Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Standard

Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1. / Schønning, Kristian; Lund, O; Lund, O S; Hansen, J E.

I: Journal of Virology, Bind 73, Nr. 10, 1999, s. 8364-8370.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskning

Harvard

Schønning, K, Lund, O, Lund, OS & Hansen, JE 1999, 'Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1.', Journal of Virology, bind 73, nr. 10, s. 8364-8370. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=10482587&query_hl=187>

APA

Schønning, K., Lund, O., Lund, O. S., & Hansen, J. E. (1999). Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Journal of Virology, 73(10), 8364-8370. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=10482587&query_hl=187

Vancouver

Schønning K, Lund O, Lund OS, Hansen JE. Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Journal of Virology. 1999;73(10):8364-8370.

Author

Schønning, Kristian ; Lund, O ; Lund, O S ; Hansen, J E. / Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1. I: Journal of Virology. 1999 ; Bind 73, Nr. 10. s. 8364-8370.

Bibtex

@article{61cd6a8180d640bbba210db2a69828ba,
title = "Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1.",
abstract = "In order to study the stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody (MAb) neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in antibody excess and under equilibrium conditions, we exploited the ability of HIV-1 to generate mixed oligomers when different env genes are coexpressed. By the coexpression of Env glycoproteins that either can or cannot bind a neutralizing MAb in an env transcomplementation assay, virions were generated in which the proportion of MAb binding sites could be regulated. As the proportion of MAb binding sites in Env chimeric virus increased, MAb neutralization gradually increased. Virus neutralization by virion aggregation was minimal, as MAb binding to HIV-1 Env did not interfere with an AMLV Env-mediated infection by HIV-1(AMLV/HIV-1) pseudotypes of CD4(-) HEK293 cells. MAb neutralization of chimeric virions could be described as a third-order function of the proportion of Env antigen refractory to MAb binding. This scenario is consistent with the Env oligomer constituting the minimal functional unit and neutralization occurring incrementally as each Env oligomer binds MAb. Alternatively, the data could be fit to a sigmoid function. Thus, these data could not exclude the existence of a threshold for neutralization. However, results from MAb neutralization of chimeric virus containing wild-type Env and Env defective in CD4 binding was readily explained by a model of incremental MAb neutralization. In summary, the data indicate that MAb neutralization of T-cell line-adapted HIV-1 is incremental rather than all or none and that each MAb binding an Env oligomer reduces the likelihood of infection.",
author = "Kristian Sch{\o}nning and O Lund and Lund, {O S} and Hansen, {J E}",
year = "1999",
language = "English",
volume = "73",
pages = "8364--8370",
journal = "Journal of Virology",
issn = "0022-538X",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

AU - Schønning, Kristian

AU - Lund, O

AU - Lund, O S

AU - Hansen, J E

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - In order to study the stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody (MAb) neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in antibody excess and under equilibrium conditions, we exploited the ability of HIV-1 to generate mixed oligomers when different env genes are coexpressed. By the coexpression of Env glycoproteins that either can or cannot bind a neutralizing MAb in an env transcomplementation assay, virions were generated in which the proportion of MAb binding sites could be regulated. As the proportion of MAb binding sites in Env chimeric virus increased, MAb neutralization gradually increased. Virus neutralization by virion aggregation was minimal, as MAb binding to HIV-1 Env did not interfere with an AMLV Env-mediated infection by HIV-1(AMLV/HIV-1) pseudotypes of CD4(-) HEK293 cells. MAb neutralization of chimeric virions could be described as a third-order function of the proportion of Env antigen refractory to MAb binding. This scenario is consistent with the Env oligomer constituting the minimal functional unit and neutralization occurring incrementally as each Env oligomer binds MAb. Alternatively, the data could be fit to a sigmoid function. Thus, these data could not exclude the existence of a threshold for neutralization. However, results from MAb neutralization of chimeric virus containing wild-type Env and Env defective in CD4 binding was readily explained by a model of incremental MAb neutralization. In summary, the data indicate that MAb neutralization of T-cell line-adapted HIV-1 is incremental rather than all or none and that each MAb binding an Env oligomer reduces the likelihood of infection.

AB - In order to study the stoichiometry of monoclonal antibody (MAb) neutralization of T-cell line-adapted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in antibody excess and under equilibrium conditions, we exploited the ability of HIV-1 to generate mixed oligomers when different env genes are coexpressed. By the coexpression of Env glycoproteins that either can or cannot bind a neutralizing MAb in an env transcomplementation assay, virions were generated in which the proportion of MAb binding sites could be regulated. As the proportion of MAb binding sites in Env chimeric virus increased, MAb neutralization gradually increased. Virus neutralization by virion aggregation was minimal, as MAb binding to HIV-1 Env did not interfere with an AMLV Env-mediated infection by HIV-1(AMLV/HIV-1) pseudotypes of CD4(-) HEK293 cells. MAb neutralization of chimeric virions could be described as a third-order function of the proportion of Env antigen refractory to MAb binding. This scenario is consistent with the Env oligomer constituting the minimal functional unit and neutralization occurring incrementally as each Env oligomer binds MAb. Alternatively, the data could be fit to a sigmoid function. Thus, these data could not exclude the existence of a threshold for neutralization. However, results from MAb neutralization of chimeric virus containing wild-type Env and Env defective in CD4 binding was readily explained by a model of incremental MAb neutralization. In summary, the data indicate that MAb neutralization of T-cell line-adapted HIV-1 is incremental rather than all or none and that each MAb binding an Env oligomer reduces the likelihood of infection.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 73

SP - 8364

EP - 8370

JO - Journal of Virology

JF - Journal of Virology

SN - 0022-538X

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 34064728