Diverse antiviral IgG effector activities are predicted by unique biophysical antibody features

Author:

Cheng Hao D.,Dowell Karen G.,Bailey-Kellogg Chris,Goods Brittany A.,Love J. Christopher,Ferrari Guido,Alter Galit,Gach Johannes,Forthal Donald N.,Lewis George K.,Greene Kelli,Gao Hongmei,Montefiori David C.,Ackerman Margaret E.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background The critical role of antibody Fc-mediated effector functions in immune defense has been widely reported in various viral infections. These effector functions confer cellular responses through engagement with innate immune cells. The precise mechanism(s) by which immunoglobulin G (IgG) Fc domain and cognate receptors may afford protection are poorly understood, however, in the context of HIV/SHIV infections. Many different in vitro assays have been developed and utilized to measure effector functions, but the extent to which these assays capture distinct antibody activities has not been fully elucidated. Results In this study, six Fc-mediated effector function assays and two biophysical antibody profiling assays were performed on a common set of samples from HIV-1 infected and vaccinated subjects. Biophysical antibody profiles supported robust prediction of diverse IgG effector functions across distinct Fc-mediated effector function assays. While a number of assays showed correlated activities, supervised machine learning models indicated unique antibody features as primary contributing factors to the associated effector functions. Additional experiments established the mechanistic relevance of relationships discovered using this unbiased approach. Conclusions In sum, this study provides better resolution on the diversity and complexity of effector function assays, offering a clearer perspective into this family of antibody mechanisms of action to inform future HIV-1 treatment and vaccination strategies.

Funder

bill and melinda gates foundation

national institute of allergy and infectious diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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