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Dive into the research topics where Nathan I. Nicely is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathan I. Nicely.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

Identification of autoantigens recognized by the 2F5 and 4E10 broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibodies

Guang Yang; T. Matt Holl; Yang Liu; Yi Li; Xiaozhi Lu; Nathan I. Nicely; Thomas B. Kepler; S. Munir Alam; Hua-Xin Liao; Derek W. Cain; Leonard D. Spicer; John L. VandeBerg; Barton F. Haynes; Garnett Kelsoe

Immunological tolerance to self-antigen impairs humoral responses to HIV-1.


Journal of Virology | 2015

Polyreactivity and Autoreactivity among HIV-1 Antibodies

Mengfei Liu; Guang Yang; Kevin Wiehe; Nathan I. Nicely; Nathan Vandergrift; Wes Rountree; Mattia Bonsignori; S. Munir Alam; Jingyun Gao; Barton F. Haynes; Garnett Kelsoe

ABSTRACT It is generally acknowledged that human broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) capable of neutralizing multiple HIV-1 clades are often polyreactive or autoreactive. Whereas polyreactivity or autoreactivity has been proposed to be crucial for neutralization breadth, no systematic, quantitative study of self-reactivity among nonneutralizing HIV-1 Abs (nNAbs) has been performed to determine whether poly- or autoreactivity in bNAbs is a consequence of chronic antigen (Ag) exposure and/or inflammation or a fundamental property of neutralization. Here, we use protein microarrays to assess binding to >9,400 human proteins and find that as a class, bNAbs are significantly more poly- and autoreactive than nNAbs. The poly- and autoreactive property is therefore not due to the infection milieu but rather is associated with neutralization. Our observations are consistent with a role of heteroligation for HIV-1 neutralization and/or structural mimicry of host Ags by conserved HIV-1 neutralization sites. Although bNAbs are more mutated than nNAbs as a group, V(D)J mutation per se does not correlate with poly- and autoreactivity. Infrequent poly- or autoreactivity among nNAbs implies that their dominance in humoral responses is due to the absence of negative control by immune regulation. Interestingly, four of nine bNAbs specific for the HIV-1 CD4 binding site (CD4bs) (VRC01, VRC02, CH106, and CH103) bind human ubiquitin ligase E3A (UBE3A), and UBE3A protein competitively inhibits gp120 binding to the VRC01 bNAb. Among these four bNAbs, avidity for UBE3A was correlated with neutralization breadth. Identification of UBE3A as a self-antigen recognized by CD4bs bNAbs offers a mechanism for the rarity of this bNAb class. IMPORTANCE Eliciting bNAbs is key for HIV-1 vaccines; most Abs elicited by HIV-1 infection or immunization, however, are strain specific or nonneutralizing, and unsuited for protection. Here, we compare the specificities of bNAbs and nNAbs to demonstrate that bNAbs are significantly more poly- and autoreactive than nNAbs. The strong association of poly- and autoreactivity with bNAbs, but not nNAbs from infected patients, indicates that the infection milieu, chronic inflammation and Ag exposure, CD4 T-cell depletion, etc., alone does not cause poly- and autoreactivity. Instead, these properties are fundamentally linked to neutralization breadth, either by the requirement for heteroligation or the consequence of host mimicry by HIV-1. Indeed, we show that human UBE3A shares an epitope(s) with HIV-1 envelope recognized by four CD4bs bNAbs. The poly- and autoreactivity of bNAbs surely contribute to the rarity of membrane-proximal external region (MPER) and CD4bs bNAbs and identify a roadblock that must be overcome to induce protective vaccines.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Human non-neutralizing HIV-1 envelope monoclonal antibodies limit the number of founder viruses during SHIV mucosal infection in rhesus macaques

Sampa Santra; Georgia D. Tomaras; Ranjit Warrier; Nathan I. Nicely; Hua-Xin Liao; Justin Pollara; Pinghuang Liu; S. Munir Alam; Ruijun Zhang; Sarah L. Cocklin; Xiaoying Shen; Ryan Duffy; Shi-Mao Xia; Robert J. Schutte; Charles W. Pemble; S. Moses Dennison; Hui Li; Andrew Chao; Kora Vidnovic; Abbey Evans; Katja Klein; Amit Kumar; James E. Robinson; Gary Landucci; Donald N. Forthal; David C. Montefiori; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Sorachai Nitayaphan; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Supachai Rerks-Ngarm

