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Dive into the research topics where Gwo-Yu Chuang is active.

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Featured researches published by Gwo-Yu Chuang.


Nature | 2011

Structure of HIV-1 gp120 V1/V2 domain with broadly neutralizing antibody PG9

Jason S. McLellan; Marie Pancera; Chris Carrico; Jason Gorman; Jean-Philippe Julien; Reza Khayat; Robert K. Louder; Robert Pejchal; Mallika Sastry; Kaifan Dai; Sijy O’Dell; Nikita Patel; Syed Shahzad-ul-Hussan; Yongping Yang; Baoshan Zhang; Tongqing Zhou; Jiang Zhu; Jeffrey C. Boyington; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Devan Diwanji; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Young Do Kwon; Doyung Lee; Mark K. Louder; Stephanie Moquin; Stephen D. Schmidt; Zhi-Yong Yang; Mattia Bonsignori; John A. Crump; Saidi Kapiga

Variable regions 1 and 2 (V1/V2) of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) gp120 envelope glycoprotein are critical for viral evasion of antibody neutralization, and are themselves protected by extraordinary sequence diversity and N-linked glycosylation. Human antibodies such as PG9 nonetheless engage V1/V2 and neutralize 80% of HIV-1 isolates. Here we report the structure of V1/V2 in complex with PG9. V1/V2 forms a four-stranded β-sheet domain, in which sequence diversity and glycosylation are largely segregated to strand-connecting loops. PG9 recognition involves electrostatic, sequence-independent and glycan interactions: the latter account for over half the interactive surface but are of sufficiently weak affinity to avoid autoreactivity. The structures of V1/V2-directed antibodies CH04 and PGT145 indicate that they share a common mode of glycan penetration by extended anionic loops. In addition to structurally defining V1/V2, the results thus identify a paradigm of antibody recognition for highly glycosylated antigens, which—with PG9—involves a site of vulnerability comprising just two glycans and a strand.


Immunity | 2013

Multidonor Analysis Reveals Structural Elements, Genetic Determinants, and Maturation Pathway for HIV-1 Neutralization by VRC01-Class Antibodies.

Tongqing Zhou; Jiang Zhu; Xueling Wu; Stephanie Moquin; Baoshan Zhang; Priyamvada Acharya; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Han R. Altae-Tran; Gwo-Yu Chuang; M. Gordon Joyce; Young Do Kwon; Nancy S. Longo; Mark K. Louder; Timothy S. Luongo; Krisha McKee; Chaim A. Schramm; Jeff Skinner; Yongping Yang; Zhongjia Yang; Z. F. Zhang; Anqi Zheng; Mattia Bonsignori; Barton F. Haynes; Johannes F. Scheid; Michel C. Nussenzweig; Melissa Simek; Dennis R. Burton; Wayne C. Koff; James C. Mullikin; Mark Connors

Antibodies of the VRC01 class neutralize HIV-1, arise in diverse HIV-1-infected donors, and are potential templates for an effective HIV-1 vaccine. However, the stochastic processes that generate repertoires in each individual of >10(12) antibodies make elicitation of specific antibodies uncertain. Here we determine the ontogeny of the VRC01 class by crystallography and next-generation sequencing. Despite antibody-sequence differences exceeding 50%, antibody-gp120 cocrystal structures reveal VRC01-class recognition to be remarkably similar. B cell transcripts indicate that VRC01-class antibodies require few specific genetic elements, suggesting that naive-B cells with VRC01-class features are generated regularly by recombination. Virtually all of these fail to mature, however, with only a few-likely one-ancestor B cell expanding to form a VRC01-class lineage in each donor. Developmental similarities in multiple donors thus reveal the generation of VRC01-class antibodies to be reproducible in principle, thereby providing a framework for attempts to elicit similar antibodies in the general population.


