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Dive into the research topics where Daniel J. Sheward is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel J. Sheward.


Nature | 2014

Developmental pathway for potent V1V2-directed HIV-neutralizing antibodies

Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Chaim A. Schramm; Jason Gorman; Penny L. Moore; Jinal N. Bhiman; Brandon J. DeKosky; Michael J. Ernandes; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Helen J. Kim; Marie Pancera; Ryan P. Staupe; Han R. Altae-Tran; Robert T. Bailer; Ema T. Crooks; Albert Cupo; Aliaksandr Druz; Nigel Garrett; Kam Hon Hoi; Rui Kong; Mark K. Louder; Nancy S. Longo; Krisha McKee; Molati Nonyane; Sijy O’Dell; Ryan S. Roark; Rebecca S. Rudicell; Stephen D. Schmidt; Daniel J. Sheward; Cinque Soto; Constantinos Kurt Wibmer

Antibodies capable of neutralizing HIV-1 often target variable regions 1 and 2 (V1V2) of the HIV-1 envelope, but the mechanism of their elicitation has been unclear. Here we define the developmental pathway by which such antibodies are generated and acquire the requisite molecular characteristics for neutralization. Twelve somatically related neutralizing antibodies (CAP256-VRC26.01–12) were isolated from donor CAP256 (from the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA)); each antibody contained the protruding tyrosine-sulphated, anionic antigen-binding loop (complementarity-determining region (CDR) H3) characteristic of this category of antibodies. Their unmutated ancestor emerged between weeks 30–38 post-infection with a 35-residue CDR H3, and neutralized the virus that superinfected this individual 15 weeks after initial infection. Improved neutralization breadth and potency occurred by week 59 with modest affinity maturation, and was preceded by extensive diversification of the virus population. HIV-1 V1V2-directed neutralizing antibodies can thus develop relatively rapidly through initial selection of B cells with a long CDR H3, and limited subsequent somatic hypermutation. These data provide important insights relevant to HIV-1 vaccine development.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2013

FUBAR: A Fast, Unconstrained Bayesian AppRoximation for Inferring Selection

Ben Murrell; Sasha Moola; Amandla Mabona; Thomas Weighill; Daniel J. Sheward; Sergei L. Kosakovsky Pond; Konrad Scheffler

Model-based analyses of natural selection often categorize sites into a relatively small number of site classes. Forcing each site to belong to one of these classes places unrealistic constraints on the distribution of selection parameters, which can result in misleading inference due to model misspecification. We present an approximate hierarchical Bayesian method using a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) routine that ensures robustness against model misspecification by averaging over a large number of predefined site classes. This leaves the distribution of selection parameters essentially unconstrained, and also allows sites experiencing positive and purifying selection to be identified orders of magnitude faster than by existing methods. We demonstrate that popular random effects likelihood methods can produce misleading results when sites assigned to the same site class experience different levels of positive or purifying selection--an unavoidable scenario when using a small number of site classes. Our Fast Unconstrained Bayesian AppRoximation (FUBAR) is unaffected by this problem, while achieving higher power than existing unconstrained (fixed effects likelihood) methods. The speed advantage of FUBAR allows us to analyze larger data sets than other methods: We illustrate this on a large influenza hemagglutinin data set (3,142 sequences). FUBAR is available as a batch file within the latest HyPhy distribution (http://www.hyphy.org), as well as on the Datamonkey web server (http://www.datamonkey.org/).


