Vaccine for HIV kickstarts key immune cell shift

"A successful vaccine will need to induce lot of antibodies that target key regions of the virus, so these results are... a promising step."

Jan 21, 2025 - 21:53
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Vaccine for HIV kickstarts key immune cell shift
A syringe sticks into a vial filled with liquid while in front of a colorful blue, pink, and green background.

Researchers have successfully created an HIV vaccine candidate that guides key immune cells along an evolutionary pathway to become broadly neutralizing antibodies.

In studies using mice, the immunogen activates diverse precursors of a specific broadly neutralizing antibody (bnAb) and starts the maturation of these antibodies at high enough levels to be a viable component of an HIV vaccine.

“A successful vaccine will need to induce lot of antibodies that target key regions of the virus, so these results are just one part of that goal, but a promising step,” says Mihai L. Azoitei, associate professor in the Duke Human Vaccine Institute and the cell biology department at Duke University and lead author of a study in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Azoitei and colleagues, building on a previous version of the immunogen developed at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute, aimed to increase the frequency of the mutations triggered by the immunogen.

They used computational modeling and structural analysis to enhance the immunogen’s ability to activate diverse bnAb precursors and to acquire the rare mutations that lead to bnAbs.

The resulting immunogen activated diverse precursors of an HIV V3-glycan bnAb—antibodies that target a key site of vulnerability on the outer envelope of the virus—and promote their acquisition of a functionally critical mutation.

The immunogen was validated biochemically, structurally, and in three different humanized mouse models that were designed to evaluate HIV vaccine candidates.

“These results provide a blueprint for rationally designing vaccine candidates that engage different immune cells and guide them on the path to producing protective antibodies against HIV,” Azoitei says.

The researchers plan further tests in primates and humans.

Funding for the study came from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institute of Health.

Source: Duke University

The post Vaccine for HIV kickstarts key immune cell shift appeared first on Futurity.

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