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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Defining C3-V4 neutralisation epitopes on human immunodeficiency virus type-1 subtype c envelope glycoproteins

Wibmer, Constantinos Kurt 17 January 2012 (has links)
The rational design of an HIV-1 vaccine immunogen able to induce potent, cross-reactive, neutralising antibodies remains one of the single greatest challenges in the field of vaccine research today. Roughly a dozen broadly neutralising monoclonal antibodies have been isolated to date, and their epitopes represent important vaccination targets. Interestingly, apart from three that identify over-lapping epitopes in gp41, all of the broadly neutralising monoclonal antibodies target epitopes apparent on different conformations of gp120 (including the epitopes of PG9/PG16). Thus the gp120 monomer remains the most ideal template for immunogen design. Recently, epitopes in the C3-V4 region of gp120 have been shown to be major targets for early strain-specific neutralising antibodies in subtype C infected individuals. Autologous neutralising antibodies identify vulnerable sites on the envelope, and understanding the nature of antigenic “hotspots” on gp120 will help to guide rational vaccine design. This study sought to confirm in four individuals that the C3-V4 epitope was in fact apparent on monomeric gp120, and thereafter to better characterise the nature of viral escape from these antibodies. Using magnetic beads coated with one of 16 different recombinant gp120 proteins it was confirmed that the C3-V4 response was aimed at a monomer-specific epitope in all four cases. In two instances these antibodies were shown to contribute to autologous neutralisation, while in a third the existence of quaternary structure specific antibodies that could not be adsorbed with monomeric gp120 made this link impossible. In the forth instance transfer of the C3-V4 region was shown to expose a normally occluded epitope in the CD4 binding site. This research also provided evidence for other epitopes for autologous neutralising antibodies in C3, overlapping with the CD4 binding site and V5. Lastly, by introducing relevant escape mutations into the parental recombinant gp120s and then comparing the ability of these proteins to adsorb out anti-C3 antibodies, it was shown that while these mutations conferred complete resistance to neutralisation they did not prevent the antibodies from binding to their respective epitopes. The extensive characterisation of C3-related epitopes such as those described in this research should no doubt contribute to the rational design of a gp120 based vaccine immunogen aimed at eliciting broad and potent neutralising antibody responses.
2

Analysis of HIV-1 variable loop 3-specific neutralizing antibody responses by HIV-2/HIV-1 envelope chimeras

Davis, Katie L. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2008. / Title from first page of PDF file (viewed on June 24, 2009). Includes bibliographical references.
3

Proteomic investigation of the HIV receptors CD4 and DC-SIGN/CD209 membrane protein interactions

Bernhard, Oliver January 2004 (has links)
Zugl.: Sydney, NSW, Univ. of Sydney, Diss., 2004 / Hergestellt on demand
4

Characterization of Envelope-Specific Antibody Response Elicited by HIV-1 Vaccines: A Dissertation

Chen, Yuxin 06 January 2015 (has links)
Despite 30 years of intensive research,an effective human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine still remains elusive. The desirable immune response capable of providing protection against HIV acquisition is still not clear. The accumulating evidence learned from a recent vaccine efficacy correlate study not only confirmed the importance of antibody responses, but also highlighted potential protective functions of antibodies with a broad repertoire of HIV-1 epitope specificities and a wide range of different antiviral mechanisms. This necessitates a deep understanding of the complexity and diversity of antibody responses elicited by HIV-1 vaccines. My dissertation characterizes antibody response profiles of HIV-1 Env antibodies elicited by several novel immunogens or different immunization regimens, in terms of magnitude, persistence, epitope specificity, binding affinity, and biological function. First, to overcome the challenge of studying polyclonal sera without established assays, we expanded a novel platform to isolate Env-specific Rabbit mAbs (RmAb) elicited by DNA prime-protein boost immunization. These RmAbs revealed diverse epitope specificity and cross-reactivity against multiple gp120 antigens from more than one subtype, and several had potent and broad neutralizing activities against sensitive Tier 1 viruses. Further, structural analysis of two V3 mAbs demonstrated that a slight shift of the V3 epitope might have a dramatic impact on their neutralization activity. All of these observations provide a useful tool to study the induction of a desired type of antibody by different immunogens or different immunization regimens. Since heavily glycosylated HIV Env protein is a critical component of an HIV vaccine, we wanted to determine the impact of the HIV Env-associated glycan shield on antibody responses. We were able to produce Env proteins with a selective and homogeneous pattern of N-glycosylation using a glycoengineered yeast cell line. Antigenicity of these novel Env proteins was examined by well-characterized human mAbs. Immunogenicity studies showed that they were immunogenic and elicited gp120- specific antibody responses. More significantly, sera elicited by glycan-modified gp120 protein immunogens revealed better neutralizing activities and increased diversity of epitopes compared to sera elicited by traditional gp120 produced in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells. Further, we examined the impact of the delivery order of DNA and protein immunization on antibody responses. We found that DNA prime-protein boost induced a comparable level of Env-specific binding Abs at the peak immunogenicity point to codelivery of DNA. However, antibody responses from DNA prime-protein boost had high avidity and diverse specificities, which improved potency and breadth of neutralizing Abs against Tier 1 viruses. Our data indicate that DNA vaccine priming of the immune system is essential for generation of high-quality antibodies. Additionally, we determined the relative immunogenicity of gp120 and gp160 Env in the context of DNA prime-protein boost vaccination to induce high-quality antibody responses. Immunized sera from gp120 DNA primed animals, but not those primed with gp160 DNA, presented with distinct antibody repertoire specificities, a high magnitude of CD4 binding site-directed binding capabilities as well as neutralizing activities. We confirmed the importance of using the gp120 Env form at the DNA priming phase, which directly determined the quality of antibody response.
5

