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Recent Articles
Krachmarov CP, Kayman SC, Trochev O, Pinter A
V3-specific polyclonal antibodies affinity purified from
sera of infected humans effectively neutralize primary isolates
of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 2001 Dec 10;17(18):1737-48
PMID: 11788025
Although many human sera possess potent neutralizing activities
for primary HIV-1 viruses, such activities are not efficiently induced
by the current generation of vaccine candidates, and the epitopes
mediating this neutralization are not known. The V3 loop of gp120
is believed to be the principal neutralization domain of laboratory-adapted
viruses, but the importance of this region in neutralization of
primary isolates is unclear. This question was explored using polyclonal
anti-V3 antibodies purified by immunoaffinity methods from sera
of HIV-1-infected patients. To include antibodies that might be
directed against conformational and/or glycan-dependent epitopes
not presented by synthetic peptides, the antibody isolations were
performed with a fusion glycoprotein expressing the native V3 region
of JR-CSF, a primary R5 isolate. V3-reactive antibody fractions
from all eight sera examined showed potent neutralization of at
least one of the three primary HIV-1 isolates tested; four of these
antibody preparations neutralized all three primary viruses. For
a number of serum-virus combinations 90% neutralization doses (ND(90))
between 1 and 5 microg/ml were obtained, and the most potent anti-V3
fraction had ND(50) values at or below 0.3 microg/ml for all three
primary isolates. These neutralization activities against primary
viruses were higher than those of potent monoclonal antibodies assayed
in the same experiment. These data indicate that the V3 region can
be an important neutralization target in primary isolates, and suggest
that effective presentation of V3 epitopes in a vaccine formulation
might induce protective humoral responses against natural infection
by HIV-1.

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