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61


Structure of a classical broadly neutralizing stem antibody in complex with a pandemic H2 influenza virus hemagglutinin

Dreyfus, Cyrille; Ekiert, Damian C; Wilson, Ian A
We report the structural characterization of the first antibody identified to cross-neutralize multiple subtypes of influenza A viruses. The crystal structure of mouse antibody C179 bound to the pandemic 1957 H2N2 hemagglutinin (HA) reveals that it targets an epitope on the HA stem similar to those targeted by the recently identified human broadly neutralizing antibodies. C179 also inhibits the low-pH conformational change of the HA but uses a different angle of approach and both heavy and light chains.
PMCID:3676097
PMID: 23552413
ISSN: 1098-5514
CID: 2291332

New approaches to vaccination

Chapter by: Wei, Chih-Jen; Ekiert, Damian C; Nabel, Gary J; Wilson, Ian A
in: TEXTBOOK OF INFLUENZA by Webster, RG; Monto, AS; Braciale, TJ; Lamb, RA [Eds]
CHICHESTER : JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD, 2013
pp. 327-336
ISBN:
CID: 2394182

A virus-like particle that elicits cross-reactive antibodies to the conserved stem of influenza virus hemagglutinin

Schneemann, Anette; Speir, Jeffrey A; Tan, Gene S; Khayat, Reza; Ekiert, Damian C; Matsuoka, Yumiko; Wilson, Ian A
The discovery of broadly neutralizing antibodies that recognize highly conserved epitopes in the membrane-proximal region of influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) has revitalized efforts to develop a universal influenza virus vaccine. This effort will likely require novel immunogens that contain these epitopes but lack the variable and immunodominant epitopes located in the globular head of HA. As a first step toward developing such an immunogen, we investigated whether the 20-residue A-helix of the HA2 chain that forms the major component of the epitope of broadly neutralizing antibodies CR6261, F10, and others is sufficient by itself to elicit antibodies with similarly broad antiviral activity. Here, we report the multivalent display of the A-helix on icosahedral virus-like particles (VLPs) derived from the capsid of Flock House virus. Mice immunized with VLPs displaying 180 copies/particle of the A-helix produced antibodies that recognized trimeric HA and the elicited antibodies had binding characteristics similar to those of CR6261 and F10: they recognized multiple HA subtypes from group 1 but not from group 2. However, the anti-A-helix antibodies did not neutralize influenza virus. These results indicate that further engineering of the transplanted peptide is required and that display of additional regions of the epitope may be necessary to achieve protection.
PMCID:3486276
PMID: 22896619
ISSN: 1098-5514
CID: 2291382

Heterosubtypic antibody recognition of the influenza virus hemagglutinin receptor binding site enhanced by avidity

Lee, Peter S; Yoshida, Reiko; Ekiert, Damian C; Sakai, Naoki; Suzuki, Yasuhiko; Takada, Ayato; Wilson, Ian A
Continual and rapid mutation of seasonal influenza viruses by antigenic drift necessitates the almost annual reformulation of flu vaccines, which may offer little protection if the match to the dominant circulating strain is poor. S139/1 is a cross-reactive antibody that neutralizes multiple HA strains and subtypes, including those from H1N1 and H3N2 viruses that currently infect humans. The crystal structure of the S139/1 Fab in complex with the HA from the A/Victoria/3/1975 (H3N2) virus reveals that the antibody targets highly conserved residues in the receptor binding site and contacts antigenic sites A, B, and D. Binding and plaque reduction assays show that the monovalent Fab alone can protect against H3 strains, but the enhanced avidity from binding of bivalent IgG increases the breadth of neutralization to additional strains from the H1, H2, H13, and H16 subtypes. Thus, antibodies making relatively low affinity Fab interactions with the receptor binding site can have significant antiviral activity when enhanced by avidity through bivalent interactions of the IgG, thereby extending the breadth of binding and neutralization to highly divergent influenza virus strains and subtypes.
PMCID:3479480
PMID: 23027945
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2291352

