Chen Alex, McKinley Scott A, Wang Simi, Shi Feng, Mucha Peter J, Forest M Gregory, Lai Samuel K
Department of Mathematics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Mathematics Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Biophys J. 2014 May 6;106(9):2028-36. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2014.02.038.
Given the difficulty in finding a cure for HIV/AIDS, a promising prevention strategy to reduce HIV transmission is to directly block infection at the portal of entry. The recent Thai RV144 trial offered the first evidence that an antibody-based vaccine may block heterosexual HIV transmission. Unfortunately, the underlying mechanism(s) for protection remain unclear. Here we theoretically examine a hypothesis that builds on our recent laboratory observation: virus-specific antibodies (Ab) can trap individual virions in cervicovaginal mucus (CVM), thereby reducing infection in vivo. Ab are known to have a weak-previously considered inconsequential-binding affinity with the mucin fibers that constitute CVM. However, multiple Ab can bind to the same virion at the same time, which markedly increases the overall Ab-mucin binding avidity, and creates an inheritable virion-mucin affinity. Our model takes into account biologically relevant length and timescales, while incorporating known HIV-Ab affinity and the respective diffusivities of viruses and Ab in semen and CVM. The model predicts that HIV-specific Ab in CVM leads to rapid formation and persistence of an HIV concentration front near the semen/CVM interface, far from the vaginal epithelium. Such an HIV concentration front minimizes the flux of HIV virions reaching target cells, and maximizes their elimination upon drainage of genital secretions. The robustness of the result implies that even exceedingly weak Ab-mucin affinity can markedly reduce the flux of virions reaching target cells. Beyond this specific application, the model developed here is adaptable to other pathogens, mucosal barriers, and geometries, as well as kinetic and diffusional effects, providing a tool for hypothesis testing and producing quantitative insights into the dynamics of immune-mediated protection.
鉴于治愈艾滋病毒/艾滋病存在困难,一种有前景的减少艾滋病毒传播的预防策略是在病毒进入门户直接阻断感染。最近的泰国RV144试验提供了首个证据,表明基于抗体的疫苗可能阻断异性间艾滋病毒传播。不幸的是,保护的潜在机制仍不清楚。在此,我们从理论上检验一种基于我们最近实验室观察结果的假说:病毒特异性抗体(Ab)可在宫颈阴道黏液(CVM)中捕获单个病毒粒子,从而在体内减少感染。已知抗体与构成CVM的黏蛋白纤维具有较弱的——此前认为无关紧要的——结合亲和力。然而,多个抗体可同时结合到同一个病毒粒子上,这显著增加了抗体与黏蛋白的总体结合亲合力,并产生一种可遗传的病毒粒子与黏蛋白的亲和力。我们的模型考虑了生物学相关的长度和时间尺度,同时纳入了已知的艾滋病毒与抗体的亲和力以及病毒和抗体在精液及CVM中的各自扩散率。该模型预测,CVM中的艾滋病毒特异性抗体导致在精液/CVM界面附近迅速形成并持续存在一个艾滋病毒浓度前沿,远离阴道上皮。这样一个艾滋病毒浓度前沿可使到达靶细胞的艾滋病毒粒子通量最小化,并在生殖分泌物排出时使其清除最大化。结果的稳健性意味着,即使是极其微弱的抗体与黏蛋白的亲和力也可显著降低到达靶细胞的病毒粒子通量。除了这个特定应用外,这里开发的模型还可适用于其他病原体、黏膜屏障和几何形状,以及动力学和扩散效应,为假说检验提供了一个工具,并对免疫介导保护的动力学产生定量见解。