Nature Medicine | 2012

Evolution of an HIV glycan–dependent broadly neutralizing antibody epitope through immune escape

Penny L. Moore; Elin S. Gray; C. Kurt Wibmer; Jinal N. Bhiman; Molati Nonyane; Daniel J. Sheward; Tandile Hermanus; Shringkhala Bajimaya; Nancy Tumba; Melissa Rose Abrahams; Bronwen E. Lambson; Nthabeleng Ranchobe; Li-Hua Ping; Nobubelo Ngandu; Quarraisha Abdool Karim; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Ronald Swanstrom; Michael S. Seaman; Carolyn Williamson; Lynn Morris

Neutralizing antibodies are likely to play a crucial part in a preventative HIV-1 vaccine. Although efforts to elicit broadly cross-neutralizing (BCN) antibodies by vaccination have been unsuccessful, a minority of individuals naturally develop these antibodies after many years of infection. How such antibodies arise, and the role of viral evolution in shaping these responses, is unknown. Here we show, in two HIV-1–infected individuals who developed BCN antibodies targeting the glycan at Asn332 on the gp120 envelope, that this glycan was absent on the initial infecting virus. However, this BCN epitope evolved within 6 months, through immune escape from earlier strain-specific antibodies that resulted in a shift of a glycan to position 332. Both viruses that lacked the glycan at amino acid 332 were resistant to the Asn332-dependent BCN monoclonal antibody PGT128 (ref. 8), whereas escaped variants that acquired this glycan were sensitive. Analysis of large sequence and neutralization data sets showed the 332 glycan to be significantly under-represented in transmitted subtype C viruses compared to chronic viruses, with the absence of this glycan corresponding with resistance to PGT128. These findings highlight the dynamic interplay between early antibodies and viral escape in driving the evolution of conserved BCN antibody epitopes.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Potent and Broad Neutralization of HIV-1 Subtype C by Plasma Antibodies Targeting a Quaternary Epitope Including Residues in the V2 Loop

Penny L. Moore; Elin S. Gray; Daniel J. Sheward; Nthabeleng Ranchobe; Zhong Lai; William J. Honnen; Nancy Tumba; Tandile Hermanus; Sengeziwe Sibeko; Koleka Mlisana; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Carolyn Williamson; Abraham Pinter; Lynn Morris

ABSTRACT The targets of broadly cross-neutralizing (BCN) antibodies are of great interest in the HIV vaccine field. We have identified a subtype C HIV-1-superinfected individual, CAP256, with high-level BCN activity, and characterized the antibody specificity mediating breadth. CAP256 developed potent BCN activity peaking at 3 years postinfection, neutralizing 32 (76%) of 42 heterologous viruses, with titers of antibodies against some viruses exceeding 1:10,000. CAP256 showed a subtype bias, preferentially neutralizing subtype C and A viruses over subtype B viruses. CAP256 BCN serum targeted a quaternary epitope which included the V1V2 region. Further mapping identified residues F159, N160, L165, R166, D167, K169, and K171 (forming the FN/LRD-K-K motif) in the V2 region as crucial to the CAP256 epitope. However, the fine specificity of the BCN response varied over time and, while consistently dependent on R166 and K169, became gradually less dependent on D167 and K171, possibly contributing to the incremental increase in breadth over 4 years. The presence of an intact FN/LRD-K-K motif in heterologous viruses was associated with sensitivity, although the length of the adjacent V1 loop modulated the degree of sensitivity, with a shorter V1 region significantly associated with higher titers. Repair of the FN/LRD-K-K motif in resistant heterologous viruses conferred sensitivity, with titers sometimes exceeding 1:10,000. Comparison of the CAP256 epitope with that of the PG9/PG16 monoclonal antibodies suggested that these epitopes overlapped, adding to the mounting evidence that this may represent a common neutralization target that should be further investigated as a potential vaccine candidate.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Multiple Pathways of Escape from HIV Broadly Cross-Neutralizing V2-Dependent Antibodies

Penny L. Moore; Daniel J. Sheward; Molati Nonyane; Nthabeleng Ranchobe; Tandile Hermanus; Elin S. Gray; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Carolyn Williamson; Lynn Morris

