Development of a highly effective vaccine or antibodies for prevention and ultimately elimination of malaria is urgently needed. Here, we report the isolation of a number of human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against the Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) circumsporozoite protein (CSP) from several subjects immunized with an attenuated whole sporozoite (SPZ) vaccine (Sanaria® PfSPZ Vaccine). Passive transfer of one of these antibodies, mAb CIS43, conferred high-level, sterile protection in two different mouse models of malaria infection. Stoichiometry and affinity of mAb CIS43 for PfCSP indicate two sequential multivalent binding events to six sites: the first 7-fold higher affinity binding event is to a unique “junctional” epitope positioned between the N-terminus and the central repeat domain of PfCSP. Moreover, mAb CIS43 prevented proteolytic cleavage of PfCSP on PfSPZ. Crystal structures of the CIS43 fragment antigen binding (Fab) in complex with the junctional epitope determined the molecular interactions of binding, revealed the epitope’s conformational flexibility, and defined NPN as the structural repeat motif. The demonstration that mAb CIS43 is highly effective for passive prevention of malaria has potential application for use in travelers, military personnel and elimination campaigns and identifies a new and conserved site of vulnerability on PfCSP for next generation rational vaccine design.
A central goal of HIV-1 vaccine research is the elicitation of antibodies capable of neutralizing diverse primary isolates of HIV-1. Here we show that focusing the immune response to exposed N-terminal residues of the fusion peptide, a critical component of the viral entry machinery and the epitope of antibodies elicited by HIV-1 infection, through immunization with fusion peptide-coupled carriers and prefusion stabilized envelope trimers, induces cross-clade neutralizing responses. In mice, these immunogens elicited monoclonal antibodies capable of neutralizing up to 31% of a cross-clade panel of 208 HIV-1 strains. Crystal and cryoelectron microscopy structures of these antibodies revealed fusion peptide conformational diversity as a molecular explanation for the cross-clade neutralization. Immunization of guinea pigs and rhesus macaques induced similarly broad fusion peptide-directed neutralizing responses, suggesting translatability. The N terminus of the HIV-1 fusion peptide is thus a promising target of vaccine efforts aimed at eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies.
While the HIV-1-glycan shield is known to shelter Env from the humoral immune response, its quantitative impact on antibody elicitation has been unclear. Here we use targeted deglycosylation to measure the impact of the glycan shield on elicitation of antibodies against the CD4 supersite. We engineered diverse Env trimers with select glycans removed proximal to the CD4 supersite, characterized their structures and glycosylation, and immunized guinea pigs and rhesus macaques. Immunizations yielded little neutralization against wild-type viruses, but potent CD4-supersite neutralization (titers 1:>1,000,000 against 4-glycan-deleted autologous viruses with over 90% breadth against 4-glycan-deleted heterologous strains exhibiting tier-2 neutralization character). To a first approximation, the immunogenicity of the glycan-shielded protein surface was negligible, with Env-elicited neutralization (ID50) proportional to the exponential of the protein-surface area accessible to antibody. Based on these high titers and exponential relationship, we propose site-selective deglycosylated trimers as priming immunogens to increase the frequency of site-targeting antibodies.
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