Main

Although cell-mediated immunity is crucial for controlling and eradicating infection by many viruses, antibodies are pivotal in preventing or modulating infection1,2. Even during early phases of infection, when the level of antibodies induced by ACTIVE IMMUNIZATION or administered by PASSIVE IMMUNIZATION is low, antibodies can reduce the size of the infecting inoculum and neutralize or eliminate virions during the first rounds of replication. This provides sufficient transient protection so that the cellular arm of the immune response can respond with proliferation and deployment of effector T cells that are required to eliminate virus-infected cells. Data indicate that this model is applicable to infection with HIV-1, simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and the chimeric simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV)3,4,5.

Despite extensive data supporting the general importance of antibodies in preventing virus infections (Fig. 1), perceptions about the role of antibodies in preventing infection with HIV-1 have varied markedly over the past 20 years. Opinions have ranged from the wildly optimistic views held in the late 1980s that antibodies would be sufficient to protect against infection, to the bleakest predictions of the mid-1990s that primary isolates were resistant to antibody-mediated neutralization and that no vaccine would ever be able to induce antibodies that are sufficiently broad and potent to provide protection. Many passive immunization experiments in various experimental models have, however, repeatedly established that antibodies can provide sterilizing immunity against HIV-1 (Refs 69). In addition, passive immunization experiments indicate that antibodies reduce the size of the infectious inoculum and allow the development of more effective cellular and humoral immune responses to the breakthrough virus3. These studies provide convincing data in all of the experimental models tested that neutralizing antibodies with appropriate specificity — when present in sufficient concentrations — are a correlate of immune protection. Even in humans, some studies indicate that antibodies transferred across the placenta might protect against transmission of HIV-1 from infected pregnant women to their infants10,11, although more studies of this controversial issue in humans are required.

Figure 1: Steps at which antibodies can potentially interfere with virus replication, using HIV-1 as an example.
figure 1

a | Antibodies can block the virus–target-cell interaction by several mechanisms, such as by: inhibiting the interaction of cell-derived molecules (such as adhesion molecules and lectins) carried in the virus envelope with their ligands on the surface of target cells; inhibiting the binding of virions to CD4 and co-receptors on the cell surface; and preventing conformational changes of the virus envelope that are required for subsequent steps in the virus life cycle. b | After attachment of the virus to target cells, antibodies can inhibit further conformational changes in the virus envelope glycoproteins that create or expose domains involved in virus–target-cell fusion. c | Antibodies can also block the protein domains that are involved in virus–cell fusion. d | At later stages in the virus life cycle, antibodies might be involved in: preventing virus uncoating after entry; interrupting virus assembly; preventing maturation of the virus particle; and inhibiting virus budding. e | Additional mechanisms of antibody-mediated neutralization include complement-induced virolysis and aggregation of infectious virions.

Protective mechanisms of antibodies

Antibodies can protect against virus infection by many mechanisms (Fig. 1). The main mode of protection that is induced by most antiviral vaccines seems to be mediated by neutralizing antibodies1. Neutralization is a generic term for the ability of antibodies to reduce the infectivity of a virus particle by interfering at one of several different steps in the virus life cycle. For example, antibodies can bind to molecules on the surface of virions and prevent their interaction with cell-surface lectins and with various receptors12,13. In the case of HIV-1, this type of inhibition is attributed to carbohydrate-specific antibodies that target the virus glycoproteins14,15, to antibodies that target different adhesion molecules16, and to antibodies that are specific for various regions of gp120 such as the CD4-binding domain, the 'CD4-induced (CD4i) epitope' (located in the bridging sheet of gp120 that is created or exposed when gp120 interacts with CD4)17, and the V2 and V3 loops (see Fig. 2 and Box 1). In addition, many 'post-attachment' mechanisms have been documented. An example of this is provided by antibodies that prevent the fusion of virus and cell membranes. In the case of HIV-1, the human monoclonal antibody 2F5 (described later) might be such an antibody, preventing either the formation of the gp41 coiled-coil form or the fusion of virus and the cell membrane18,19,20,21. Antibodies can also mediate post-fusion neutralization of many viruses (although this has not yet been shown for HIV-1), blocking late stages in the virus life cycle12. Therefore, antibodies can prevent the primary uncoating of the virus in the cytoplasm, transcription steps in the nucleus, and virus assembly and budding at the cell membrane as the virus exits the cell.