FC Receptor-Mediated Activities of Env-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies Generated from Human Volunteers Receiving a DNA Prime-Protein Boost HIV Vaccine: A Dissertation

Costa, Matthew R. 12 October 2016 (has links)
Human immunodeficiency type 1 (HIV-1) is able to elicit broadly potent neutralizing antibodies in a very small subset of individuals only after several years’ infection and as a result, vaccines that elicit these types of antibodies have been difficult to design. The RV144 trial showed that a moderate protection is possible, which may correlate with antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity. Previous studies in the Lu lab demonstrated that in an HIV-1 vaccine phase I trial, DP6-001, a polyvalent Env DNA prime-protein boost formulation, could elicit potent and broadly reactive, gp120-specific antibodies with positive neutralization activities along with multiple Fc mediated effector functions. I developed a protocol for the production and analysis of HIV-1 Env-specific human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) isolated from these DP6-001 vaccinees. By utilizing a labeled gp120 bait to isolate Env specific B cells, paired heavy and light chain immunoglobulin (Ig) genes were cloned and allowed for the production of monoclonal antibodies with specificity for gp120. By using this protocol, 13 isolated mAbs from four DP6-001 vaccinees showed broad binding activities to gp120 proteins of diverse subtypes, both autologous and heterologous to vaccine immunogens, with mostly conformational epitopes and a few V3 and C5 specific mAbs. Equally cross-reactive Fc-mediated functional activities, including ADCC and antibody dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP), were present with both immune sera and isolated mAbs, confirming the induction of non-neutralizing functional antibodies by the DNA prime- protein boost vaccination. Elicitation of broadly reactive mAbs by vaccination in healthy human volunteers confirms the value of the polyvalent formulation in this HIV-1 vaccine design.
6

"Avaliação do gene estrutural da proteína de ligação à lectina (MBL) e sua relação com a transmissão materno-fetal do HIV" / Evaluation of the structural lectin binding protein (MBL) gene and its relationship with maternal-to-child HIV transmission

Chagas, Kélem de Nardi 17 August 2005 (has links)
Avaliou-se a expressão do gene mbl2 em 79 crianças e suas mães HIV positivas com o objetivo de avaliar a sua influência na transmissão vertical. Os pacientes divididos em dois grupos: crianças HIV positivas e suas mães (n=18) e crianças HIV negativas e suas mães (n=61) foram avaliados pelo CH50 e AP50 (ensaios hemolíticos), dosagem e avaliação funcional da MBL, ativação da cascata terminal do complemento (ELISA) e o gene mbl2 (PCR). Os resultados não mostraram diferença significante entre os níveis séricos, atividade funcional e o gene da MBL entre os grupos, excluindo a sua influência sobre a transmissão materno-fetal do HIV / It was evaluated the mbl2 gene expression in 79 children and their HIV positive mothers with the aim to evaluate its influence on mother-to-child HIV. The patients were divided in two groups: HIV positive children and their mothers (n=18) and HIV negative children and their mothers (n=61) were evaluated by CH50 and AP50 (hemolytic assays); levels and functional MBL and terminal complement cascade (ELISA) and mbl2 gene (PCR). The results didn't show significant difference amons serum levels, functional activities and MBL gene between the groups, excluding the influence in the mother-to child HIV transmission.
7

"Avaliação do gene estrutural da proteína de ligação à lectina (MBL) e sua relação com a transmissão materno-fetal do HIV" / Evaluation of the structural lectin binding protein (MBL) gene and its relationship with maternal-to-child HIV transmission

Kélem de Nardi Chagas 17 August 2005 (has links)
Avaliou-se a expressão do gene mbl2 em 79 crianças e suas mães HIV positivas com o objetivo de avaliar a sua influência na transmissão vertical. Os pacientes divididos em dois grupos: crianças HIV positivas e suas mães (n=18) e crianças HIV negativas e suas mães (n=61) foram avaliados pelo CH50 e AP50 (ensaios hemolíticos), dosagem e avaliação funcional da MBL, ativação da cascata terminal do complemento (ELISA) e o gene mbl2 (PCR). Os resultados não mostraram diferença significante entre os níveis séricos, atividade funcional e o gene da MBL entre os grupos, excluindo a sua influência sobre a transmissão materno-fetal do HIV / It was evaluated the mbl2 gene expression in 79 children and their HIV positive mothers with the aim to evaluate its influence on mother-to-child HIV. The patients were divided in two groups: HIV positive children and their mothers (n=18) and HIV negative children and their mothers (n=61) were evaluated by CH50 and AP50 (hemolytic assays); levels and functional MBL and terminal complement cascade (ELISA) and mbl2 gene (PCR). The results didn't show significant difference amons serum levels, functional activities and MBL gene between the groups, excluding the influence in the mother-to child HIV transmission.

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