ABSTRACT Broadly cross-neutralizing (BCN) antibodies are likely to be critical for an effective HIV vaccine. However, the ontogeny of such antibodies and their relationship with autologous viral evolution is unclear. Here, we characterized viral evolution in CAP256, a subtype C-infected individual who developed potent BCN antibodies targeting positions R166 and K169 in the V2 region. CAP256 was superinfected at 3 months postinfection with a virus that was highly sensitive to BCN V2-dependent monoclonal antibodies. The autologous neutralizing response in CAP256 was directed at V1V2, reaching extremely high titers (>1:40,000) against the superinfecting virus at 42 weeks, just 11 weeks prior to the development of the BCN response targeting the same region. Recombination between the primary and superinfecting viruses, especially in V2 and gp41, resulted in two distinct lineages by 4 years postinfection. Although neutralization of some CAP256 clones by plasma from as much as 2 years earlier suggested incomplete viral escape, nonetheless titers against later clones were reduced at least 40-fold to less than 1:1,000. Escape mutations were identified in each lineage, either at R166 or at K169, suggesting that strain-specific and BCN antibodies targeted overlapping epitopes. Furthermore, the early dependence of CAP256 neutralizing antibodies on the N160 glycan decreased with the onset of neutralization breadth, indicating a change in specificity. These data suggest rapid maturation, within 11 weeks, of CAP256 strain-specific antibodies to acquire breadth, with implications for the vaccine elicitation of BCN V2-dependent antibodies. Overall these studies demonstrate that ongoing viral escape is possible, even from BCN antibodies.


PLOS Pathogens | 2017

Structure and Recognition of a Novel HIV-1 gp120-gp41 Interface Antibody that Caused MPER Exposure through Viral Escape

Constantinos Kurt Wibmer; Jason Gorman; Gabriel Ozorowski; Jinal N. Bhiman; Daniel J. Sheward; Debra H. Elliott; Julie. Rouelle; Ashley. Smira; M. Gordon Joyce; Nonkululeko. Ndabambi; Aliaksandr Druz; Mangai Asokan; Dennis R. Burton; Mark Connors; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; John R. Mascola; James E. Robinson; Andrew B. Ward; Carolyn Williamson; Peter D. Kwong; Lynn Morris; Penny L. Moore

A comprehensive understanding of the regions on HIV-1 envelope trimers targeted by broadly neutralizing antibodies may contribute to rational design of an HIV-1 vaccine. We previously identified a participant in the CAPRISA cohort, CAP248, who developed trimer-specific antibodies capable of neutralizing 60% of heterologous viruses at three years post-infection. Here, we report the isolation by B cell culture of monoclonal antibody CAP248-2B, which targets a novel membrane proximal epitope including elements of gp120 and gp41. Despite low maximum inhibition plateaus, often below 50% inhibitory concentrations, the breadth of CAP248-2B significantly correlated with donor plasma. Site-directed mutagenesis, X-ray crystallography, and negative-stain electron microscopy 3D reconstructions revealed how CAP248-2B recognizes a cleavage-dependent epitope that includes the gp120 C terminus. While this epitope is distinct, it overlapped in parts of gp41 with the epitopes of broadly neutralizing antibodies PGT151, VRC34, 35O22, 3BC315, and 10E8. CAP248-2B has a conformationally variable paratope with an unusually long 19 amino acid light chain third complementarity determining region. Two phenylalanines at the loop apex were predicted by docking and mutagenesis data to interact with the viral membrane. Neutralization by CAP248-2B is not dependent on any single glycan proximal to its epitope, and low neutralization plateaus could not be completely explained by N- or O-linked glycosylation pathway inhibitors, furin co-transfection, or pre-incubation with soluble CD4. Viral escape from CAP248-2B involved a cluster of rare mutations in the gp120-gp41 cleavage sites. Simultaneous introduction of these mutations into heterologous viruses abrogated neutralization by CAP248-2B, but enhanced neutralization sensitivity to 35O22, 4E10, and 10E8 by 10-100-fold. Altogether, this study expands the region of the HIV-1 gp120-gp41 quaternary interface that is a target for broadly neutralizing antibodies and identifies a set of mutations in the gp120 C terminus that exposes the membrane-proximal external region of gp41, with potential utility in HIV vaccine design.


