Journal article
Repeated vaccination of cows with HIV env gp140 during subsequent pregnancies elicits and sustains an enduring strong env-binding and neutralising antibody response
B Heydarchi, RJ Center, C Gonelli, B Muller, C Mackenzie, G Khoury, M Lichtfuss, G Rawlin, DFJ Purcell
Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2016
Abstract
An important feature of a potential vaccine against HIV is the production of broadly neutralising antibodies (BrNAbs) capable of potentially blocking infectivity of a diverse array of HIV strains. BrNAbs naturally arise in some HIV infected individuals after several years of infection and their serum IgG can neutralise various HIV strains across different subtypes. We previously showed that vaccination of cows with HIV gp140 AD8 trimers resulted in a high titre of serum IgG against HIV envelope (Env) that had strong BrNAb activity. These polyclonal BrNAbs concentrated into the colostrum during the late stage of pregnancy and can be harvested in vast quantities immediately after calving. In t..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
Immuron Ltd funded the animal husbandry and veterinarian support. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.We thank Ian Gill and Noel Russell for Veterinary care of the cows and Victor Wong and Gerhardt Rank for technical assistance. RSC3 (catalog no. 12042) and RSC3 Delta 371I/P363N (catalog no. 12362) were obtained through the AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program, Division of AIDS, NIAID, NIH, from Zhi-Yong Yang, Peter Kwong, and Gary Nabel.