Science | 2013

Delineating Antibody Recognition in Polyclonal Sera from Patterns of HIV-1 Isolate Neutralization

Ivelin S. Georgiev; Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Tongqing Zhou; Young Do Kwon; Ryan P. Staupe; Stephanie Moquin; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Mark K. Louder; Stephen D. Schmidt; Han R. Altae-Tran; Robert T. Bailer; Krisha McKee; Martha Nason; Sijy O’Dell; Gilad Ofek; Marie Pancera; Sanjay Srivatsan; Lawrence Shapiro; Mark Connors; Stephen A. Migueles; Lynn Morris; Yoshiaki Nishimura; Malcolm A. Martin; John R. Mascola; Peter D. Kwong

Building Better Vaccines In the past few years, several highly potent, broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) specific for the gp120 envelope protein of HIV-1 have been discovered. The goal of this work is to use this information to inform the design of vaccines that are able to induce such antibodies (see the Perspective by Crowe). However, because of extensive somatic hypermutation, the epitope bound by these antibodies often does not bind to the germline sequence. Jardine et al. (p. 711, published online 28 March; see the cover) used computational analysis and in vitro screening to design an immunogen that could bind to VRC01-class bNAbs and to their germline precursors. Georgiev et al. (p. 751) took advantage of the fact that only four sites on the HIV viral envelope protein seem to bind bNAbs, and sera that contain particular bNAbs show characteristic patterns of neutralization. An algorithm was developed that could successfully delineate the neutralization specificity of antibodies present in polyclonal sera from HIV-infected patients. An algorithm predicts the neutralization specificity of sera from HIV-infected individuals. [Also see Perspective by Crowe] Serum characterization and antibody isolation are transforming our understanding of the humoral immune response to viral infection. Here, we show that epitope specificities of HIV-1–neutralizing antibodies in serum can be elucidated from the serum pattern of neutralization against a diverse panel of HIV-1 isolates. We determined “neutralization fingerprints” for 30 neutralizing antibodies on a panel of 34 diverse HIV-1 strains and showed that similarity in neutralization fingerprint correlated with similarity in epitope. We used these fingerprints to delineate specificities of polyclonal sera from 24 HIV-1–infected donors and a chimeric siman-human immunodeficiency virus–infected macaque. Delineated specificities matched published specificities and were further confirmed by antibody isolation for two sera. Patterns of virus-isolate neutralization can thus afford a detailed epitope-specific understanding of neutralizing-antibody responses to viral infection.


Cell | 2016

Maturation Pathway from Germline to Broad HIV-1 Neutralizer of a CD4-Mimic Antibody

Mattia Bonsignori; Tongqing Zhou; Zizhang Sheng; Lei Chen; Feng Gao; M. Gordon Joyce; Gabriel Ozorowski; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Chaim A. Schramm; Kevin Wiehe; S. Munir Alam; Todd Bradley; Morgan A. Gladden; Kwan-Ki Hwang; Sheelah Iyengar; Amit Kumar; Xiaozhi Lu; Kan Luo; Michael C. Mangiapani; Robert Parks; Hongshuo Song; Priyamvada Acharya; Robert T. Bailer; Allen Cao; Aliaksandr Druz; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Young Do Kwon; Mark K. Louder; Baoshan Zhang; Anqi Zheng

Antibodies with ontogenies from VH1-2 or VH1-46-germline genes dominate the broadly neutralizing response against the CD4-binding site (CD4bs) on HIV-1. Here, we define with longitudinal sampling from time-of-infection the development of a VH1-46-derived antibody lineage that matured to neutralize 90% of HIV-1 isolates. Structures of lineage antibodies CH235 (week 41 from time-of-infection, 18% breadth), CH235.9 (week 152, 77%), and CH235.12 (week 323, 90%) demonstrated the maturing epitope to focus on the conformationally invariant portion of the CD4bs. Similarities between CH235 lineage and five unrelated CD4bs lineages in epitope focusing, length-of-time to develop breadth, and extraordinary level of somatic hypermutation suggested commonalities in maturation among all CD4bs antibodies. Fortunately, the required CH235-lineage hypermutation appeared substantially guided by the intrinsic mutability of the VH1-46 gene, which closely resembled VH1-2. We integrated our CH235-lineage findings with a second broadly neutralizing lineage and HIV-1 co-evolution to suggest a vaccination strategy for inducing both lineages.