PLOS Pathogens | 2016

Features of Recently Transmitted HIV-1 Clade C Viruses that Impact Antibody Recognition: Implications for Active and Passive Immunization

Cecilia Rademeyer; Bette T. Korber; Michael S. Seaman; Elena E. Giorgi; R. Thebus; Alexander Robles; Daniel J. Sheward; Kshitij Wagh; Jetta Garrity; Brittany R. Carey; Hongmei Gao; Kelli M. Greene; Haili Tang; Gama Bandawe; Jinny C. Marais; Thabo E. Diphoko; Peter Hraber; Nancy Tumba; Penny L. Moore; Glenda Gray; James G. Kublin; M. Juliana McElrath; Marion Vermeulen; Keren Middelkoop; Linda-Gail Bekker; Michael Hoelscher; Leonard Maboko; Joseph Makhema; Merlin L. Robb; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim

The development of biomedical interventions to reduce acquisition of HIV-1 infection remains a global priority, however their potential effectiveness is challenged by very high HIV-1 envelope diversity. Two large prophylactic trials in high incidence, clade C epidemic regions in southern Africa are imminent; passive administration of the monoclonal antibody VRC01, and active immunization with a clade C modified RV144-like vaccines. We have created a large representative panel of C clade viruses to enable assessment of antibody responses to vaccines and natural infection in Southern Africa, and we investigated the genotypic and neutralization properties of recently transmitted clade C viruses to determine how viral diversity impacted antibody recognition. We further explore the implications of these findings for the potential effectiveness of these trials. A panel of 200 HIV-1 Envelope pseudoviruses was constructed from clade C viruses collected within the first 100 days following infection. Viruses collected pre-seroconversion were significantly more resistant to serum neutralization compared to post-seroconversion viruses (p = 0.001). Over 13 years of the study as the epidemic matured, HIV-1 diversified (p = 0.0009) and became more neutralization resistant to monoclonal antibodies VRC01, PG9 and 4E10. When tested at therapeutic levels (10ug/ml), VRC01 only neutralized 80% of viruses in the panel, although it did exhibit potent neutralization activity against sensitive viruses (IC50 titres of 0.42 μg/ml). The Gp120 amino acid similarity between the clade C panel and candidate C-clade vaccine protein boosts (Ce1086 and TV1) was 77%, which is 8% more distant than between CRF01_AE viruses and the RV144 CRF01_AE immunogen. Furthermore, two vaccine signature sites, K169 in V2 and I307 in V3, associated with reduced infection risk in RV144, occurred less frequently in clade C panel viruses than in CRF01_AE viruses from Thailand. Increased resistance of pre-seroconversion viruses and evidence of antigenic drift highlights the value of using panels of very recently transmitted viruses and suggests that interventions may need to be modified over time to track the changing epidemic. Furthermore, high divergence such as that observed in the older clade C epidemic in southern Africa may impact vaccine efficacy, although the correlates of infection risk are yet to be defined in the clade C setting. Findings from this study of acute/early clade C viruses will aid vaccine development, and enable identification of new broad and potent antibodies to combat the HIV-1 C-clade epidemic in southern Africa.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Degenerate Primer IDs and the Birthday Problem

Daniel J. Sheward; Ben Murrell; Carolyn Williamson

In PNAS, Jabara et al. (1) proposed an important approach to correct for recombination, allelic skewing, misincorporations, and sequencing errors in deep sequencing technologies. Their approach relies on each viral RNA template receiving a unique, randomly generated “Primer ID.” They were thus able to quantify template resampling by counting the repeated detection of each unique ID. Furthermore, they were able to exploit template resampling to correct for PCR errors, sequencing errors, and allelic skewing by only retaining consensus sequences where at least three reads shared a Primer ID.