Figure 2: Diagram of the structure of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp120.
figure 2

The gp120 molecule with the location of the variable regions marked in boxes (V1–V5). The glycosylation sites containing high mannose-type and/or hybrid-type oligosaccharide structures are indicated by the branched structures, and glycosylation sites containing complex-type oligosaccharide structures are indicated by the U-shaped branches. Epitopes in gp120 that induce neutralizing antibodies are highlighted in colour. These include the highly conformational CD4-binding domain (key epitopes highlighted in yellow), the CD4-induced epitope (green), an epitope composed of α1→2 mannose residues (purple), the V2 loop (orange) and the V3 loop (blue). Reproduced with permission from Ref. 63 © (1990) American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

Additional mechanisms by which antibodies can mediate protection include aggregation of virus particles, which reduces the size of the inoculum and renders virions more susceptible to phagocytosis and destruction12, and lysis of enveloped viruses by binding to the virion and initiating the complement cascade22. Antibodies might also attack virus-infected cells; for example, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) is a well-documented antiviral mechanism that controls virus infection, which has been shown to affect HIV-1-infected cells23,24.

Identification of protective epitopes

Given the 'rediscovered' importance of antibodies in the prevention of HIV-1 infection25, it is necessary to re-examine the question of which antibodies should be induced and how this might be achieved. As the most consistent correlate of immune protection against viral infections is the presence of neutralizing antibodies1,12, emphasis has been placed on identifying antibodies that neutralize HIV-1.

As with most pathogens, HIV-1 induces a polyclonal antibody response to a wide array of epitopes on different viral proteins26,27. Studies of polyclonal sera have helped to identify the specificities of antibodies that are associated with protection28,29, but it is the study of human monoclonal antibodies that has most clearly defined the few epitopes that are located in the two envelope glycoproteins, gp120 and gp41, that induce neutralizing antibodies in natural infection (Table 1) and mediate protection against infection in passive immunization studies. Induction of antibodies to each of these epitopes might ultimately be useful as a defensive shield against HIV-1 infection; however, each of these epitopes presents challenges to vaccine design.

Table 1 Epitopes of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins that induce neutralizing antibodies

Constant regions of the virus envelope as targets

Antibodies to epitopes in gp41. Several human monoclonal antibodies specific for gp41 have been produced, and several epitopes within gp41 have been defined27,30,31 (Fig. 3, Table 1 and Box 1). However, only a small minority of gp41-specific antibodies have neutralizing activity. One human monoclonal antibody, 2F5, has been shown to have broad neutralizing activity for diverse primary HIV-1 isolates32. This monoclonal antibody recognizes a core epitope of six amino acids within a relatively conserved 16-amino-acid linear sequence (NEQELLELDKWASLWN) in the ectodomain of gp41 near the transmembrane region of the molecule33. Two additional human monoclonal antibodies, 4E10 and Z13, which are specific for the transmembrane proximal region of gp41 in a region immediately carboxy-terminal to the 2F5 epitope, also have broad neutralizing activity34. Epitopes in this region of gp41 are poorly exposed on both the surface of intact virus particles and the membranes of virus-infected cells35,36,37. Studies showing that exposure of these epitopes is altered by CD4-induced changes in the envelope35 and that monoclonal antibodies such as 2F5 bind poorly to virions yet can neutralize the virus37 indicate that these monoclonal antibodies recognize epitopes that have accessibility changes during the course of infection35,37. Such antigenic determinants, the exposure of which occurs during limited periods during virus infectivity, are characterized as 'transitional epitopes', a term that also applies to other envelope epitopes (see later).