Cell | 2015

Maturation and Diversity of the VRC01-Antibody Lineage over 15 Years of Chronic HIV-1 Infection

Xueling Wu; Z. F. Zhang; Chaim A. Schramm; M. Gordon Joyce; Young Do Kwon; Tongqing Zhou; Zizhang Sheng; Baoshan Zhang; Sijy O’Dell; Krisha McKee; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Nancy S. Longo; Rebecca M. Lynch; Kevin O. Saunders; Cinque Soto; Sanjay Srivatsan; Yongping Yang; Robert T. Bailer; Mark K. Louder; Betty Benjamin; Robert W. Blakesley; Gerry Bouffard; Shelise Brooks; Holly Coleman; Mila Dekhtyar; Michael Gregory; Xiaobin Guan; Jyoti Gupta; Joel Han

HIV-1-neutralizing antibodies develop in most HIV-1-infected individuals, although highly effective antibodies are generally observed only after years of chronic infection. Here, we characterize the rate of maturation and extent of diversity for the lineage that produced the broadly neutralizing antibody VRC01 through longitudinal sampling of peripheral B cell transcripts over 15 years and co-crystal structures of lineage members. Next-generation sequencing identified VRC01-lineage transcripts, which encompassed diverse antibodies organized into distinct phylogenetic clades. Prevalent clades maintained characteristic features of antigen recognition, though each evolved binding loops and disulfides that formed distinct recognition surfaces. Over the course of the study period, VRC01-lineage clades showed continuous evolution, with rates of ∼2 substitutions per 100 nucleotides per year, comparable to that of HIV-1 evolution. This high rate of antibody evolution provides a mechanism by which antibody lineages can achieve extraordinary diversity and, over years of chronic infection, develop effective HIV-1 neutralization.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

Prefusion F-specific antibodies determine the magnitude of RSV neutralizing activity in human sera

Joan O. Ngwuta; Man Chen; Kayvon Modjarrad; M. Gordon Joyce; Masaru Kanekiyo; Azad Kumar; Hadi M. Yassine; Syed M. Moin; April M. Killikelly; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Aliaksandr Druz; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Emily Rundlet; Mallika Sastry; Guillaume Stewart-Jones; Yongping Yang; Baoshan Zhang; Martha Nason; Cristina Capella; Mark E. Peeples; Julie E. Ledgerwood; Jason S. McLellan; Peter D. Kwong; Barney S. Graham

Antibodies to the prefusion conformation of the RSV F glycoprotein neutralize natural infection. Neutralizing RSV Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection causes cold-like symptoms in healthy adults but may be deadly in infants and other high-risk populations. However, no vaccine is currently available for RSV. Ngwuta et al. report that antibodies against an antigen site found in the RSV fusion glycoprotein (F) constitute most of the neutralizing antibody response in infected individuals. This site is found in the prefusion but not the postfusion form of the glycoprotein, suggesting that vaccines should be targeted to the prefusion version of this protein. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is estimated to claim more lives among infants <1 year old than any other single pathogen, except malaria, and poses a substantial global health burden. Viral entry is mediated by a type I fusion glycoprotein (F) that transitions from a metastable prefusion (pre-F) to a stable postfusion (post-F) trimer. A highly neutralization-sensitive epitope, antigenic site Ø, is found only on pre-F. We determined what fraction of neutralizing (NT) activity in human sera is dependent on antibodies specific for antigenic site Ø or other antigenic sites on F in healthy subjects from ages 7 to 93 years. Adsorption of individual sera with stabilized pre-F protein removed >90% of NT activity and depleted binding antibodies to both F conformations. In contrast, adsorption with post-F removed ~30% of NT activity, and binding antibodies to pre-F were retained. These findings were consistent across all age groups. Protein competition neutralization assays with pre-F mutants in which sites Ø or II were altered to knock out binding of antibodies to the corresponding sites showed that these sites accounted for ~35 and <10% of NT activity, respectively. Binding competition assays with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) indicated that the amount of site Ø–specific antibodies correlated with NT activity, whereas the magnitude of binding competed by site II mAbs did not correlate with neutralization. Our results indicate that RSV NT activity in human sera is primarily derived from pre-F–specific antibodies, and therefore, inducing or boosting NT activity by vaccination will be facilitated by using pre-F antigens that preserve site Ø.


