. Second, that dampening the antigenicity of non-functional Env (for example uncleaved gp160) using either protease digests or IgG masking may be useful. Third, that guinea pig sera preferentially target non-conserved epitopes and exhibit relatively high background activity, suggesting that rabbits may be preferable as small animal vaccine models. Recent immunogenicity studies in rabbits appear to bear out all 3 of these leads.