Publication | Open Access
An Unrelated Monoclonal Antibody Neutralizes Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Binding to an Artificial Epitope Engineered in a Functionally Neutral Region of the Viral Envelope Glycoproteins
50
Citations
67
References
2005
Year
Virus EntryImmunologyViral Structural ProteinImmunotherapySynthetic ImmunologyHuman RetrovirusAntibody EngineeringEnvelope Glycoprotein FunctionNeurovirologyVirologyArtificial Epitope EngineeredHivCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringFunctionally Neutral RegionArtificial Epitope TagAntiviral ResponseVirus-host InteractionViral Envelope GlycoproteinsMedicine
Neutralizing antibodies often recognize regions of viral envelope glycoproteins that play a role in receptor binding or other aspects of virus entry. To address whether this is a necessary feature of a neutralizing antibody, we identified the V4 region of the gp120 envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) as a sequence that is tolerant of drastic change and thus appears to play a negligible role in envelope glycoprotein function. An artificial epitope tag was inserted into the V4 region without a significant effect on virus entry or neutralization by antibodies that recognize HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein sequences. An antibody directed against the artificial epitope tag was able to neutralize the modified, but not the wild-type, HIV-1. Thus, the specific target of a neutralizing antibody need not contribute functionally to the process of virus entry.
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