During the past year, this laboratory continued studies on the mechanism of HIV entry, and on the development of novel protective and treatment strategies based on the molecules involved in entry. 1) Molecular mechanisms of HIV Env-mediated entry/fusion. a) Subunit interactions within the oligomeric structure of HIV Env. We found that Envs containing different functional defects in gp120 or gp41 can complement one another within the HIV oligomer. The results support a model in which cooperative subunit interactions within the Env oligomer result in concerted conformational changes upon receptor binding, resulting in activation for fusion. Future work will focus on the implications of these findings for Env function and virus neutralization. b) Mechanisms of antibody resistance of some primary HIV-1 strains. We have developed assays to assess whether such isolates can be rendered sensitive by pretreating Env with soluble CD4. Our studies are designed to distinguish whether the antibody resistance is due to absence vs. masking of the corresponding epitopes. The results will have important implication for the development of anti-HIV vaccines based on neutralizing antibody. 2) Novel anti-HIV agents based on HIV Env/receptor interactions. a) sCD4-17b, a potent HIV-1 neutralizing agent. sCD4-17b is aa recombinant chimeric protein containing soluble CD4 attached via a long flexible polypeptide linker to a single chain antibody that binds to a CD4-induced epitope of gp120 involved in binding to coreceptor. The protein neutralizes diverse primary HIV-1 isolates, with potency considerably higher than the best neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. Future studies will focus on producing and purifying large amounts of the protein for extensive in vitro analysis, and assessment of protective efficacy in animal models.We have also begun a collaborative effort to engineer Lactobacillus, the natural microflora of the healthy human vaginal tract, to produce the chimeric protein. The goal is to colonize the vaginal tract with the engineered lactobacillus to provide durable protection against sexual transmission of HIV. b) 3b3-PE38, an anti-HIV immunotoxin. In vitro studies indicate that 3b3-PE38 is significantly more potent in vitro than a previous agent CD4- PE40. The immunotoxin efficiently kills HIV-infected cells, and inhibits spreading infection of diverse primary isolates in both primary T cells and macrophages. In vivo studies with rhesus macaques indicate minimal hepatoxicity compared to CD4-PE40, in uninfected and SHIV- infected animals. Future work is focused on developing 3b3-PE38 for Phase I clinical trials in individuals whose virus loads have been effectively suppressed by HAART.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01AI000538-14
Application #
6506851
Study Section
(LVD)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Niaid Extramural Activities
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Salzwedel, Karl; Berger, Edward A (2009) Complementation of diverse HIV-1 Env defects through cooperative subunit interactions: a general property of the functional trimer. Retrovirology 6:75
Berger, Edward A; Alkhatib, Ghalib (2007) HIV gp120 interactions with coreceptors: insights from studies with CCR5-based peptides. Eur J Med Res 12:403-7
Alkhatib, Ghalib; Berger, Edward A (2007) HIV coreceptors: from discovery and designation to new paradigms and promise. Eur J Med Res 12:375-84
Lusso, Paolo; Earl, Patricia L; Sironi, Francesca et al. (2005) Cryptic nature of a conserved, CD4-inducible V3 loop neutralization epitope in the native envelope glycoprotein oligomer of CCR5-restricted, but not CXCR4-using, primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 strains. J Virol 79:6957-68
Lagenaur, Laurel A; Berger, Edward A (2005) An anti-HIV microbicide comes alive. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102:12294-5
Agrawal, Lokesh; VanHorn-Ali, Zainab; Berger, Edward A et al. (2004) Specific inhibition of HIV-1 coreceptor activity by synthetic peptides corresponding to the predicted extracellular loops of CCR5. Blood 103:1211-7
Dey, Barna; Del Castillo, Christie S; Berger, Edward A (2003) Neutralization of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by sCD4-17b, a single-chain chimeric protein, based on sequential interaction of gp120 with CD4 and coreceptor. J Virol 77:2859-65
Farber, Joshua M; Berger, Edward A (2002) HIV's response to a CCR5 inhibitor: I'd rather tighten than switch! Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99:1749-51
McHugh, Louise; Hu, Stella; Lee, B K et al. (2002) Increased affinity and stability of an anti-HIV-1 envelope immunotoxin by structure-based mutagenesis. J Biol Chem 277:34383-90
Schito, M L; Kennedy, P E; Kowal, R P et al. (2001) A human immunodeficiency virus-transgenic mouse model for assessing interventions that block microbial-induced proviral expression. J Infect Dis 183:1592-600

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