Figure 3: Diagram of the structure of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp41.
figure 3

The gp41 molecule with α-helices depicted as alternating three- and four-amino-acid groupings connected by single lines, hydrophobic amino acids indicated as grey circles, charged amino acids as unfilled circles and neutral amino acids as heavily outlined circles. Strong turns are indicated by 'T', and potential glycosylation sites by branched-stick figures. Key functional and structural regions are boxed, and well-characterized epitopes are shown in colour, with epitope clusters I and II shown in turquoise and pink, respectively, and the transmembrane-proximal epitope highlighted in yellow. Reproduced with permission from Ref. 126 © (1989) Mary Ann Liebert Inc. Publishers.

Data indicate that antibodies to the membrane-proximal region of gp41 might prevent infection by blocking either the formation of the gp41 coiled-coil form or gp41-mediated changes that lead to the fusion of virus and cell membranes18,19,20,21,38. However, this region of gp41 — especially the core epitope that is recognized by monoclonal antibody 2F5 (ELDKWA) — seems to be poorly immunogenic, as antibodies specific for this epitope occur infrequently in HIV-1-infected individuals39,40. Moreover, experimental immunogens that consisted of the 2F5 epitope inserted into either the influenza virus haemagglutinin antigen, the hepatitis B virus surface antigen or the Escherichia coli MaIE protein failed to elicit antisera with neutralizing activity for primary isolates40,41,42. Therefore, this interesting epitope seems to require a particular molecular context, but this context might reduce the efficiency of its presentation to the immune system.

A human monoclonal antibody, clone 3, to an epitope that spans the disulphide bond in the IMMUNODOMINANT loop of the ectodomain of gp41 (GCSGKLICTT) has also been shown to neutralize primary isolates43,44. Interestingly, human monoclonal antibodies (such as monoclonal antibody 246) that recognize epitopes that are offset by 5–7 amino acids upstream of the clone 3 epitope do not have this neutralizing capacity30,45.

Antibodies to the CD4-binding domain of gp120. The CD4-binding domain (CD4bd) in the gp120 molecule (Fig. 2 and Box 1) is a highly conserved, complex, conformation-dependent region which, by definition, is responsible for the interaction between the virus envelope and the CD4 molecule on the surface of target cells. Because this interaction is pivotal to the process by which HIV-1 infects, it was assumed that antibodies specific for the CD4bd would be particularly effective at blocking infection, and, indeed, many monoclonal antibodies to this region do neutralize T-CELL-LINE-ADAPTED VIRUSES46,47. However, most CD4bd-specific monoclonal antibodies (exemplified by monoclonal antibodies 559/64D and 15e) do not neutralize primary isolates for reasons that are still not well understood45,48. An exception is the human monoclonal antibody IgG1b12, which was constructed using recombinant technology from the bone marrow of an HIV-1-infected donor49. This monoclonal antibody has exceptionally broad activity against primary isolates, thereby confirming the crucial role of the CD4bd in HIV-1 infection32,50. Given the complexity of the CD4bd and the paucity of CD4bd-specific monoclonal antibodies with neutralizing activity, the design of an immunogen that will give rise to neutralizing antibodies specific for this epitope will be a challenge.

An additional observation complicates the rationale for eliciting CD4bd-specific antibodies. Antibodies to the CD4bd have recently been shown to interfere with the processing of gp120 by antigen-presenting cells and to block the subsequent presentation of gp120 epitopes to envelope-specific T helper cells51,52. These findings indicate that the induction of antibodies that are specific for the CD4bd, even CD4bd-specific monoclonal antibodies with neutralizing activity, could potentially inhibit the development of effective cellular immune responses to the virus envelope. Of note, antibodies specific for other epitopes of gp120 do not have this effect51.

