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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Sophie Dugast is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Sophie Dugast.


Cell | 2013

Protective Efficacy of a Global HIV-1 Mosaic Vaccine against Heterologous SHIV Challenges in Rhesus Monkeys

Dan H. Barouch; Kathryn E. Stephenson; Erica N. Borducchi; Kaitlin M. Smith; Kelly Stanley; Anna McNally; Jinyan Liu; Peter Abbink; Lori F. Maxfield; Michael S. Seaman; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Galit Alter; Melissa Ferguson; Wenjun Li; Patricia L. Earl; Bernard Moss; Elena E. Giorgi; James Szinger; Leigh Anne Eller; Erik Billings; Mangala Rao; Sodsai Tovanabutra; Eric Sanders-Buell; Mo Weijtens; Maria G. Pau; Hanneke Schuitemaker; Merlin L. Robb; Jerome H. Kim; Bette T. Korber; Nelson L. Michael

The global diversity of HIV-1 represents a critical challenge facing HIV-1 vaccine development. HIV-1 mosaic antigens are bioinformatically optimized immunogens designed for improved coverage of HIV-1 diversity. However, the protective efficacy of such global HIV-1 vaccine antigens has not previously been evaluated. Here, we demonstrate the capacity of bivalent HIV-1 mosaic antigens to protect rhesus monkeys against acquisition of infection following heterologous challenges with the difficult-to-neutralize simian-human immunodeficiency virus SHIV-SF162P3. Adenovirus/poxvirus and adenovirus/adenovirus vector-based vaccines expressing HIV-1 mosaic Env, Gag, and Pol afforded a significant reduction in the per-exposure acquisition risk following repetitive, intrarectal SHIV-SF162P3 challenges. Protection against acquisition of infection correlated with vaccine-elicited binding, neutralizing, and functional nonneutralizing antibodies, suggesting that the coordinated activity of multiple antibody functions may contribute to protection against difficult-to-neutralize viruses. These data demonstrate the protective efficacy of HIV-1 mosaic antigens and suggest a potential strategy for the development of a global HIV-1 vaccine. PAPERCLIP:


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Polyfunctional Fc-Effector Profiles Mediated by IgG Subclass Selection Distinguish RV144 and VAX003 Vaccines

Amy W. Chung; Musie Ghebremichael; Hannah Robinson; Eric P. Brown; Ickwon Choi; Sophie Lane; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Matthew K. Schoen; Morgane Rolland; Todd J. Suscovich; Alison E. Mahan; Larry Liao; Hendrik Streeck; Charla Andrews; Supachai Rerks-Ngarm; Sorachai Nitayaphan; Mark S. de Souza; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Donald P. Francis; Nelson L. Michael; Jerome H. Kim; Chris Bailey-Kellogg; Margaret E. Ackerman; Galit Alter

RV144 vaccination induced polyfunctional antibody Fc-effector responses, whereas VAX003 vaccination increased inhibitory IgG4 antibodies. More Is Better for Protection Against HIV Recently, results from the first protective HIV phase 2B RV144 vaccine trial pointed to an unexpected signature of protection, not associated with the traditional mechanisms of vaccine-induced immunity, namely, neutralizing antibodies and killer T cell immunity. Instead, protection was associated with specific subpopulations of antibodies that were able to direct killing of HIV-infected cells. However, little is known about the properties of these killer antibodies or their biophysical features. In a new study, Chung et al. functionally profiled antibodies raised by the protective RV144 vaccine trial and its nonprotective predecessor, the VAX003 vaccine trial, both conducted in Thailand. RV144 vaccination uniquely induced antibodies capable of directing several different antiviral functions in a coordinated manner. In contrast, VAX003 vaccination predominantly induced single or uncoordinated antiviral responses. Functional coordination was regulated by the selection of antibody responses directed at vulnerable regions on the HIV envelope that were specifically tuned to enhanced functionality through the selection of a specific antibody subclass, IgG3, known to harbor strong antiviral activity. Collectively, these data suggest that vaccines able to induce broader antibody functional profiles, through the selection of more potent antibody subclasses, which target vulnerable regions of the virus, may represent a new means by which to achieve protection from HIV infection in the absence of neutralization. The human phase 2B RV144 ALVAC-HIV vCP1521/AIDSVAX B/E vaccine trial, held in Thailand, resulted in an estimated 31.2% efficacy against HIV infection. By contrast, vaccination with VAX003 (consisting of only AIDSVAX B/E) was not protective. Because protection within RV144 was observed in the absence of neutralizing antibody activity or cytotoxic T cell responses, we speculated that the specificity or qualitative differences in Fc-effector profiles of nonneutralizing antibodies may have accounted for the efficacy differences observed between the two trials. We show that the RV144 regimen elicited nonneutralizing antibodies with highly coordinated Fc-mediated effector responses through the selective induction of highly functional immunoglobulin G3 (IgG3). By contrast, VAX003 elicited monofunctional antibody responses influenced by IgG4 selection, which was promoted by repeated AIDSVAX B/E protein boosts. Moreover, only RV144 induced IgG1 and IgG3 antibodies targeting the crown of the HIV envelope V2 loop, albeit with limited coverage of breakthrough viral sequences. These data suggest that subclass selection differences associated with coordinated humoral functional responses targeting strain-specific protective V2 loop epitopes may underlie differences in vaccine efficacy observed between these two vaccine trials.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2011

