Role of Maternal Autologous Neutralizing Antibody in Selective Perinatal Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Escape Variants

Author:

Dickover Ruth1,Garratty Eileen1,Yusim Karina2,Miller Catherine2,Korber Bette2,Bryson Yvonne1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095

2. Los Alamos National Laboratories, Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545

Abstract

ABSTRACT Perinatal human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission is characterized by acquisition of a homogeneous viral quasispecies, yet the selective factors responsible for this genetic bottleneck are unclear. We examined the role of maternal autologous neutralizing antibody (aNAB) in selective transmission of HIV-1 escape variants to infants. Maternal sera from 38 infected mothers at the time of delivery were assayed for autologous neutralizing antibody activity against maternal time-of-delivery HIV-1 isolates in vitro. Maternal sera were also tested for cross-neutralization of infected-infant-first-positive-time-point viral isolates. Heteroduplex and DNA sequence analyses were then performed to identify the initial infecting virus as a neutralization-sensitive or escape HIV-1 variant. In utero transmitters ( n = 14) were significantly less likely to have aNAB to their own HIV-1 strains at delivery than nontransmitting mothers ( n = 17, 14.3% versus 76.5%, P = 0.003). Cross-neutralization assays of infected-infant-first-positive-time-point HIV-1 isolates indicated that while 14/21 HIV-1-infected infant first positive time point isolates were resistant to their own mother's aNAB, no infant isolate was inherently resistant to antibody neutralization by all sera tested. Furthermore, both heteroduplex ( n = 21) and phylogenetic ( n = 9) analyses showed that selective perinatal transmission and/or outgrowth of maternal autologous neutralization escape HIV-1 variants occurs in utero and intrapartum. These data indicate that maternal autologous neutralizing antibody can exert powerful protective and selective effects in perinatal HIV-1 transmission and therefore has important implications for vaccine development.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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