Antibodies to the CD4-induced epitope of gp120. Antibodies are found in HIV-1-infected individuals that react better with gp120 when it is complexed with soluble CD4; the conformational changes in gp120 that are induced by soluble CD4 create or expose the CD4i epitope53. The region recognized by CD4i-specific monoclonal antibodies has now been mapped to regions of gp120 that are involved in its binding to chemokine receptors54,55,56, recognizing epitopes formed by β-strands in the V1/V2 stem and the C4 region57. Several such human monoclonal antibodies have been identified53,57,58, showing that the relevant epitope(s) are immunogenic at least in a subset of infected individuals. One monoclonal antibody specific for the CD4i epitope, monoclonal antibody 17b, has been particularly useful in crystallographic studies of gp120 (Ref. 59), but, surprisingly, monoclonal antibody 17b and other monoclonal antibodies to this epitope (such as 48D) in their complete IgG form do not neutralize most of the primary isolates tested57. Interestingly, the antigen-binding fragment (Fab) and single-chain fragments of these CD4i-specific monoclonal antibodies do have neutralizing function58,60. The inability of the whole IgG CD4i-specific monoclonal antibody to neutralize can be explained by steric hindrance, given that the distance between the CD4i epitope on gp120 and the target cell membrane in molecular models seems too small to accommodate the entire IgG molecule61,62,132. If these observations are confirmed, the physical constraints on antibody access to the CD4i epitope will preclude the use of antibodies to this epitope as a barrier against infection with HIV-1.

Antibodies to carbohydrate epitopes of gp120. Given that 50% of the mass of gp120 is composed of carbohydrate moieties63, it is perhaps not surprising that antibodies to carbohydrates have neutralizing activity against HIV-1 (Ref. 14). The best studied of the neutralizing carbohydrate-specific antibodies of human origin is the monoclonal antibody 2G12, which targets a cluster of carbohydrate moieties in gp120 (Fig. 2); this monoclonal antibody has broad neutralizing activity for both T-cell-line-adapted and primary isolates of HIV-1 (Refs 15,64). Crystallographic studies have revealed its unusual structure, which allows for multivalent interaction with a conserved cluster of oligomannose-type sugars65; however, the extremely unusual configuration of this monoclonal antibody and the poor immunogenicity of the epitope recognized by monoclonal antibody 2G12 (Ref. 64) raise several questions. What is the probability that a vaccine could regularly elicit such antibodies? How could an immunogen be designed to mimic the unique cluster of oligomannose residues targeted by 2G12? And, what is the mechanism by which this monoclonal antibody mediates neutralization, given the location of this epitope on a surface of gp120 that is not known to be involved in virus attachment or fusion?

Variable regions of the virus envelope as targets

The V2 and V3 variable loops of gp120 (Fig. 2 and Box 1) have long been recognized to contain epitopes that induce potent neutralizing antibodies66,67,68,69,70. However, scepticism persists concerning the protective value of antibodies to variable regions of gp120, because these antibodies are thought to be isolate specific, and because the variable nature of these regions is thought inevitably to allow HIV-1 to escape the effects of these antibodies62,71.

Antibodies to the V2 region. Scepticism about the use of V2-specific antibodies might be warranted. Although studies of polyclonal antibodies specific for the V2 region show potent antiviral neutralizing activity66,67,72, broad neutralizing activity against primary viruses is not a general property of V2-specific antibodies, as shown by the inability of several rodent and human V2-specific monoclonal antibodies (such as monoclonal antibody 697-D) to neutralize panels of T-cell-line-adapted and primary isolates73 (M. K. Gorny, unpublished observations). This seems to be due to the fact that the V2 region varies not only in sequence but also in length, due to insertions and deletions that alter or eliminate conserved elements to which broadly neutralizing antibodies could be targeted. Given that viruses lacking the V1/V2 region or the V2 variable loop are capable of replication74,75, this region cannot be essential for infectivity and therefore is relatively unconstrained in terms of mutation. Therefore, despite the fact that this region of the virus envelope carries out important functions — mediating gp41-independent interaction within the gp120 trimer76 and shielding the region in and around the bridging sheet of gp120 responsible for interaction with chemokine receptors74,75,77,78,79 — the V1/V2 loop is an improbable target for vaccines and, in fact, is specifically being deleted in some vaccine constructs to provide better access to neutralizing epitopes in and near the co-receptor binding site80.