HIV-1 mucosal transmission begins with virus or virus-infected cells moving through mucus across mucosal epithelium to infect CD4+ T cells. Although broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) are the type of HIV-1 antibodies that are most likely protective, they are not induced with current vaccine candidates. In contrast, antibodies that do not neutralize primary HIV-1 strains in the TZM-bl infection assay are readily induced by current vaccine candidates and have also been implicated as secondary correlates of decreased HIV-1 risk in the RV144 vaccine efficacy trial. Here, we have studied the capacity of anti-Env monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against either the immunodominant region of gp41 (7B2 IgG1), the first constant region of gp120 (A32 IgG1), or the third variable loop (V3) of gp120 (CH22 IgG1) to modulate in vivo rectal mucosal transmission of a high-dose simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV-BaL) in rhesus macaques. 7B2 IgG1 or A32 IgG1, each containing mutations to enhance Fc function, was administered passively to rhesus macaques but afforded no protection against productive clinical infection while the positive control antibody CH22 IgG1 prevented infection in 4 of 6 animals. Enumeration of transmitted/founder (T/F) viruses revealed that passive infusion of each of the three antibodies significantly reduced the number of T/F genomes. Thus, some antibodies that bind HIV-1 Env but fail to neutralize virus in traditional neutralization assays may limit the number of T/F viruses involved in transmission without leading to enhancement of viral infection. For one of these mAbs, gp41 mAb 7B2, we provide the first co-crystal structure in complex with a common cyclical loop motif demonstrated to be critical for infection by other retroviruses.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Differential Reactivity of Germ Line Allelic Variants of a Broadly Neutralizing HIV-1 Antibody to a gp41 Fusion Intermediate Conformation

S. M. Alam; Hua-Xin Liao; S. M. Dennison; Frederick H. Jaeger; Robert Parks; Kara Anasti; Andrew Foulger; Michele. Donathan; Judith T. Lucas; Laurent Verkoczy; Nathan I. Nicely; Georgia D. Tomaras; Garnett Kelsoe; Bing Chen; Thomas B. Kepler; Barton F. Haynes

ABSTRACT Genetic factors, as well as antigenic stimuli, can influence antibody repertoire formation. Moreover, the affinity of antigen for unmutated naïve B cell receptors determines the threshold for activation of germinal center antibody responses. The gp41 2F5 broadly neutralizing antibody (bNAb) uses the VH2-5 gene, which has 10 distinct alleles that use either a heavy-chain complementarity-determining region 2 (HCDR2) aspartic acid (DH54) or an HCDR2 asparagine (NH54) residue. The 2F5 HCDR2 DH54 residue has been shown to form a salt bridge with gp41 665K; the VH2-5 germ line allele variant containing NH54 cannot do so and thus should bind less avidly to gp41. Thus, the induction of 2F5 bNAb is dependent on both genetic and structural factors that could affect antigen affinity of unmutated naïve B cell receptors. Here, we studied allelic variants of the VH2-5 inferred germ line forms of the HIV-1 gp41 bNAb 2F5 for their antigen binding affinities to gp41 linear peptide and conformational protein antigens. Both VH2-5 2F5 inferred germ line variants bound to gp41 peptides and protein, including the fusion intermediate protein mimic, although more weakly than the mature 2F5 antibody. As predicted, the affinity of the NH54 variant for fusion-intermediate conformation was an order of magnitude lower than that of the DH54 VH2-5 germ line antibody, demonstrating that allelic variants of 2F5 germ line antibodies differentially bind to gp41. Thus, these data demonstrate a genetically determined trait that may affect host responses to HIV-1 envelope epitopes recognized by broadly neutralizing antibodies and has implications for unmutated ancestor-based immunogen design.


