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Dive into the research topics where Gopal Sapparapu is active.

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Featured researches published by Gopal Sapparapu.


Nature | 2016

Neutralizing human antibodies prevent Zika virus replication and fetal disease in mice

Gopal Sapparapu; Estefania Fernandez; Nurgun Kose; Bin Cao; Julie M. Fox; Robin G. Bombardi; Haiyan Zhao; Christopher A. Nelson; Aubrey L. Bryan; Trevor Barnes; Edgar Davidson; Indira U. Mysorekar; Daved H. Fremont; Benjamin J. Doranz; Michael S. Diamond; James E. Crowe

Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging mosquito-transmitted flavivirus that can cause severe disease, including congenital birth defects during pregnancy. To develop candidate therapeutic agents against ZIKV, we isolated a panel of human monoclonal antibodies from subjects that were previously infected with ZIKV. We show that a subset of antibodies recognize diverse epitopes on the envelope (E) protein and exhibit potent neutralizing activity. One of the most inhibitory antibodies, ZIKV-117, broadly neutralized infection of ZIKV strains corresponding to African and Asian-American lineages. Epitope mapping studies revealed that ZIKV-117 recognized a unique quaternary epitope on the E protein dimer–dimer interface. We evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of ZIKV-117 in pregnant and non-pregnant mice. Monoclonal antibody treatment markedly reduced tissue pathology, placental and fetal infection, and mortality in mice. Thus, neutralizing human antibodies can protect against maternal–fetal transmission, infection and disease, and reveal important determinants for structure-based rational vaccine design efforts.


Cell | 2016

Cross-Reactive and Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses in Human Survivors of Natural Ebolavirus Infection

Andrew I. Flyak; Xiaoli Shen; Charles D. Murin; Hannah L. Turner; Joshua A. David; Marnie L. Fusco; Rebecca Lampley; Nurgun Kose; Philipp A. Ilinykh; Natalia Kuzmina; Andre Branchizio; Hannah King; Leland Brown; Christopher Bryan; Edgar Davidson; Benjamin J. Doranz; James C. Slaughter; Gopal Sapparapu; Curtis Klages; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Erica Ollmann Saphire; Andrew B. Ward; Alexander Bukreyev; James E. Crowe

Recent studies have suggested that antibody-mediated protection against the Ebolaviruses may be achievable, but little is known about whether or not antibodies can confer cross-reactive protection against viruses belonging to diverse Ebolavirus species, such as Ebola virus (EBOV), Sudan virus (SUDV), and Bundibugyo virus (BDBV). We isolated a large panel of human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against BDBV glycoprotein (GP) using peripheral blood B cells from survivors of the 2007 BDBV outbreak in Uganda. We determined that a large proportion of mAbs with potent neutralizing activity against BDBV bind to the glycan cap and recognize diverse epitopes within this major antigenic site. We identified several glycan cap-specific mAbs that neutralized multiple ebolaviruses, including SUDV, and a cross-reactive mAb that completely protected guinea pigs from the lethal challenge with heterologous EBOV. Our results provide a roadmap to develop a single antibody-based treatment effective against multiple Ebolavirus infections.


Cell | 2015

Mechanism of Human Antibody-Mediated Neutralization of Marburg Virus

Andrew I. Flyak; Philipp A. Ilinykh; Charles D. Murin; Tania Garron; Xiaoli Shen; Marnie L. Fusco; Takao Hashiguchi; Zachary A. Bornholdt; James C. Slaughter; Gopal Sapparapu; Curtis Klages; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Andrew B. Ward; Erica Ollmann Saphire; Alexander Bukreyev; James E. Crowe

The mechanisms by which neutralizing antibodies inhibit Marburg virus (MARV) are not known. We isolated a panel of neutralizing antibodies from a human MARV survivor that bind to MARV glycoprotein (GP) and compete for binding to a single major antigenic site. Remarkably, several of the antibodies also bind to Ebola virus (EBOV) GP. Single-particle EM structures of antibody-GP complexes reveal that all of the neutralizing antibodies bind to MARV GP at or near the predicted region of the receptor-binding site. The presence of the glycan cap or mucin-like domain blocks binding of neutralizing antibodies to EBOV GP, but not to MARV GP. The data suggest that MARV-neutralizing antibodies inhibit virus by binding to infectious virions at the exposed MARV receptor-binding site, revealing a mechanism of filovirus inhibition.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2015