In contrast to the variable nature of the V1/V2 region, the stem of the V1/V2 loop is relatively well conserved and is involved in the formation of the chemokine-receptor-binding site and interaction with CD4 (Refs 77,81). This indicates that the V1/V2 stem has a crucial role, which makes it a potentially valuable target of antibodies. However, no antibodies specific for this region have yet been described, indicating that this site is poorly immunogenic and/or is poorly or only transiently exposed.

Antibodies to the V3 loop. Similar to the V2 loop, the amino-acid sequence of the V3 loop is variable, but V3 is distinct from V2 in both its structural characteristics and function. Due to the variable nature of V3, some V3-specific antibodies, similar to V2-specific antibodies, are isolate specific. Such isolate-specific V3-specific antibodies are mainly produced early after infection or after brief immunization protocols68,69,82,83. Moreover, most V3-specific monoclonal antibodies produced by infected individuals and selected using linear V3 peptides have little neutralizing activity for primary isolates despite broad immunochemical crossreactivity45,84,85. However, in addition to isolate-specific V3-specific antibodies, broadly reactive V3-specific antibodies with potent neutralizing activity have been described; such polyclonal and monoclonal V3-specific antibodies are conformation sensitive rather than specific for linear epitopes in the V3 loop86. The most broadly reactive of the neutralizing V3-specific monoclonal antibodies can neutralize a large proportion of clade B HIV-1 primary isolates87,88,89,90, and have also been shown to neutralize viruses from clades A and F, which, by definition, must have shared or crossreactive epitopes86. V3-specific antibodies with broad specificity and functional activity (similar to monoclonal antibodies 447/52-D, 19b and 2182) are probably produced later in infection as a result of SOMATIC HYPERMUTATION in the variable-region immunoglobulin genes that occurs during maturation of the humoral immune response to any given antigen91. This apparent requirement for prolonged antigenic stimulation to induce broadly reactive V3-specific antibodies is a challenging problem in terms of designing a practical vaccine strategy that will induce broadly reactive, protective V3-specific antibodies. So far, no clinical vaccine trial has addressed whether longer immunization regimens induce more broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies, in general, and more highly crossreactive V3-specific antibodies, in particular.

The surprising crossreactivity of V3-specific antibodies can be explained on the basis of both structural and functional characteristics of the V3 loop. Therefore, despite its designation as the third variable domain of gp120, and unlike the V2 region, the V3 loop is actually a semi-conserved region with many constant features, including a fixed size (30–35 amino acids), a conserved type II turn at its tip, a disulphide bond at its base and a net positive charge92. This structural constraint is imposed by the functional requirement for the V3 loop to interact with chemokine receptors for virus infectivity93,94. Indeed, deletion of the V3 loop results in non-infectious virions74.

The conserved nature of the V3 loop is further explained by its homology to structures of the natural ligands of the virus co-receptors. This was revealed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of V3 peptides complexed with fragments of two V3-specific monoclonal antibodies that preferentially neutralize CC-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5)-tropic or CXC-chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4)-tropic viruses (R5 and X4 viruses, respectively). These structural studies showed alternative V3 conformations that are homologous to the β-hairpin structures in the CC-chemokines CCL3 (macrophage inflammatory protein 1α, MIP1α), CCL4 (MIP1β) and CCL5 (RANTES), and in the CXC-chemokine CXCL12 (stromal-cell-derived factor 1, SDF1), respectively95 (Fig. 4). Functional homology between the V3 loop of an X4 virus and CXCL12 was established by Yonezawa et al.96 who showed that infectivity was retained when the V3 loop of an X4 virus was replaced by 43 amino acids from CXCL12 — a region that includes the β-hairpin domain that is structurally homologous to the V3 loop of X4 viruses. These data reveal mechanisms by which the virus envelope interacts with the chemokine receptors, support the crucial role of the V3 region in virus infectivity, explain why there must be marked conservation in the V3 loop, and provide a rationale for how antibodies to conserved V3 motifs can be so highly crossreactive.

