Depletion of interfering antibodies in chronic hepatitis C patients and vaccinated chimpanzees reveals broad cross-genotype neutralizing activity

P Zhang, L Zhong, EB Struble… - Proceedings of the …, 2009 - National Acad Sciences
P Zhang, L Zhong, EB Struble, H Watanabe, A Kachko, K Mihalik, ML Virata, HJ Alter…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009National Acad Sciences
Using human immune globulins made from antihepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive plasma, we
recently identified two antibody epitopes in the E2 protein at residues 412–426 (epitope I)
and 434–446 (epitope II). Whereas epitope I is highly conserved among genotypes, epitope
II varies. We discovered that epitope I was implicated in HCV neutralization whereas the
binding of non-neutralizing antibody to epitope II disrupted virus neutralization mediated by
antibody binding at epitope I. These findings suggested that, if this interfering mechanism …
Using human immune globulins made from antihepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive plasma, we recently identified two antibody epitopes in the E2 protein at residues 412–426 (epitope I) and 434–446 (epitope II). Whereas epitope I is highly conserved among genotypes, epitope II varies. We discovered that epitope I was implicated in HCV neutralization whereas the binding of non-neutralizing antibody to epitope II disrupted virus neutralization mediated by antibody binding at epitope I. These findings suggested that, if this interfering mechanism operates in vivo during HCV infection, a neutralizing antibody against epitope I can be restrained by an interfering antibody, which may account for the persistence of HCV even in the presence of an abundance of neutralizing antibodies. We tested this hypothesis by affinity depletion and peptide-blocking of epitope-II-specific antibodies in plasma of a chronically HCV-infected patient and recombinant E1E2 vaccinated chimpanzees. We demonstrate that, by removing the restraints imposed by the interfering antibodies to epitope-II, neutralizing activity can be revealed in plasma that previously failed to neutralize viral stock in cell culture. Further, cross-genotype neutralization could be generated from monospecific plasma. Our studies contribute to understanding the mechanisms of antibody-mediated neutralization and interference and provide a practical approach to the development of more potent and broadly reactive hepatitis C immune globulins.
National Acad Sciences