A robust, high-throughput assay to determine the phagocytic activity of clinical antibody samples

Margaret E. Ackerman; Brian Moldt; Richard T. Wyatt; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Elizabeth McAndrew; Stephen Tsoukas; Stephanie Jost; Christoph T. Berger; Gaia Sciaranghella; Qingquan Liu; Darrell J. Irvine; Dennis R. Burton; Galit Alter

Phagocytosis can be induced via the engagement of Fcγ receptors by antibody-opsonized material. Furthermore, the efficiency of antibody-induced effector functions has been shown to be dramatically modulated by changes in antibody glycosylation. Because infection can modulate antibody glycans, which in turn modulate antibody functions, assays capable of determining the induction of effector functions rather than neutralization or titer provide a valuable opportunity to more fully characterize the quality of the adaptive immune response. Here we describe a robust and high-throughput flow cytometric assay to define the phagocytic activity of antigen-specific antibodies from clinical samples. This assay employs a monocytic cell line that expresses numerous Fc receptors: including inhibitory and activating, and high and low affinity receptors--allowing complex phenotypes to be studied. We demonstrate the adaptability of this high-throughput, flow-based assay to measure antigen-specific antibody-mediated phagocytosis against an array of viruses, including influenza, HIV, and dengue. The phagocytosis assay format further allows for simultaneous analysis of cytokine release, as well as determination of the role of specific Fcγ-receptor subtypes, making it a highly useful system for parsing differences in the ability of clinical and vaccine induced antibody samples to recruit this critical effector function.


Journal of Virology | 2012

A Nonfucosylated Variant of the anti-HIV-1 Monoclonal Antibody b12 Has Enhanced FcγRIIIa-Mediated Antiviral Activity In Vitro but Does Not Improve Protection against Mucosal SHIV Challenge in Macaques

Brian Moldt; Mami Shibata-Koyama; Eva G. Rakasz; Niccole Schultz; Yutaka Kanda; D. Cameron Dunlop; Samantha L. Finstad; Chenggang Jin; Gary Landucci; Michael D. Alpert; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Paul W. H. I. Parren; Falk Nimmerjahn; David T. Evans; Galit Alter; Donald N. Forthal; Jörn E. Schmitz; Shigeru Iida; Pascal Poignard; David I. Watkins; Ann J. Hessell; Dennis R. Burton

