Antibodies May Lead to Protection Against HIV
By David Brown (Washington Post) 8 August 2008: Some long-term survivors of HIV infection produce rare and extremely potent antibodies that keep the disease from progressing to AIDS, and might point to a way to protect uninfected people from the virus, researchers reported yesterday in the closing hours of the 17th International AIDS Conference in Mexico City.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/07/AR2008080703223.html
Some long-term survivors of HIV infection produce rare and extremely
potent antibodies that keep the disease from progressing to AIDS, and
might point to a way to protect uninfected people from the virus,
researchers reported yesterday in the closing hours of the 17th
International AIDS Conference in Mexico City.
The antibodies, against a particular part of a much-studied HIV protein
called gp120, might prove useful as a microbicide for blocking
infection during sexual intercourse. If researchers could find a way to
prompt the immune system to make its own supply of the antibodies
before encountering the virus, they would have a vaccine.
"I think the road is long before we reach that point," cautioned
Stephanie Planque, the researcher who presented two studies.
The search for both an AIDS microbicide and a vaccine has been
particularly frustrating. None are in use, and some candidates tested
in recent years have turned out to increase the risk of
infection.
The antibodies described yesterday attack a small and crucial region of
HIV's outer shell where the virus binds to its chief prey,
immune-system cells called lymphocytes. Acting as an enzyme, the
antibody clips the attachment point, and falls away undamaged and ready
to do the job again.
These "catalytic antibodies" have been isolated from people with lupus,
a disease in which the immune system malfunctions and produces a large
number of unusual antibodies. Catalytic antibodies have also been seen
in some long-term survivors of HIV infection, including three people
with the blood disease hemophilia, whose cases were described
yesterday.
Immunologists have paid great attention to the gp120 protein for more
than a decade. The virus uses it to dock to two receptors on the
surface of lymphocytes, starting the process of infection.
People infected with HIV make antibodies against gp120, but in most
cases they are not enough to stop or slow the infection. A vaccine
consisting of multiple injections of purified gp120 protein did not
protect people in a large clinical trial run earlier this decade.
Recent research has focused on a 13-unit long stretch of the 500-unit
protein, exactly where the virus attaches to the cells' receptors.
(Each unit is an amino acid, which are strung in a chain like beads on
a necklace to form the protein.)
Among the laboratories doing this work is one run by biochemist and
immunologist Sudhir Paul at the University of Texas Medical School in
Houston, where Planque is a graduate student. Others include labs at
the National Institutes of Health and the Scripps Research Institute in
California.
This small section of gp120 is identical in virtually all strains of
HIV. But because it is partly hidden by other sections of the protein,
the immune system "sees" it poorly and does not make good antibodies
against it -- except in rare cases.
One of those exceptions is in lupus patients. AIDS researchers noticed
years ago that HIV infection rarely occurred in them. "One hypothesis
is that they mount an immune response that protected them," Planque
said yesterday.
She screened a library of antibodies made by lupus patients, looking
for ones with catalytic activity against the 13-unit stretch of gp120.
She found some.
In one of yesterday's late sessions, she told scientists at the
conference that lupus-derived antibodies killed HIV samples from five
clades, or families, of the virus. In a related presentation, she
described how antibodies purified from three people with hemophilia,
who had each lived for more than 17 years with HIV infection, did the
same.
The broad effect of the antibodies is important. The AIDS virus differs
somewhat from one geographical region to another. To be useful, a
microbicide or vaccine would have to protect against all the
clades.
Antibodies are already in use as drugs for several chronic diseases,
such as rheumatoid arthritis, but they are extremely expensive, in part
because they must be given in large doses.
However, Paul, Planque's supervisor, speculated that a microbicide
containing antibodies might be affordable even for people in the
developing world. That is because only very small quantities of
material would be needed to protect against sexual transmission, and
the protection would have to last only hours, not days or weeks.
Finding a way to stimulate the immune system to make catalytic
antibodies will be much harder, he said. Paul is researching strategies
for "presenting" the crucial part of the protein to the immune system
in a more effective way than occurs naturally. If successful, such a
strategy could result in a useful vaccine.
Curiously, everyone already makes the catalytic antibodies against
gp120 in small quantities. That is because they are among the roughly
2,500 antibodies whose production is directly driven by genes and,
thus, part of the immune system's innate repertoire.
The immune system can make millions of more antibodies, capable of
attacking virtually any foreign substance. But that process involves
being exposed to the foreign substance, called an antigen, a
complicated process of gene-shuffling, and a time-consuming refinement
of antibody production by the immune system.
In contrast, the anti-gp120 catalytic antibody is part of an ancient,
hard-wired protective response, whose evolutionary origins are largely
a mystery. Whatever they are, the body's output of them is not quite
good enough to protect most people from HIV.
Paul and others hope that, with some tinkering, it might be made
so.