Figure 4: Alternative conformations of HIV-1 V3 loops mimic β-hairpin structures of chemokines.
figure 4

a | A space-filled diagram of CXC-chemokine ligand 12 (CXCL12, also known as stromal-cell-derived factor 1, SDF1) with the β-hairpin structure shown as a ribbon diagram. The structure of the V3 loop of gp120 (as defined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis when complexed with mouse V3-specific monoclonal antibody 0.5β95) is shown in red, superimposed on the β-hairpin of CXCL12, shown in green. b | A space-filled diagram of CC-chemokine ligand 5 (CCL5, also known as RANTES) with the β-hairpin structure shown as a ribbon diagram. The structure of the V3 loop (as defined by NMR analysis when complexed with human V3-specific monoclonal antibody 447/52-D95) is shown in purple, superimposed on the β-hairpin of CCL5, shown in green. Images courtesy of M. Schapira.

These studies also prompt a re-examination of the data that underlie the long-standing dogma that V3-specific antibodies are isolate specific and cannot neutralize primary isolates. For example, we now know that whereas isolate-specific V3-specific antibodies are produced early after infection or immunization68,69,82, broadly reactive V3-specific antibodies are characteristic of a more mature immune response86,88. Similarly, the conclusion that V3-specific antibodies are ineffective for neutralizing primary isolates was based on inefficient depletion of antibodies from HIV-1+ sera with linear V3 peptides — a process that would have failed to effectively remove antibodies that are specific for conformation-sensitive V3 epitopes97,98. Moreover, careful review of early studies, as well as more recent data published by several groups, shows that epitopes in the V3 loop are not cryptic but are at least partially displayed on the surface of R5 virus particles and R5-virus-infected cells36,37,89,90,99,100, and that V3-specific monoclonal antibodies can neutralize R5 as well as X4 viruses86,87,89,90,101.

In summary, studies show that there are conserved conformations in the V3 loop that are crucial to its function, that the pattern of charged residues below the tip of the loop is important for co-receptor binding102 and that regions in the V3 loop (and chemokines) crucial to their interaction with chemokine receptors are discontinuous102,103. These elements strongly support the hypothesis that the conformation and pattern of charges of this region of the virus envelope are key to ligand–receptor interactions. So, the challenge to inducing broadly neutralizing V3-specific antibodies by immunization lies in designing an antigen that presents an immunogenic and conformationally correct V3 loop, and presenting it in a formulation and dosing schedule that will allow optimal maturation of the antibody response.

The need to identify new protective epitopes

Although many human monoclonal antibodies to various epitopes of gp120 and gp41 have been identified that neutralize HIV-1 primary isolates, and the epitopes that are recognized by these monoclonal antibodies have been carefully dissected, there might be additional protective epitopes that have not yet been identified by the presently available panel of monoclonal antibodies. These epitopes might be formed by quaternary structures that result from the interaction of the monomeric envelope subunits that form trimers on the surface of intact virions. These and other (as-yet-undefined) epitopes might be immunogenic in only a subset of individuals, might be composed of structures that appear on some but not all isolates, or might predominate on less well studied virus subtypes. Finally, new epitopes might consist of transitional epitopes and/or molecular regions that are poorly represented during the various screening regimens that are used to select monoclonal antibodies. Defining additional epitopes that induce neutralizing antibodies in HIV-1-infected individuals will provide additional scaffolds on which to model candidate vaccines.

