Division of Infection and Immunity, Institute of Immunity and Transplantation, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Immunol. 2021 Oct 19;12:708227. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.708227. eCollection 2021.
Since their discovery, antibodies capable of broad neutralisation have been at the forefront of HIV-1 research and are of particular interest due to passive transfer studies demonstrating their potential to provide protection. Currently an exact definition of what is required for a monoclonal antibody to be classed as a broadly neutralising antibody (bnAb) has not yet been established. This has led to hundreds of antibodies with varying neutralisation breadth being studied and has given insight into antibody maturation pathways and epitopes targeted. However, even with this knowledge, immunisation studies and vaccination trials to date have had limited success in eliciting antibodies with neutralisation breadth. For this reason there is a growing need to identify factors specifically associated with bnAb development, yet to do this a set of criteria is necessary to distinguish bnAbs from non-bnAbs. This review aims to define what it means to be a HIV-1 bnAb by comparing neutralisation breadth, genetic features and epitopes of bnAbs, and in the process highlights the challenges of comparing the array of antibodies that have been isolated over the years.
自发现以来,能够广泛中和的抗体一直处于 HIV-1 研究的前沿,由于被动转移研究表明它们具有提供保护的潜力,因此特别受到关注。目前,尚未确定将单克隆抗体归类为广泛中和抗体 (bnAb) 需要什么确切的定义。这导致研究了数百种具有不同中和广度的抗体,并深入了解了抗体成熟途径和靶向表位。然而,即使有了这些知识,免疫研究和疫苗试验迄今为止在引发具有中和广度的抗体方面取得的成功有限。因此,人们越来越需要确定与 bnAb 发展特别相关的因素,但为此有必要制定一套标准来区分 bnAb 和非 bnAb。这篇综述旨在通过比较 bnAb 的中和广度、遗传特征和表位来定义 HIV-1 bnAb 的含义,并在此过程中强调了比较多年来分离的大量抗体所面临的挑战。