HIV protein unveils vaccine target

Mar 31, 2011
HIV envelope protein before (orange) and after (green) attaching to a human T cell. Top: The orange shape shows the three-armed HIV envelope protein, seen from above, before attaching to the CD4 protein. The green shape shows how it opens and twists after attaching to CD4 (dark blue ribbon on the green shape). The image at bottom shows a side view of the HIV protein before (orange) and after (green). Credit: R. Holland Cheng

(PhysOrg.com) -- An international study headed by a UC Davis scientist describes how a component of a potential HIV vaccine opens like a flower, undergoing one of the most dramatic protein rearrangements yet observed in nature. The finding could reveal new targets for vaccines to prevent HIV infection and AIDS. A paper describing the work was published online this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In the new study, researchers from the U.S., Sweden and France explored the structure and behavior of the HIV envelope , which could potentially serve as a component of a aimed at eliciting the human immune system to generate antibodies against HIV.

“By opening up these less exposed regions, we might be able to raise more broadly cross-reactive antibodies to HIV,” said R. Holland Cheng, professor of molecular and cellular biology at UC Davis and senior author of the study.

HIV infects a type of white blood cell called the CD4 T cell, weakening the immune system and leading to . HIV attaches to these cells through the envelope complex, which is made up of three gp120 proteins and three gp41 proteins, Cheng said.

First, the gp120 protein attaches to a CD4 protein on the victim cell’s membrane. Then it uses gp41 to punch a hole through the membrane.

UC Davis graduate student Carlos Moscoso and project scientist Li Xing, working in Cheng’s laboratory, used a cryoelectron microscope to study the structure of the complex and how it changes when it is exposed to a piece of the CD4 protein. A cryoelectron microscope derives three-dimensional images of complex protein structures from samples frozen in liquid nitrogen.

They found that when the HIV protein complex attaches to a CD4 protein, it rotates and flattens, exposing more of the gp41 proteins in the middle — probably allowing the gp41 protein to get closer to the cell membrane so it can lock on.

It also potentially exposes an area of the virus that would be vulnerable to attack by the immune system, Cheng said. If a person were vaccinated and had antibodies to such a protein region, they might be able to stop the virus at the point of invading the CD4 T cell.

The gp120 protein itself varies considerably between strains, so it has been difficult to make an effective vaccine against it. But these hidden protein regions vary less between different strains of HIV, Cheng said.

Cheng’s group is part of the HIV Research and Design consortium formed by the National Institutes of Health to pursue new targets for HIV vaccines. In future work, the consortium plans to test potent antibodies from HIV-positive people who have survived without developing AIDS to see if the recognize the new potential vaccine targets.

The complex was prepared by Novartis Diagnostics and Vaccines Inc. of Cambridge, Mass.

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More information: The other authors of the paper are: Selina Poon, Dominik Green and Frank Lin at the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, UC Davis; Yide Sun, Elaine Kan, Susan Barnett and Indresh Srivastava, at Novartis; Loïc Martin, Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique, France; and Anders Vahlne, Karolinska Institute, Sweden.

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