Focusing the antibody response

The gp41 and gp120 envelope glycoproteins contain a large number of B-cell epitopes27,30,31. Current vaccine protocols induce antibodies to many epitopes rather than focusing the immune response on epitopes that will induce protective antibodies. Epitopes such as those in C5 of gp120 and near the disulphide loop in the ectodomain of gp41, for example, are immunodominant but give rise to antibodies that are generally not neutralizing104. Given that several neutralizing epitopes in gp120 and gp41 have already been identified, it would be advantageous to direct the antibody response to these protective epitopes. Several approaches are being used to focus the immune response on one or a few epitopes. For example, limited envelope deglycosylation or deletion of the V2 loop seems to create immunogens that augment the level of neutralizing antibodies by improving the exposure and/or immunogenicity of neutralizing epitopes80,105. The contrary approach — hyperglycosylation — is being studied to abrogate the immunogenicity of all but one or a few key envelope epitopes106. Other approaches include the use of single or multiple-chain peptides to induce antibodies to specific regions of the envelope5,107,108.

Several additional new approaches have recently been proposed to design vaccine immunogens. One of these, known as REVERSE IMMUNOLOGY109, identifies peptide ligands bound by MHC molecules, T-cell receptors or immunoglobulins to define peptide immunogens that will be recognized by the immune system. Given the number of HIV-1-specific monoclonal antibodies with neutralizing activity that have been described, it is not surprising that a similar strategy has been used to determine the B-cell epitopes that they recognize. For example, Zwick et al.39 identified a peptide mimotope of the epitope that is recognized by monoclonal antibody IgG1b12. This peptide is a homodimer, the activity of which depends on an intact disulphide bridge that joins its polypeptide chains. Disappointingly, a vaccine constructed from this synthetic peptide and conjugated to each of two different carriers failed to elicit significant gp120 crossreactive antibodies. The broadly neutralizing V3-specific human monoclonal antibody 447/52-D has also been screened with a random phage library. Most of the peptides identified and sequenced contained the GPXR-motif characteristic of the tip of the V3 loop. One of the 15-mer peptides identified as binding strongly to monoclonal antibody 447/52-D was conjugated to a carrier and used to immunize rabbits. The sera from three of four rabbits showed neutralizing activity against two of five HIV-1 variants tested110. These results indicate that, at least for some epitopes, the use of mimotopes defined using monoclonal antibodies might lead to the design of immunogens that will induce neutralizing antibodies. Although not a simple task, designing such mimotopes should now be more feasible as the structures of several human monoclonal antibodies with broad neutralizing activity have been studied by NMR and X-ray crystallographic analyses15,95,111,112,113,133. Information about the epitopes that these monoclonal antibodies recognize and the key features of their combining sites should be useful in the design of immunogens that will induce similar antibodies. The potential promise of this approach is suggested by results obtained with mimotope-based vaccines under development against human T-cell leukaemia virus type 1 (HTLV1)114, measles115, coronavirus116 and herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV2)117.

The need for polyvalent vaccines

Some of the epitopes discussed earlier that could serve as targets of neutralizing antibodies are found in constant regions of the virus envelope; others are localized to variable regions. Although some variable epitopes, such as the V3 region, retain conserved elements, present data indicate that, at the very least, more than two conformations exist. Therefore, to induce antibodies to neutralizing epitopes in variable regions, polyvalent vaccines will be required. This requirement for polyvalent vaccines against antigenically variable pathogens is well established, given the requirement for multiple-strain-based vaccines against organisms such as polio virus, influenza virus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. For these vaccines, extensive research was necessary to identify which and how many strains were required for maximum protection. In the case of influenza virus, the choice of vaccine strains is an ongoing concern as the antigenic nature of the organism is constantly changing. Similar challenges probably face the HIV-1 vaccine field.