ABSTRACT Eliciting neutralizing antibodies is thought to be a key activity of a vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). However, a number of studies have suggested that in addition to neutralization, interaction of IgG with Fc gamma receptors (FcγR) may play an important role in antibody-mediated protection. We have previously obtained evidence that the protective activity of the broadly neutralizing human IgG1 anti-HIV monoclonal antibody (MAb) b12 in macaques is diminished in the absence of FcγR binding capacity. To investigate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) as a contributor to FcγR-associated protection, we developed a nonfucosylated variant of b12 (NFb12). We showed that, compared to fully fucosylated (referred to as wild-type in the text) b12, NFb12 had higher affinity for human and rhesus macaque FcγRIIIa and was more efficient in inhibiting viral replication and more effective in killing HIV-infected cells in an ADCC assay. Despite these more potent in vitro antiviral activities, NFb12 did not enhance protection in vivo against repeated low-dose vaginal challenge in the simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV)/macaque model compared to wild-type b12. No difference in protection, viral load, or infection susceptibility was observed between animals given NFb12 and those given fully fucosylated b12, indicating that FcγR-mediated activities distinct from FcγRIIIa-mediated ADCC may be important in the observed protection against SHIV challenge.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2012

High-throughput, multiplexed IgG subclassing of antigen-specific antibodies from clinical samples.

Eric P. Brown; Anna Licht; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Ickwon Choi; Chris Bailey-Kellogg; Galit Alter; Margaret E. Ackerman

In vivo, the activity of antibodies relies critically on properties of both the variable domain, responsible for antigen recognition, and the constant domain, responsible for innate immune recognition. Here, we describe a flexible, microsphere-based array format for capturing information about both functional ends of disease-specific antibodies from complex, polyclonal clinical serum samples. Using minimal serum, we demonstrate IgG subclass profiling of multiple antibody specificities. We further capture and determine the subclass of epitope-specific antibodies. The data generated in this array provides a profile of the humoral immune response with multi-dimensional metrics regarding properties of both variable and constant IgG domains. Significantly, these properties are assessed simultaneously, and therefore information about the relationship between variable and constant domain characteristics is captured, and can be used to predict functions such as antibody effector activity.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Enhanced phagocytic activity of HIV-specific antibodies correlates with natural production of immunoglobulins with skewed affinity for FcγR2a and FcγR2b

Margaret E. Ackerman; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Elizabeth McAndrew; Stephen Tsoukas; Anna Licht; Darrell J. Irvine; Galit Alter

ABSTRACT While development of an HIV vaccine that can induce neutralizing antibodies remains a priority, decades of research have proven that this is a daunting task. However, accumulating evidence suggests that antibodies with the capacity to harness innate immunity may provide some protection. While significant research has focused on the cytolytic properties of antibodies in acquisition and control, less is known about the role of additional effector functions. In this study, we investigated antibody-dependent phagocytosis of HIV immune complexes, and we observed significant differences in the ability of antibodies from infected subjects to mediate this critical effector function. We observed both quantitative differences in the capacity of antibodies to drive phagocytosis and qualitative differences in their FcγR usage profile. We demonstrate that antibodies from controllers and untreated progressors exhibit increased phagocytic activity, altered Fc domain glycosylation, and skewed interactions with FcγR2a and FcγR2b in both bulk plasma and HIV-specific IgG. While increased phagocytic activity may directly influence immune activation via clearance of inflammatory immune complexes, it is also plausible that Fc receptor usage patterns may regulate the immune response by modulating downstream signals following phagocytosis—driving passive degradation of internalized virus, release of immune modulating cytokines and chemokines, or priming of a more effective adaptive immune response.


Annual Review of Medicine | 2012

Emerging concepts on the role of innate immunity in the prevention and control of HIV infection.

Margaret E. Ackerman; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Galit Alter

While neutralizing antibodies can provide sterilizing protection from HIV infection via their variable domains, the antibody constant domain provides a functional link between innate and adaptive immunity and offers a means to harness the potent antiviral properties of a wide spectrum of innate immune effector cells. There has been a growing appreciation of the role of these effector mechanisms across fields from cancer immunotherapy to autoimmunity and infectious disease, as well as speculation that this mechanism may be responsible for the protection observed in the RV144 HIV vaccine trial. This review summarizes these extraneutralizing humoral immune activities, progress in defining the importance of these effector mechanisms during progression in HIV infection, and the potential impact that such vaccine-induced immune responses may have on protection from infection.