Retrovirology | 2015

South African HIV-1 subtype C transmitted variants with a specific V2 motif show higher dependence on α4β7 for replication

Simone I. Richardson; Elin S. Gray; Nonhlanhla N. Mkhize; Daniel J. Sheward; Bronwen E. Lambson; Constantinos Kurt Wibmer; Lindi Masson; Lise. Werner; Nigel Garrett; Jo-Ann S. Passmore; Quarraisha Abdool Karim; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Carolyn Williamson; Penny L. Moore; Lynn Morris

BackgroundThe integrin α4β7 mediates the trafficking of immune cells to the gut associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) and is an attachment factor for the HIV gp120 envelope glycoprotein. We developed a viral replication inhibition assay to more clearly evaluate the role of α4β7 in HIV infection and the contribution of viral and host factors.ResultsReplication of 60 HIV-1 subtype C viruses collected over time from 11 individuals in the CAPRISA cohort were partially inhibited by antibodies targeting α4β7. However, dependence on α4β7 for replication varied substantially among viral isolates from different individuals as well as over time in some individuals. Among 8 transmitted/founder (T/F) viruses, α4β7 reactivity was highest for viruses having P/SDI/V tri-peptide binding motifs. Mutation of T/F viruses that had LDI/L motifs to P/SDI/V resulted in greater α4β7 reactivity, whereas mutating P/SDI/V to LDI/L motifs was associated with reduced α4β7 binding. P/SDI/V motifs were more common among South African HIV subtype C viruses (35%) compared to subtype C viruses from other regions of Africa (<8%) and to other subtypes, due in part to a founder effect. In addition, individuals with bacterial vaginosis (BV) and who had higher concentrations of IL-7, IL-8 and IL-1α in the genital tract had T/F viruses with higher α4β7 dependence for replication, suggesting that viruses with P/SDI/V motifs may be preferentially transmitted in the presence of BV in this population.ConclusionsCollectively, these data suggest a role for α4β7 in HIV infection that is influenced by both viral and host factors including the sequence of the α4β7 binding motif, the cytokine milieu and BV in the genital tract. The higher frequency of P/SDI/V sequences among South African HIV-1 subtype C viruses may have particular significance for the role of α4β7 in this geographical region.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2014

Limited HIV-1 Superinfection in Seroconverters from the CAPRISA 004 Microbicide Trial

Andrew D. Redd; Caroline E. Mullis; Sarah K. Wendel; Daniel J. Sheward; Craig Martens; Daniel Bruno; Lise. Werner; Nigel Garrett; Quarraisha Abdool Karim; Carolyn Williamson; Stephen F. Porcella; Thomas C. Quinn; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim

ABSTRACT HIV-1 superinfection (SI) occurs when an infected individual acquires a distinct new viral strain. The rate of superinfection may be reflective of the underlying HIV risk in a population. The Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA) 004 clinical trial demonstrated that women who used a tenofovir-containing microbicide gel had lower rates of HIV infection than women using a placebo gel. Women who contracted HIV-1 during the trial were screened for the occurrence of superinfection by next-generation sequencing of the viral gag and env genes. There were two cases (one in each trial arm) of subtype C superinfection identified from the 76 women with primary infection screened at two time points (rate of superinfection, 1.5/100 person-years). Both women experienced a >0.5-log increase in viral load during the window when superinfection occurred. The rate of superinfection was significantly lower than the overall primary HIV incidence in the microbicide trial (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 0.20; P = 0.003). The women who seroconverted during the trial reported a significant increase in sexual contact with their stable partner 4 months after seroconversion (P < 0.001), which may have lowered the risk of superinfection in this population. The lower frequency of SI compared to the primary incidence is in contrast to a report from a general heterosexual African population but agrees with a study of high-risk women in Kenya. A better understanding of the rate of HIV superinfection could have important implications for ongoing HIV vaccine research.

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Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim

Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa

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Penny L. Moore

University of the Witwatersrand

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Lynn Morris

Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa

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Nigel Garrett

Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa

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Molati Nonyane

National Health Laboratory Service

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Ben Murrell

University of California

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Constantinos Kurt Wibmer

University of the Witwatersrand

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Jinal N. Bhiman

University of the Witwatersrand

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