Isolation and Characterization of Broad and Ultrapotent Human Monoclonal Antibodies with Therapeutic Activity against Chikungunya Virus

Scott A. Smith; Julie M. Fox; Andrew I. Flyak; Nurgun Kose; Gopal Sapparapu; Solomiia Khomandiak; Alison W. Ashbrook; Kristen M. Kahle; Rachel H. Fong; Sherri Swayne; Benjamin J. Doranz; Charles E. McGee; Mark T. Heise; Pankaj Pal; James D. Brien; S. Kyle Austin; Michael S. Diamond; Terence S. Dermody; James E. Crowe

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-transmitted RNA virus that causes acute febrile infection associated with polyarthralgia in humans. Mechanisms of protective immunity against CHIKV are poorly understood, and no effective therapeutics or vaccines are available. We isolated and characterized human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that neutralize CHIKV infectivity. Among the 30 mAbs isolated, 13 had broad and ultrapotent neutralizing activity (IC50 < 10 ng/ml), and all of these mapped to domain A of the E2 envelope protein. Potent inhibitory mAbs blocked post-attachment steps required for CHIKV membrane fusion, and several were protective in a lethal challenge model in immunocompromised mice, even when administered at late time points after infection. These highly protective mAbs could be considered for prevention or treatment of CHIKV infection, and their epitope location in domain A of E2 could be targeted for rational structure-based vaccine development.


Nature Communications | 2017

A human antibody against Zika virus crosslinks the E protein to prevent infection.

S. Saif Hasan; Andrew Miller; Gopal Sapparapu; Estefania Fernandez; Thomas Klose; Feng Long; Andrei Fokine; Jason Porta; Wen Jiang; Michael S. Diamond; James E. Crowe; Richard J. Kuhn; Michael G. Rossmann

The recent Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic has been linked to unusual and severe clinical manifestations including microcephaly in fetuses of infected pregnant women and Guillian-Barré syndrome in adults. Neutralizing antibodies present a possible therapeutic approach to prevent and control ZIKV infection. Here we present a 6.2 Å resolution three-dimensional cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) structure of an infectious ZIKV (strain H/PF/2013, French Polynesia) in complex with the Fab fragment of a highly therapeutic and neutralizing human monoclonal antibody, ZIKV-117. The antibody had been shown to prevent fetal infection and demise in mice. The structure shows that ZIKV-117 Fabs cross-link the monomers within the surface E glycoprotein dimers as well as between neighbouring dimers, thus preventing the reorganization of E protein monomers into fusogenic trimers in the acidic environment of endosomes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Exceptional Amyloid β Peptide Hydrolyzing Activity of Nonphysiological Immunoglobulin Variable Domain Scaffolds

Hiroaki Taguchi; Stephanie Planque; Gopal Sapparapu; Stephane Boivin; Mariko Hara; Yasuhiro Nishiyama; Sudhir Paul