Science | 2016

Fusion peptide of HIV-1 as a site of vulnerability to neutralizing antibody

Rui Kong; Ke Xu; Tongqing Zhou; Priyamvada Acharya; Thomas Lemmin; Liu K; Gabriel Ozorowski; Cinque Soto; Justin D. Taft; Robert T. Bailer; Evan M. Cale; Lei Chen; Choi Cw; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Aliaksandr Druz; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Jason Gorman; Jian-Dong Huang; Michael Gordon Joyce; Mark K. Louder; Xiaochu Ma; Krisha McKee; Sijy O'Dell; Marie Pancera; Yili Yang; Scott C. Blanchard; Walther Mothes; Dennis R. Burton; Wayne C. Koff

An antibody to block viral fusion A small fraction of HIV-1–infected individuals develop broad and potent antibodies that bind the HIV-1 envelope protein (Env). These antibodies recognize a limited set of conserved epitopes on Env, such as Envs host receptor-binding site. Kong et al. now report a neutralizing antibody isolated from an HIV-1–infected individual that binds to the fusion peptide of Env. This is unexpected because viruses often try to mask such key components of their cell entry machinery from antibody attack. Crystal structures of the antibody bound to the fusion peptide and to Env itself define the epitope, provide insight into the specific mechanism of antibody binding, and may inform HIV-1 vaccine design. Science, this issue p. 828 A neutralizing antibody against HIV-1 unexpectedly targets a key component of the virus’ cell entry machinery. The HIV-1 fusion peptide, comprising 15 to 20 hydrophobic residues at the N terminus of the Env-gp41 subunit, is a critical component of the virus-cell entry machinery. Here, we report the identification of a neutralizing antibody, N123-VRC34.01, which targets the fusion peptide and blocks viral entry by inhibiting conformational changes in gp120 and gp41 subunits of Env required for entry. Crystal structures of N123-VRC34.01 liganded to the fusion peptide, and to the full Env trimer, revealed an epitope consisting of the N-terminal eight residues of the gp41 fusion peptide and glycan N88 of gp120, and molecular dynamics showed that the N-terminal portion of the fusion peptide can be solvent-exposed. These results reveal the fusion peptide to be a neutralizing antibody epitope and thus a target for vaccine design.


Journal of Virology | 2016

New Member of the V1V2-Directed CAP256-VRC26 Lineage That Shows Increased Breadth and Exceptional Potency.

Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Jinal N. Bhiman; Ryan S. Roark; Chaim A. Schramm; Jason Gorman; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Marie Pancera; Evan M. Cale; Michael J. Ernandes; Mark K. Louder; Mangaiarkarasi Asokan; Robert T. Bailer; Aliaksandr Druz; Isabella R. Fraschilla; Nigel Garrett; Marissa Jarosinski; Rebecca M. Lynch; Krisha McKee; Sijy O'Dell; Amarendra Pegu; Stephen D. Schmidt; Ryan P. Staupe; Matthew S. Sutton; Constantinos Kurt Wibmer; Barton F. Haynes; Salim Abdool-Karim; Lawrence Shapiro; Peter D. Kwong; Penny L. Moore; Lynn Morris

ABSTRACT The epitopes defined by HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) are valuable templates for vaccine design, and studies of the immunological development of these antibodies are providing insights for vaccination strategies. In addition, the most potent and broadly reactive of these bNAbs have potential for clinical use. We previously described a family of 12 V1V2-directed neutralizing antibodies, CAP256-VRC26, isolated from an HIV-1 clade C-infected donor at years 1, 2, and 4 of infection (N. A. Doria-Rose et al., Nature 509:55–62, 2014, http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature13036). Here, we report on the isolation and characterization of new members of the family mostly obtained at time points of peak serum neutralization breadth and potency. Thirteen antibodies were isolated from B cell culture, and eight were isolated using trimeric envelope probes for differential single B cell sorting. One of the new antibodies displayed a 10-fold greater neutralization potency than previously published lineage members. This antibody, CAP256-VRC26.25, neutralized 57% of diverse clade viral isolates and 70% of clade C isolates with remarkable potency. Among the viruses neutralized, the median 50% inhibitory concentration was 0.001 μg/ml. All 33 lineage members targeted a quaternary epitope focused on V2. While all known bNAbs targeting the V1V2 region interact with the N160 glycan, the CAP256-VRC26 antibodies showed an inverse correlation of neutralization potency with dependence on this glycan. Overall, our results highlight the ongoing evolution within a single antibody lineage and describe more potent and broadly neutralizing members with potential clinical utility, particularly in areas where clade C is prevalent. IMPORTANCE Studies of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) provide valuable information for vaccine design, and the most potent and broadly reactive of these bNAbs have potential for clinical use. We previously described a family of V1V2-directed neutralizing antibodies from an HIV-1 clade C-infected donor. Here, we report on the isolation and characterization of new members of the family mostly obtained at time points of peak serum neutralization breadth and potency. One of the new antibodies, CAP256-VRC26.25, displayed a 10-fold greater neutralization potency than previously described lineage members. It neutralized 57% of diverse clade viral isolates and 70% of clade C isolates with remarkable potency: the median 50% inhibitory concentration was 0.001 μg/ml. Our results highlight the ongoing evolution within a single antibody lineage and describe more potent and broadly neutralizing members with potential clinical utility, particularly in areas where clade C is prevalent.