Virology | 2011

Decreased Fc receptor expression on innate immune cells is associated with impaired antibody-mediated cellular phagocytic activity in chronically HIV-1 infected individuals

Anne-Sophie Dugast; Andrew Tonelli; Christoph T. Berger; Margaret E. Ackerman; Gaia Sciaranghella; Qingquan Liu; Magdalena Sips; Ildiko Toth; Alicja Piechocka-Trocha; Musie Ghebremichael; Galit Alter

In addition to neutralization, antibodies mediate other antiviral activities including antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), as well as complement deposition. While it is established that progressive HIV infection is associated with reduced ADCC and ADCP, the underlying mechanism for this loss of function is unknown. Here we report considerable changes in FcR expression over the course of HIV infection on both mDCs and monocytes, including elevated FcγRI expression in acute HIV infection and reduced expression of FcγRII and FcγRIIIa in chronic HIV infection. Furthermore, selective blockade of FcγRII alone was associated with a loss in ADCP activity, suggesting that FcγRII plays a central role in modulating ADCP. Overall, HIV infection is associated with a number of changes in FcR expression on phagocytic cells that are associated with changes in their ability to respond to antibody-opsonized targets, potentially contributing to a failure in viral clearance in progressive HIV-1 infection.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Lack of Protection following Passive Transfer of Polyclonal Highly Functional Low-Dose Non-Neutralizing Antibodies

Anne-Sophie Dugast; Ying Chan; Michelle Hoffner; Anna Licht; Joseph P. Nkolola; Hualin Li; Hendrik Streeck; Todd J. Suscovich; Musie Ghebremichael; Margaret E. Ackerman; Dan H. Barouch; Galit Alter

Recent immune correlates analysis from the RV144 vaccine trial has renewed interest in the role of non-neutralizing antibodies in mediating protection from infection. While neutralizing antibodies have proven difficult to induce through vaccination, extra-neutralizing antibodies, such as those that mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), are associated with long-term control of infection. However, while several non-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies have been tested for their protective efficacy in vivo, no studies to date have tested the protective activity of naturally produced polyclonal antibodies from individuals harboring potent ADCC activity. Because ADCC-inducing antibodies are highly enriched in elite controllers (EC), we passively transferred highly functional non-neutralizing polyclonal antibodies, purified from an EC, to assess the potential impact of polyclonal non-neutralizing antibodies on a stringent SHIV-SF162P3 challenge in rhesus monkeys. Passive transfer of a low-dose of ADCC inducing antibodies did not protect from infection following SHIV-SF162P3 challenge. Passively administered antibody titers and gp120-specific, but not gp41-specific, ADCC and antibody induced phagocytosis (ADCP) were detected in the majority of the monkeys, but did not correlate with post infection viral control. Thus these data raise the possibility that gp120-specific ADCC activity alone may not be sufficient to control viremia post infection but that other specificities or Fc-effector profiles, alone or in combination, may have an impact on viral control and should be tested in future passive transfer experiments.


Mucosal Immunology | 2012

Altered distribution of mucosal NK cells during HIV infection

Magdalena Sips; Gaia Sciaranghella; Thomas J. Diefenbach; Anne-Sophie Dugast; Christoph T. Berger; Qingquan Liu; Douglas S. Kwon; Musie Ghebremichael; Jacob D. Estes; Mary Carrington; Jeffrey N. Martin; Steven G. Deeks; Peter W. Hunt; Galit Alter

The human gut mucosa is a major site of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and infection-associated pathogenesis. Increasing evidence shows that natural killer (NK) cells have an important role in control of HIV infection, but the mechanism(s) by which they mediate antiviral activity in the gut is unclear. Here, we show that two distinct subsets of NK cells exist in the gut, one localized to intraepithelial spaces (intraepithelial lymphocytes, IELs) and the other to the lamina propria (LP). The frequency of both subsets of NK cells was reduced in chronic infection, whereas IEL NK cells remained stable in spontaneous controllers with protective killer immunoglobulin-like receptor/human leukocyte antigen genotypes. Both IEL and LP NK cells were significantly expanded in immunological non-responsive patients, who incompletely recovered CD4+ T cells on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). These data suggest that both IEL and LP NK cells may expand in the gut in an effort to compensate for compromised CD4+ T-cell recovery, but that only IEL NK cells may be involved in providing durable control of HIV in the gut.

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Margaret E. Ackerman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Anna Licht

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Dan H. Barouch

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Lynn Morris

Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa

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Derseree Archary

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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