RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 An HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibody from a clade C infected pediatric elite neutralizer potently neutralizes the contemporaneous and autologous evolving viruses JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 403469 DO 10.1101/403469 A1 Sanjeev Kumar A1 Harekrushna Panda A1 Muzamil Ashraf Makhdoomi A1 Nitesh Mishra A1 Haaris Ahsan Safdari A1 Heena Aggarwal A1 Elluri Seetharami Reddy A1 Rakesh Lodha A1 Sushil Kumar Kabra A1 Anmol Chandele A1 Somnath Dutta A1 Kalpana Luthra YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/08/29/403469.abstract AB Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) have demonstrated protective effects against HIV-1 in primate studies and recent human clinical trials. Elite-neutralizers are potential candidates for isolation of HIV-1 bNAbs and coexistence of bNAbs such as BG18 with neutralization susceptible autologous viruses in an HIV-1 infected adult elite controller has been suggested to control viremia. Disease progression is faster in HIV-1 infected children than adults. Plasma bNAbs with multiple epitope specificities are developed in HIV-1 chronically infected children with more potency and breadth than in adults. Therefore, we evaluated the specificity of plasma neutralizing antibodies of an antiretroviral naïve HIV-1 clade C chronically infected pediatric elite neutralizer AIIMS_330. The plasma antibodies showed broad and potent HIV-1 neutralizing activity with >87% (29/33) breadth, median inhibitory dilution (ID50) value of 1246 and presence of N160 and N332-supersite dependent HIV-1 bNAbs. The sorting of BG505.SOSIP.664.C2 T332N gp140 HIV-1 antigen-specific single B cells of AIIMS_330 resulted in the isolation of an HIV-1 N332-supersite dependent bNAb AIIMS-P01. The AIIMS-P01 neutralized 67% of HIV-1 cross-clade viruses; exhibited substantial indels despite limited somatic hypermutations; interacted with native-like HIV-1 trimer as observed in negative stain electron microscopy and demonstrated high binding affinity. In addition, AIIMS-P01 potently neutralized the coexisting and evolving autologous viruses suggesting the coexistence of vulnerable autologous viruses and HIV-1 bNAbs in AIIMS_330 pediatric elite neutralizer. Further studies on such pediatric elite-neutralizers and isolation of novel HIV-1 pediatric bNAbs may provide newer insights to guide vaccine design.Importance More than 50% of the HIV-1 infections globally are caused by clade C viruses. Till date, there is no effective vaccine to prevent HIV-1 infection. Based on the structural information of the currently available HIV-1 bNAbs, attempts are underway to design immunogens that can elicit correlates of protection upon vaccination. Here we report the isolation and characterization of an HIV-1 N332-supersite dependent bNAb AIIMS-P01 from a clade C chronically infected pediatric elite neutralizer. The N332-supersite is an important epitope and is one of the current HIV-1 vaccine targets. AIIMS-P01 potently neutralized the contemporaneous and autologous evolving viruses and exhibits substantial indels despite low somatic hypermutations. Taken together with the information on infant bNAbs, further isolation of bNAbs contributing to the plasma breadth in HIV-1 infected children may help to better understand their development and characteristics, which in turn may guide vaccine design.