Cell | 2016

Vaccine-Induced Antibodies that Neutralize Group 1 and Group 2 Influenza A Viruses.

M. Gordon Joyce; Adam K. Wheatley; Paul V. Thomas; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Cinque Soto; Robert T. Bailer; Aliaksandr Druz; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Rebecca A. Gillespie; Masaru Kanekiyo; Wing-Pui Kong; Kwanyee Leung; Sandeep N. Narpala; Madhu Prabhakaran; Eun Sung Yang; Baoshan Zhang; Yi Zhang; Mangaiarkarasi Asokan; Jeffrey C. Boyington; Tatsiana Bylund; Sam Darko; Christopher R. Lees; Amy Ransier; Chen-Hsiang Shen; Lingshu Wang; James R. R. Whittle; Xueling Wu; Hadi M. Yassine; Celia Santos; Yumiko Matsuoka

Antibodies capable of neutralizing divergent influenza A viruses could form the basis of a universal vaccine. Here, from subjects enrolled in an H5N1 DNA/MIV-prime-boost influenza vaccine trial, we sorted hemagglutinin cross-reactive memory B cells and identified three antibody classes, each capable of neutralizing diverse subtypes of group 1 and group 2 influenza A viruses. Co-crystal structures with hemagglutinin revealed that each class utilized characteristic germline genes and convergent sequence motifs to recognize overlapping epitopes in the hemagglutinin stem. All six analyzed subjects had sequences from at least one multidonor class, and-in half the subjects-multidonor-class sequences were recovered from >40% of cross-reactive B cells. By contrast, these multidonor-class sequences were rare in published antibody datasets. Vaccination with a divergent hemagglutinin can thus increase the frequency of B cells encoding broad influenza A-neutralizing antibodies. We propose the sequence signature-quantified prevalence of these B cells as a metric to guide universal influenza A immunization strategies.


Journal of Virology | 2012

A Short Segment of the HIV-1 gp120 V1/V2 Region Is a Major Determinant of Resistance to V1/V2 Neutralizing Antibodies

Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Sijy O'Dell; Gwo-Yu Chuang; Ryan P. Staupe; Jason S. McLellan; Jason Gorman; Marie Pancera; Mattia Bonsignori; Barton F. Haynes; Dennis R. Burton; Wayne C. Koff; Peter D. Kwong; John R. Mascola

ABSTRACT Antibody PG9 is a prototypical member of a class of V1/V2-directed antibodies that effectively neutralizes diverse strains of HIV-1. We analyzed strain-specific resistance to PG9 using sequence and structural information. For multiply resistant strains, mutations in a short segment of V1/V2 resulted in gain of sensitivity to PG9 and related V1/V2 neutralizing antibodies, suggesting both a common mechanism of HIV-1 resistance to and a common mode of recognition by this class of antibodies.

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Ivelin S. Georgiev

National Institutes of Health

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Baoshan Zhang

National Institutes of Health

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Tongqing Zhou

National Institutes of Health

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John R. Mascola

National Institutes of Health

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Aliaksandr Druz

National Institutes of Health

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Mark K. Louder

National Institutes of Health

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Marie Pancera

National Institutes of Health

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Robert T. Bailer

National Institutes of Health

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Nicole A. Doria-Rose

National Institutes of Health

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