Science Translational Medicine | 2016

Initiation of immune tolerance–controlled HIV gp41 neutralizing B cell lineages

Ruijun Zhang; Laurent Verkoczy; Kevin Wiehe; S. Munir Alam; Nathan I. Nicely; Sampa Santra; Todd Bradley; Charles W. Pemble; Jinsong Zhang; Feng Gao; David C. Montefiori; Hilary Bouton-Verville; Garnett Kelsoe; Kevin Larimore; Phillip D. Greenberg; Robert Parks; Andrew Foulger; Jessica Peel; Kan Luo; Xiaozhi Lu; Ashley M. Trama; Nathan Vandergrift; Georgia D. Tomaras; Thomas B. Kepler; M. Anthony Moody; Hua-Xin Liao; Barton F. Haynes

Immune tolerance mechanisms limit gp41 neutralizing antibody lineage maturation to broadly neutralizing antibodies. An immune block to HIV vaccines Because HIV is a rapidly mutating virus, a successful vaccine will need to elicit an immune response against a variety of HIV strains—broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). However, despite multiple promising targets, bnAb generation after HIV vaccination has remained elusive. Now, Zhang et al. report that bnAbs to one such target, gp41, are controlled by immune tolerance. In mouse and macaque, precursors to these antibodies are either deleted or do not attain sufficient affinity to neutralize virus. Therefore, a successful vaccine for HIV will need to overcome immune tolerance mechanisms. Development of an HIV vaccine is a global priority. A major roadblock to a vaccine is an inability to induce protective broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). HIV gp41 bnAbs have characteristics that predispose them to be controlled by tolerance. We used gp41 2F5 bnAb germline knock-in mice and macaques vaccinated with immunogens reactive with germline precursors to activate neutralizing antibodies. In germline knock-in mice, bnAb precursors were deleted, with remaining anergic B cells capable of being activated by germline-binding immunogens to make gp41-reactive immunoglobulin M (IgM). Immunized macaques made B cell clonal lineages targeted to the 2F5 bnAb epitope, but 2F5-like antibodies were either deleted or did not attain sufficient affinity for gp41-lipid complexes to achieve the neutralization potency of 2F5. Structural analysis of members of a vaccine-induced antibody lineage revealed that heavy chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) hydrophobicity was important for neutralization. Thus, gp41 bnAbs are controlled by immune tolerance, requiring vaccination strategies to transiently circumvent tolerance controls.


Immunity | 2014

Antibody Light-Chain-Restricted Recognition of the Site of Immune Pressure in the RV144 HIV-1 Vaccine Trial Is Phylogenetically Conserved

Kevin Wiehe; David Easterhoff; Kan Luo; Nathan I. Nicely; Todd Bradley; Frederick H. Jaeger; S. Moses Dennison; Ruijun Zhang; Krissey E. Lloyd; Christina Stolarchuk; Robert Parks; Laura L. Sutherland; Richard M. Scearce; Lynn Morris; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Sorachai Nitayaphan; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Supachai Rerks-Ngarm; Faruk Sinangil; Sanjay Phogat; Nelson L. Michael; Jerome H. Kim; Garnett Kelsoe; David C. Montefiori; Georgia D. Tomaras; Mattia Bonsignori; Sampa Santra; Thomas B. Kepler; S. Munir Alam; M. Anthony Moody

In HIV-1, the ability to mount antibody responses to conserved, neutralizing epitopes is critical for protection. Here we have studied the light chain usage of human and rhesus macaque antibodies targeted to a dominant region of the HIV-1 envelope second variable (V2) region involving lysine (K) 169, the site of immune pressure in the RV144 vaccine efficacy trial. We found that humans and rhesus macaques used orthologous lambda variable gene segments encoding a glutamic acid-aspartic acid (ED) motif for K169 recognition. Structure determination of an unmutated ancestor antibody demonstrated that the V2 binding site was preconfigured for ED motif-mediated recognition prior to maturation. Thus, light chain usage for recognition of the site of immune pressure in the RV144 trial is highly conserved across species. These data indicate that the HIV-1 K169-recognizing ED motif has persisted over the diversification between rhesus macaques and humans, suggesting an evolutionary advantage of this antibody recognition mode.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Crystal structure of a non-neutralizing antibody to the HIV-1 gp41 membrane-proximal external region

