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Genetic and structural analyses of affinity maturation in the humoral response to HIV ‐1
Author(s) -
Kepler Thomas B.,
Wiehe Kevin
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
immunological reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.839
H-Index - 223
eISSN - 1600-065X
pISSN - 0105-2896
DOI - 10.1111/imr.12513
Subject(s) - affinity maturation , biology , antibody , hiv vaccine , b cell , phenotype , humoral immunity , computational biology , immune system , mutation , immunology , genetics , virology , gene , vaccine trial
Summary Most broadly neutralizing antibodies ( BNA bs) elicited in response to HIV ‐1 infection are extraordinarily mutated. One goal of HIV ‐1 vaccine development is to induce antibodies that are similar to the most potent and broad BNA bs isolated from infected subjects. The most effective BNA bs have very high mutation frequencies, indicative of the long periods of continual activation necessary to acquire the BNA b phenotype through affinity maturation. Understanding the mutational patterns that define the maturation pathways in BNA b development is critical to vaccine design efforts to recapitulate through vaccination the successful routes to neutralization breadth and potency that have occurred in natural infection. Studying the mutational changes that occur during affinity maturation, however, requires accurate partitioning of sequence data into B‐cell clones and identification of the starting point of a B‐cell clonal lineage, the initial V(D)J rearrangement. Here, we describe the statistical framework we have used to perform these tasks. Through the recent advancement of these and similar computational methods, many HIV ‐1 ancestral antibodies have been inferred, synthesized and their structures determined. This has allowed, for the first time, the investigation of the structural mechanisms underlying the affinity maturation process in HIV ‐1 antibody development. Here, we review what has been learned from this atomic‐level structural characterization of affinity maturation in HIV ‐1 antibodies and the implications for vaccine design.

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