INSIGHTS | PERSPECTIVES
sciencemag.org SCIENCEGRAPHIC: VERONICA FALCONIERI/SCIENCEantibody response and thus represent bot-
tlenecks in generating bnAbs ( 9 ). Two previ-
ously described bnAbs, DH270 and CH235
( 10 , 11 ), the lineages of which were previ-
ously characterized and shown to harbor
improbable mutations that are important
for HIV-1 neutralization ( 9 ), were studied by
Saunders et al. On the basis of Env-DH270
lineage bnAb structures, an Env immuno-
gen was designed that bound the inferred
unmutated common ancestor (UCA) anti-
body with submicromolar affinity and, criti-
cally, also bound an affinity-maturation in-
termediate bnAb harboring rare mutations
with greater than fourfold increased affin-
ity. After six immunizations with a nanopar-
ticle-Env immunogen, physiologically rele-
vant neutralizing activity of modest breadth
was achieved in mice harboring B cells en-
gineered to express the DH270-UCA bnAb
precursor antibody. This Env immunogen
recruited DH270-UCA–expressing B cells
that incorporated rare mutations critical
for neutralization, an important advance on
the path to bnAb generation.
In additional experiments, inferred
CH235-UCA antibody genes were again used
to produce mice that, when immunized with
Env immunogen, generated HIV-1 neutral-
izing antibodies also carrying CH235 rare
mutations. Inducing physiologically rele-
vant HIV-1 neutralization in mouse models
is noteworthy, although tempered, in these
studies because the mice were engineered to
harbor supraphysiological (10 to 15%) initial
precursor B cell populations that were ca-
pable of responding. However, rhesus ma-
caques immunized with the CH235-eliciting
Env immunogen elicited HIV-1 neutralizing
antibodies after at least two immunizations.
Macaques presumably harbor a physiologi-
cally relevant low frequency of immuno-
gen-binding B cells, although this was not
evaluated. Thus, the findings in nonhuman
primates highlight an important hallmark in
eliciting HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies from
a natural B cell repertoire.
Steichen et al. similarly achieve an im-
portant goal in the development of an ef-
fective HIV-1 vaccine investigating the
BG18 bnAb lineage that leads to a potent
bnAb recognizing the V3 glycan neutral-
izing epitope on Env ( 12 ). However, this
study focuses on the available B cell anti-
body specificities in a healthy individual.
Because each of the hundreds of millions
of B cells in the body express a unique anti-
body specificity, the frequency of precursor
B cells that can recognize a bnAb-eliciting
immunogen is important to determine
when considering which precursor bnAb
lineage to target ( 13 ). Although the BG18
bnAb sequence is 30% mutated from the
inferred UCA, this bnAb lacks nucleotide
deletions or insertions that are consid-
ered more difficult to elicit through affin-
ity maturation. Informed by the BG18-Envstructure, Steichen et al. designed a precur-
sor antibody that carried 11% of the muta-
tions while retaining two-thirds the BG18
neutralizing breadth. On the basis of this
minimally mutated antibody sequence and
antibody-Env structure, next-generation
DNA sequencing data from 14 healthy indi-
viduals were examined to identify Ig heavy
chain–encoding sequences from each do-
nor with similar BG18 HCDR3 length and
Ig gene usage; 28 common BG18-like pre-
cursor antibodies were identified.
Common precursor antibodies were pro-
duced and used to iteratively select Env im-
munogens with appreciable affinities to the
common BG18 precursor antibodies. These
immunogens were then used to immunize
mice engineered to harbor B cells express-
ing the BG18-UCA Ig heavy chain that could
pair with different mouse Ig light chains. To
better reflect physiological precursor B cell
frequencies, BG18-UCA+ B cells were adop-
tively transferred into wild-type hosts at aratio of seven BG18-UCA+ B cells per million
host B cells. These mice were immunized
with nanoparticle-presented Env immuno-
gen, and rare BG18-UCA+ precursor B cells
were shown to respond, including their dif-
ferentiation into plasma cells secreting IgG
antibodies with increased affinities for the
immunogen. Steichen et al. further used
these BG18-UCA immunogens to assess re-
activity among human B cells from 16 dif-
ferent donors and found that immunogen-
reactive B cells were present at a frequency
of ~0.001% within a healthy B cell antibody
repertoire. These data thus document the
feasibility of engineering HIV-1 immuno-
gens that can recruit precursor bnAb B cells
into an antibody response from a physiolog-
ically relevant rare subset.
Development of an HIV vaccine remains
a daunting task. The studies of Saunders et
al. and Steichen et al., together with a recent
report from Escolano et al. demonstrating
the ability of a distinct HIV-1 Env immuno-
gen to recruit precursor bnAb-expressing B
cells into an appropriate antibody response
in wild-type mice, rabbits, and macaques
( 14 ), demonstrate meaningful progress. A
number of issues remain important to con-
sider in future studies, including identify-
ing which of the bnAb lineages to replicate
in a vaccine and the ability of any new im-
munogen to also generate B cell memory
and long-lived plasma cells, as well as better
characterization of the breadth of neutral-
izing activity elicited. Inherent to reaching
these goals will be a more careful evalua-
tion of the manner in which immunogens
are presented in a vaccine as well as the
timing and mode of vaccine administration
( 15 ). Finally, considering that many HIV
bnAbs cross-react with self-antigens, it will
also be important to evaluate whether vac-
cine strategies targeting these lineages also
promote autoimmunity. jREFERENCES AND NOTES- K. O. Saunders et al., Science 366 , eaay7199 (2019).
- J. M. Steichen et al., Science 366 , eaax4380 (2019).
- P. D. Kwong, J. R. Mascola, Immunity 37 , 412 (2012).
- P. D. Kwong, J. R. Mascola, Immunity 48 , 855 (2018).
- M. Bonsignori et al., Immunol. Rev. 275 , 145 (2017).
- B. F. Haynes et al., Cell Host Microbe 19 , 292 (2016).
- A. Escolano, P. Dosenovic, M. C. Nussenzweig, J. Exp.
Med. 214 , 3 (2017). - J. E. Crowe Jr., Cell 166 , 1360 (2016).
- K. Wiehe et al., Cell Host Microbe 23 , 759 (2018).
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- M. Bonsignori et al., Cell 165 , 449 (2016).
- N. T. Freund et al., Sci. Transl. Med. 9 , eaal2144 (2017).
- R. K. Abbott et al., Immunity 48 , 133 (2018).
- A. Escolano et al., Nature 570 , 468 (2019).
- K. M. Cirelli et al., Cell 177 , 1153 (2019).
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge R. Pelanda for helpful comments. R.M.T is
funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH, AI136534),
and A.A. was funded by the NIH (T32 AR007534).10.1126/science.aaz8647B cellEnv structure–based serial immunogensCritical mutationsUCA antibodyEnv, envelope; IgH, immunoglobulin heavy chain; IgL, immunoglobulin light chain; UCA, unmutated common ancestor.
IgHIgLAfnity
maturationAfnity
maturationAfnity
maturationHIV neutralization and breadthBroadly neutralizing
antibodyStaged HIV-1 immunization
Serial immunizations with distinct immunogens of the Env epitope of HIV-1 favor affinity maturation
of antibodies toward broadly neutralizing activity in mice and macaques.
1198 6 DECEMBER 2019 • VOL 366 ISSUE 6470
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