Cross-neutralization of influenza A viruses mediated by a single antibody loop

Ekiert, Damian C; Kashyap, Arun K; Steel, John; Rubrum, Adam; Bhabha, Gira; Khayat, Reza; Lee, Jeong Hyun; Dillon, Michael A; O'Neil, Ryann E; Faynboym, Aleksandr M; Horowitz, Michael; Horowitz, Lawrence; Ward, Andrew B; Palese, Peter; Webby, Richard; Lerner, Richard A; Bhatt, Ramesh R; Wilson, Ian A
Immune recognition of protein antigens relies on the combined interaction of multiple antibody loops, which provide a fairly large footprint and constrain the size and shape of protein surfaces that can be targeted. Single protein loops can mediate extremely high-affinity binding, but it is unclear whether such a mechanism is available to antibodies. Here we report the isolation and characterization of an antibody called C05, which neutralizes strains from multiple subtypes of influenza A virus, including H1, H2 and H3. X-ray and electron microscopy structures show that C05 recognizes conserved elements of the receptor-binding site on the haemagglutinin surface glycoprotein. Recognition of the haemagglutinin receptor-binding site is dominated by a single heavy-chain complementarity-determining region 3 loop, with minor contacts from heavy-chain complementarity-determining region 1, and is sufficient to achieve nanomolar binding with a minimal footprint. Thus, binding predominantly with a single loop can allow antibodies to target small, conserved functional sites on otherwise hypervariable antigens.
PMCID:3538848
PMID: 22982990
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 2291362

Molecular basis for recognition of methylated and specific DNA sequences by the zinc finger protein Kaiso

Buck-Koehntop, Bethany A; Stanfield, Robyn L; Ekiert, Damian C; Martinez-Yamout, Maria A; Dyson, H Jane; Wilson, Ian A; Wright, Peter E
Methylation of CpG dinucleotides in DNA is a common epigenetic modification in eukaryotes that plays a central role in maintenance of genome stability, gene silencing, genomic imprinting, development, and disease. Kaiso, a bifunctional Cys(2)His(2) zinc finger protein implicated in tumor-cell proliferation, binds to both methylated CpG (mCpG) sites and a specific nonmethylated DNA motif (TCCTGCNA) and represses transcription by recruiting chromatin remodeling corepression machinery to target genes. Here we report structures of the Kaiso zinc finger DNA-binding domain in complex with its nonmethylated, sequence-specific DNA target (KBS) and with a symmetrically methylated DNA sequence derived from the promoter region of E-cadherin. Recognition of specific bases in the major groove of the core KBS and mCpG sites is accomplished through both classical and methyl CH...O hydrogen-bonding interactions with residues in the first two zinc fingers, whereas residues in the C-terminal extension following the third zinc finger bind in the opposing minor groove and are required for high-affinity binding. The C-terminal region is disordered in the free protein and adopts an ordered structure upon binding to DNA. The structures of these Kaiso complexes provide insights into the mechanism by which a zinc finger protein can recognize mCpG sites as well as a specific, nonmethylated regulatory DNA sequence.
PMCID:3458336
PMID: 22949637
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2291372

Highly conserved protective epitopes on influenza B viruses

Dreyfus, Cyrille; Laursen, Nick S; Kwaks, Ted; Zuijdgeest, David; Khayat, Reza; Ekiert, Damian C; Lee, Jeong Hyun; Metlagel, Zoltan; Bujny, Miriam V; Jongeneelen, Mandy; van der Vlugt, Remko; Lamrani, Mohammed; Korse, Hans J W M; Geelen, Eric; Sahin, Ozcan; Sieuwerts, Martijn; Brakenhoff, Just P J; Vogels, Ronald; Li, Olive T W; Poon, Leo L M; Peiris, Malik; Koudstaal, Wouter; Ward, Andrew B; Wilson, Ian A; Goudsmit, Jaap; Friesen, Robert H E
Identification of broadly neutralizing antibodies against influenza A viruses has raised hopes for the development of monoclonal antibody-based immunotherapy and "universal" vaccines for influenza. However, a substantial part of the annual flu burden is caused by two cocirculating, antigenically distinct lineages of influenza B viruses. Here, we report human monoclonal antibodies, CR8033, CR8071, and CR9114, that protect mice against lethal challenge from both lineages. Antibodies CR8033 and CR8071 recognize distinct conserved epitopes in the head region of the influenza B hemagglutinin (HA), whereas CR9114 binds a conserved epitope in the HA stem and protects against lethal challenge with influenza A and B viruses. These antibodies may inform on development of monoclonal antibody-based treatments and a universal flu vaccine for all influenza A and B viruses.
PMCID:3538841
PMID: 22878502
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 2291392

