Stabilized gp120-specific CD4 for next-generation HIV-1 inhibitors
Bahn-Suh, A. J.; Caldera, L. F.; Gnanapragasam, P. N. P.; Keeffe, J. R.; Seaman, M. S.; Bjorkman, P. J.; Mayo, S. L.
Show abstract
HIV-1 Envs gp120 subunit uses the T-cell coreceptor CD4 to enter host cells in a manner that prevents the evolution of host resistance by sharing the binding epitope with the footprint of CD4s natural ligands, class II MHC proteins1,2. Consequently, CD4-containing biologics, such as CD4-Ig3,4 and derivatives5-9, benefit from this conserved relationship and are promising broad-acting anti-HIV-1 agents that are resistant to viral mutational escape10. However, these biologics suffer from short serum half-lives in humans11,12 and animals3,13, likely due to CD4s poor thermostability14 and/or off-target class II MHC binding15. This latter property also warrants caution for CD4-containing biologics that could indiscriminately recruit Fc-dependent effector functions against uninfected cells and/or compete with host CD4 for class II MHC during T cell interactions with antigen-presenting cells. Here, we describe gp120-specific CD4 (gCD4), which exhibits enhanced thermostability and retains Env, but not class II MHC, binding. CD4-Ig variants incorporating gCD4 did not bind class II MHC on human B cells, displayed greater longevity in human tonsil organoid cultures, showed half-lives equivalent to therapeutic IgG antibodies in mice, and neutralized HIV-1 more broadly and potently compared to the original CD4-Ig molecules. Encouragingly, one variant neutralized 100% of a panel of clinically-relevant HIV-1 strains at titers correlating to infection prevention in humans, outperforming known broadly neutralizing antibodies16,17. Thus, gCD4 holds promise for the development of new CD4-containing biologics with best-in-class specificity, pharmacokinetic properties, and neutralization breadth and potency.
Matching journals
The top 6 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.