Nucleophilic sites in the paired variable domains of the light and heavy chains (VL and VH domains) of Ig can catalyze peptide bond hydrolysis. Amyloid β (Aβ)-binding Igs are under consideration for immunotherapy of Alzheimer disease. We searched for Aβ-hydrolyzing human IgV domains (IgVs) in a library containing a majority of single chain Fv clones mimicking physiological VL-VH-combining sites and minority IgV populations with nonphysiological structures generated by cloning errors. Random screening and covalent selection of phage-displayed IgVs with an electrophilic Aβ analog identified rare IgVs that hydrolyzed Aβ mainly at His14-Gln15. Inhibition of IgV catalysis and irreversible binding by an electrophilic hapten suggested a nucleophilic catalytic mechanism. Structural analysis indicated that the catalytic IgVs are nonphysiological structures, a two domain heterodimeric VL (IgVL2-t) and single domain VL clones with aberrant polypeptide tags (IgVL-t′). The IgVs hydrolyzed Aβ at rates superior to naturally occurring Igs by 3-4 orders of magnitude. Forced pairing of the single domain VL with VH or VL domains resulted in reduced Aβ hydrolysis, suggesting catalysis by the unpaired VL domain.Ångstrom level amino acid displacements evident in molecular models of the two domain and unpaired VL domain clones explain alterations of catalytic activity. In view of their superior catalytic activity, the VL domain IgVs may help attain clearance of medically important antigens more efficiently than natural Igs.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Human Rotavirus VP6-Specific Antibodies Mediate Intracellular Neutralization by Binding to a Quaternary Structure in the Transcriptional Pore.

Mohammed S. Aiyegbo; Gopal Sapparapu; Benjamin W. Spiller; Ilyas M. Eli; Dewight R. Williams; Robert Kim; David E. Lee; Tong Liu; Sheng Li; Virgil L. Woods; David P. Nannemann; Jens Meiler; Phoebe L. Stewart; James E. Crowe

Several live attenuated rotavirus (RV) vaccines have been licensed, but the mechanisms of protective immunity are still poorly understood. The most frequent human B cell response is directed to the internal protein VP6 on the surface of double-layered particles, which is normally exposed only in the intracellular environment. Here, we show that the canonical VP6 antibodies secreted by humans bind to such particles and inhibit viral transcription. Polymeric IgA RV antibodies mediated an inhibitory effect against virus replication inside cells during IgA transcytosis. We defined the recognition site on VP6 as a quaternary epitope containing a high density of charged residues. RV human mAbs appear to bind to a negatively-charged patch on the surface of the Type I channel in the transcriptionally active particle, and they sterically block the channel. This unique mucosal mechanism of viral neutralization, which is not apparent from conventional immunoassays, may contribute significantly to human immunity to RV.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Human antibodies that neutralize respiratory droplet transmissible H5N1 influenza viruses

Natalie J. Thornburg; David P. Nannemann; David L. Blum; Jessica A. Belser; Terrence M. Tumpey; Shyam Deshpande; Gloria Fritz; Gopal Sapparapu; Jens Krause; Jeong Hyun Lee; Andrew B. Ward; David E. Lee; Sheng Li; Katie L. Winarski; Benjamin W. Spiller; Jens Meiler; James E. Crowe

Recent studies described the experimental adaptation of influenza H5 HAs that confers respiratory droplet transmission (rdt) to influenza virus in ferrets. Acquisition of the ability to transmit via aerosol may lead to the development of a highly pathogenic pandemic H5 virus. Vaccines are predicted to play an important role in H5N1 control should the virus become readily transmissible between humans. We obtained PBMCs from patients who received an A/Vietnam/1203/2004 H5N1 subunit vaccine. Human hybridomas were then generated and characterized. We identified antibodies that bound the HA head domain and recognized both WT and rdt H5 HAs. We used a combination of structural techniques to define a mechanism of antibody recognition of an H5 HA receptor-binding site that neutralized H5N1 influenza viruses and pseudoviruses carrying the HA rdt variants that have mutations near the receptor-binding site. Incorporation or retention of this critical antigenic site should be considered in the design of novel H5 HA immunogens to protect against mammalian-adapted H5N1 mutants.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

H7N9 influenza virus neutralizing antibodies that possess few somatic mutations

Natalie J. Thornburg; Heng Zhang; Sandhya Bangaru; Gopal Sapparapu; Nurgun Kose; Rebecca Lampley; Robin G. Bombardi; Yingchun Yu; Stephen M. Graham; Andre Branchizio; Sandra M. Yoder; Michael T. Rock; C. Buddy Creech; Kathryn M. Edwards; David M. Lee; Sheng Li; Ian A. Wilson; Adolfo García-Sastre; Randy A. Albrecht; James E. Crowe