Recognition of sialylated poly-N-acetyllactosamine chains on N- and O-linked glycans by human and avian influenza A virus hemagglutinins

Nycholat, Corwin M; McBride, Ryan; Ekiert, Damian C; Xu, Rui; Rangarajan, Janani; Peng, Wenjie; Razi, Nahid; Gilbert, Michel; Wakarchuk, Warren; Wilson, Ian A; Paulson, James C
Human influenza viruses are proposed to recognize sialic acids (pink diamonds) on glycans extended with poly-LacNAc chains (LacNAc=(yellow circle+blue square)). N- and O-linked glycans were extended with different poly-LacNAc chains with alpha2-3- and alpha2-6-linked sialic acids recognized by human and avian influenza viruses, respectively. The specificity of recombinant hemagglutinins (receptors in green) was investigated by using glycan microarray technology.
PMCID:3517101
PMID: 22505324
ISSN: 1521-3773
CID: 2291402

Broadly neutralizing antibodies against influenza virus and prospects for universal therapies

Ekiert, Damian C; Wilson, Ian A
Vaccines are the gold standard for the control and prevention of infectious diseases, but a number of important human diseases remain challenging targets for vaccine development. An influenza vaccine that confers broad spectrum, long-term protection remains elusive. Several broadly neutralizing antibodies have been identified that protect against multiple subtypes of influenza A viruses, and crystal structures of several neutralizing antibodies in complex with the major influenza surface antigen, hemagglutinin, have revealed at least 3 highly conserved epitopes. Our understanding of the molecular details of these antibody-antigen interactions has suggested new strategies for the rational design of improved influenza vaccines, and has inspired the development of new antivirals for the treatment of influenza infections.
PMCID:3368890
PMID: 22482710
ISSN: 1879-6265
CID: 2291412

Influenza human monoclonal antibody 1F1 interacts with three major antigenic sites and residues mediating human receptor specificity in H1N1 viruses

Tsibane, Tshidi; Ekiert, Damian C; Krause, Jens C; Martinez, Osvaldo; Crowe, James E Jr; Wilson, Ian A; Basler, Christopher F
Most monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to the influenza A virus hemagglutinin (HA) head domain exhibit very limited breadth of inhibitory activity due to antigenic drift in field strains. However, mAb 1F1, isolated from a 1918 influenza pandemic survivor, inhibits select human H1 viruses (1918, 1943, 1947, and 1977 isolates). The crystal structure of 1F1 in complex with the 1918 HA shows that 1F1 contacts residues that are classically defined as belonging to three distinct antigenic sites, Sa, Sb and Ca(2). The 1F1 heavy chain also reaches into the receptor binding site (RBS) and interacts with residues that contact sialoglycan receptors and determine HA receptor specificity. The 1F1 epitope is remarkably similar to the previously described murine HC63 H3 epitope, despite significant sequence differences between H1 and H3 HAs. Both antibodies potently inhibit receptor binding, but only HC63 can block the pH-induced conformational changes in HA that drive membrane fusion. Contacts within the RBS suggested that 1F1 may be sensitive to changes that alter HA receptor binding activity. Affinity assays confirmed that sequence changes that switch the HA to avian receptor specificity affect binding of 1F1 and a mAb possessing a closely related heavy chain, 1I20. To characterize 1F1 cross-reactivity, additional escape mutant selection and site-directed mutagenesis were performed. Residues 190 and 227 in the 1F1 epitope were found to be critical for 1F1 reactivity towards 1918, 1943 and 1977 HAs, as well as for 1I20 reactivity towards the 1918 HA. Therefore, 1F1 heavy-chain interactions with conserved RBS residues likely contribute to its ability to inhibit divergent HAs.
PMCID:3516549
PMID: 23236279
ISSN: 1553-7374
CID: 2291342