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Published November 29, 2012 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Inhibitory effect of HIV-specific neutralizing IgA on mucosal transmission of HIV in humanized mice

Abstract

HIV-1 infections are generally initiated at mucosal sites. Thus, IgA antibody, which plays pivotal roles in mucosal immunity, might efficiently prevent HIV infection. However, mounting a highly effective HIV-specific mucosal IgA response by conventional immunization has been challenging and the potency of HIV-specific IgA against infection needs to be addressed in vivo. Here we show that the polymeric IgA form of anti-HIV antibody inhibits HIV mucosal transmission more effectively than the monomeric IgA or IgG1 form in a comparable range of concentrations in humanized mice. To deliver anti-HIV IgA in a continual manner, we devised a hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell (HSPC)–based genetic approach using an IgA gene. We transplanted human HSPCs transduced with a lentiviral construct encoding a class-switched anti-HIV IgA (b12-IgA) into the humanized bone marrow-liver-thymus (BLT) mice. The transgene was expressed specifically in B cells and plasma cells in lymphoid organs and mucosal sites. After vaginal HIV-1 challenge, mucosal CD4^+ T cells in the b12-IgA–producing mice were protected from virus-mediated depletion. Similar results were also obtained in a second humanized model, "human immune system mice." Our study demonstrates the potential of anti-HIV IgA in immunoprophylaxis in vivo, emphasizing the importance of the mucosal IgA response in defense against HIV/AIDS.

Additional Information

© 2012 The American Society of Hematology. Submitted April 7, 2012; Accepted September 20, 2012. The authors thank G. Nabel (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases) for the b12-IgG plasmid; B. Corthésy (University State Hospital [CHUV], Switzerland) for human IgA2 plasmids; A. Balazs (California Institute of Technology) for lentiviral vectors; and P. Bjorkman and A. West (both from California Institute of Technology) for the purified proteins. This work was supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant HHSN266200500035C, and NIH career development award 5K08CA133521 (D.S.R.). Contribution: E.M.H. and D.B. conceived the study with assistance from L.Y.; E.M.H. designed the experiments; E.M.H. and S.N.P. performed experiments and analyzed the data; S.S. performed transplantation to generate hu-BLT mice with direction from D.S.A.; D.S.R. assisted with analysis of immunohistochemistry; P.N.P.G. performed in vitro neutralization assay of antibodies; and E.M.H. and D.B. wrote the paper with contributions from all authors. Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Published - Blood-2012-Hur-4571-82.pdf

Supplemental Material - blood-2012-04-422303-1.pdf

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