Avian H7N9 influenza viruses are group 2 influenza A viruses that have been identified as the etiologic agent for a current major outbreak that began in China in 2013 and may pose a pandemic threat. Here, we examined the human H7-reactive antibody response in 75 recipients of a monovalent inactivated A/Shanghai/02/2013 H7N9 vaccine. After 2 doses of vaccine, the majority of donors had memory B cells that secreted IgGs specific for H7 HA, with dominant responses against single HA subtypes, although frequencies of H7-reactive B cells ranged widely between donors. We isolated 12 naturally occurring mAbs with low half-maximal effective concentrations for binding, 5 of which possessed neutralizing and HA-inhibiting activities. The 5 neutralizing mAbs exhibited narrow breadth of reactivity with influenza H7 strains. Epitope-mapping studies using neutralization escape mutant analysis, deuterium exchange mass spectrometry, and x-ray crystallography revealed that these neutralizing mAbs bind near the receptor-binding pocket on HA. All 5 neutralizing mAbs possessed low numbers of somatic mutations, suggesting the clones arose from naive B cells. The most potent mAb, H7.167, was tested as a prophylactic treatment in a mouse intranasal virus challenge study, and systemic administration of the mAb markedly reduced viral lung titers.


Journal of Virology | 2016

Dengue Virus prM-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies with Virus Replication-Enhancing Properties Recognize a Single Immunodominant Antigenic Site

Scott A. Smith; Usha K. Nivarthi; Ruklanthi de Alwis; Nurgun Kose; Gopal Sapparapu; Robin G. Bombardi; Kristen M. Kahle; Jennifer M. Pfaff; Sherri Lieberman; Benjamin J. Doranz; Aravinda M. de Silva; James E. Crowe

ABSTRACT The proposed antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) mechanism for severe dengue virus (DENV) disease suggests that non-neutralizing serotype cross-reactive antibodies generated during a primary infection facilitate entry into Fc receptor bearing cells during secondary infection, resulting in enhanced viral replication and severe disease. One group of cross-reactive antibodies that contributes considerably to this serum profile target the premembrane (prM) protein. We report here the isolation of a large panel of naturally occurring human monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) obtained from subjects following primary DENV serotype 1, 2, or 3 or secondary natural DENV infections or following primary DENV serotype 1 live attenuated virus vaccination to determine the antigenic landscape on the prM protein that is recognized by human antibodies. We isolated 25 prM-reactive human MAbs, encoded by diverse antibody-variable genes. Competition-binding studies revealed that all of the antibodies bound to a single major antigenic site on prM. Alanine scanning-based shotgun mutagenesis epitope mapping studies revealed diverse patterns of fine specificity of various clones, suggesting that different antibodies use varied binding poses to recognize several overlapping epitopes within the immunodominant site. Several of the antibodies interacted with epitopes on both prM and E protein residues. Despite the diverse genetic origins of the antibodies and differences in the fine specificity of their epitopes, each of these prM-reactive antibodies was capable of enhancing the DENV infection of Fc receptor-bearing cells. IMPORTANCE Antibodies may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of enhanced DENV infection and disease during secondary infections. A substantial proportion of enhancing antibodies generated in response to natural dengue infection are directed toward the prM protein. The fine specificity of human prM antibodies is not understood. Here, we isolated a panel of dengue prM-specific human monoclonal antibodies from individuals after infection in order to define the mode of molecular recognition by enhancing antibodies. We found that only a single antibody molecule can be bound to each prM protein at any given time. Distinct overlapping epitopes were mapped, but all of the epitopes lie within a single major antigenic site, suggesting that this antigenic domain forms an immunodominant region of the protein. Neutralization and antibody-dependent enhanced replication experiments showed that recognition of any of the epitopes within the major antigenic site on prM was sufficient to cause enhanced infection of target cells.

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James E. Crowe

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Nurgun Kose

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Michael S. Diamond

Washington University in St. Louis

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Rebecca Lampley

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Andrew B. Ward

Scripps Research Institute

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Stephanie Planque

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Sudhir Paul

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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