It is highly unlikely that a single construct will protect against all subtypes of HIV-1. Given the continuing evolution of the virus and the spread of subtypes throughout the world, the question is how to choose which and how many strains need to be represented in a vaccine to give maximum protection. Initial approaches to designing polyvalent HIV-1 vaccines have been based on choosing viruses that are representative of genetically defined 'clades' (or subtypes). Clades are defined on the basis of the nucleotide sequences of the HIV-1 genome, including those genes that encode the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins. So far, three groups of HIV-1 have been identified (M, N and O). Within group M, which is the main group that infects patients worldwide, nine clades and 14 circulating recombinant forms have been identified. Several studies have shown that sera from HIV-1 infected individuals might neutralize several primary isolates from various clades with similar potency118,119,120. So, with the exception of clades B and E, which show distinct antigenic differences121, there seems to be no particular preference for sera from patients infected with one clade to neutralize other viruses from the same clade; a diagramatic representation of this is shown in Fig. 5. Similarly, studies of HIV-1-specific human monoclonal antibodies, most of which come from clade-B-infected individuals (such as those listed in Table 1) show their comparable potency in neutralizing many viruses from various clades32,86,122. These data raise important questions about the relevance of HIV-1 genotypic classification in vaccine design. Therefore, in addition to genotypic classification, other approaches are being used to identify representative viruses for inclusion in a polyvalent HIV-1 vaccine. Bioinformatic techniques are being used to search the HIV-1 sequence database for common epitopes that could induce cross-clade immunity123. Related techniques are being used to identify or construct HIV-1 envelope proteins that have antigenic similarities to presently circulating strains or to ancestral viruses that might more effectively elicit crossreactive immune responses124. A third approach is based on immunological studies of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins in an attempt to classify HIV-1 strains in terms of their immunological characteristics. For this, cluster analysis of immunochemical and neutralization data with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies is being used to determine the existence of immunologically related classes of HIV-1 ('immunotypes') or groups of viruses defined by their ability to be neutralized by sets of monoclonal antibodies ('neutrotypes')119,125. The value of each of these methods has yet to be established, but the clear need for a polyvalent HIV-1 vaccine and the absence of data supporting the general relevance of genotypic classification for choosing HIV-1 strains for inclusion in a vaccine indicate that these and additional approaches need to be pursued actively.

Figure 5: Hypothetical neutralization matrices.
figure 5

Positive neutralization by a serum–virus pair is denoted by a green box, and the absence of neutralization is denoted by a blue box. If antibodies preferentially neutralized the virus subtype infecting the patient, then neutralization by sera from subjects infected with subtypes A, B, C, D or A/E would preferentially neutralize viruses from the same subtype, as shown in part a. In fact, patterns approximating part b have been achieved in several studies118,119,120, indicating that there is little correlation between the neutralizing activity of a patient's serum and the genotype of the virus infecting that patient.

Conclusions

Experience with viral vaccines that are in use at present, and results from extensive studies of HIV-1, SIV and SHIV, strongly indicate that an effective HIV-1 vaccine will need to induce both broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies and cell-mediated immunity. Potent and broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies have been described in studies of sera from HIV-1-infected subjects and by the study of neutralizing monoclonal antibodies derived from the cells of HIV-1-infected individuals. Therefore, protective antibodies are represented in the human B-cell repertoire; however, inducing these antibodies with candidate vaccines has proven difficult because, although a broad range of antibodies are produced in most individuals or animals immunized with candidate vaccines, the antisera have limited neutralizing activity measured by either qualitative or quantitative means.

The design of new immunogens and new approaches might be informed by the epitopes that have been described that are targeted by human neutralizing antibodies. Each of these epitopes presents unique challenges to vaccine design, but useful nuances and patterns emerge (Box 2). From these studies, it becomes clear that research over the past decade has documented the ability of the human immune system to produce protective antibodies against HIV-1. The challenge of the coming decade is to understand how to build immunogens that will stimulate B cells to make these antibodies.