Nathan I. Nicely; S. M. Dennison; Leonard D. Spicer; Richard M. Scearce; Garnett Kelsoe; Yoshihiro Ueda; Huaiyong Chen; Hua-Xin Liao; S. M. Alam; Barton F. Haynes

The monoclonal antibody 13H11 shares part of its epitope in the HIV-1 gp41 membrane-proximal external region (MPER) with the rare, broadly neutralizing human antibody 2F5. Although 13H11 partially cross-blocked 2F5 binding, 13H11 is non-neutralizing and does not block 2F5 neutralization. We show that unlike 2F5, 13H11 binds to a well-defined helical MPER structure that is consistent with the structure of gp41 in a post-fusion six-helix bundle conformation.


Science immunology | 2017

Potent and broad HIV-neutralizing antibodies in memory B cells and plasma.

LaTonya D. Williams; Gilad Ofek; Sebastian Schätzle; Jonathan R. McDaniel; Xiaozhi Lu; Nathan I. Nicely; Liming Wu; Caleb S. Lougheed; Todd Bradley; Mark K. Louder; Krisha McKee; Robert T. Bailer; Sijy O’Dell; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Michael S. Seaman; Robert Parks; Dawn J. Marshall; Kara Anasti; Guang Yang; Xiaoyan Nie; Nancy Tumba; Kevin Wiehe; Kshitij Wagh; Bette T. Korber; Thomas B. Kepler; S. Munir Alam; Lynn Morris; Gift Kamanga; Myron S. Cohen; Mattia Bonsignori

Plasma is a source of broadly neutralizing antibodies for recombinant antibodies with enhanced potency and breadth. Engineering HIV immunity For rapidly mutating viruses such as HIV, antibodies that can neutralize more than one strain may have real potential as a therapeutic. Now, Williams et al. examine the ontogeny of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to the distal portion of the membrane-proximal external region (MPER) of HIV-1 gp41. They found similar clonal lineages of an MPER bnAb from both memory B cells and plasma, highlighting the viability of plasma as a source of bnAbs. These lineages shared an autoreactive unmutated common ancestor, suggesting that tolerance must be overcome for bnAb induction. The authors then engineered chimeric antibodies from the plasma and memory B cells that neutralized most HIV-1 strains. Induction of broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) is a goal of HIV-1 vaccine development. Antibody 10E8, reactive with the distal portion of the membrane-proximal external region (MPER) of HIV-1 gp41, is broadly neutralizing. However, the ontogeny of distal MPER antibodies and the relationship of memory B cell to plasma bnAbs are poorly understood. HIV-1–specific memory B cell flow sorting and proteomic identification of anti-MPER plasma antibodies from an HIV-1–infected individual were used to isolate broadly neutralizing distal MPER bnAbs of the same B cell clonal lineage. Structural analysis demonstrated that antibodies from memory B cells and plasma recognized the envelope gp41 bnAb epitope in a distinct orientation compared with other distal MPER bnAbs. The unmutated common ancestor of this distal MPER bnAb was autoreactive, suggesting lineage immune tolerance control. Construction of chimeric antibodies of memory B cell and plasma antibodies yielded a bnAb that potently neutralized most HIV-1 strains.


Journal of Virology | 2017

Glycosylation Benchmark Profile for HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Production Based on Eleven Env Trimers

Eden P. Go; Haitao Ding; Shijian Zhang; Rajesh P. Ringe; Nathan I. Nicely; David Hua; Robert T. Steinbock; Michael Golabek; James Alin; S. Munir Alam; Albert Cupo; Barton F. Haynes; John C. Kappes; John P. Moore; Joseph Sodroski; Heather Desaire; Wesley I. Sundquist

ABSTRACT HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (Env) glycosylation is important because individual glycans are components of multiple broadly neutralizing antibody epitopes, while shielding other sites that might otherwise be immunogenic. The glycosylation on Env is influenced by a variety of factors, including the genotype of the protein, the cell line used for its expression, and the details of the construct design. Here, we used a mass spectrometry (MS)-based approach to map the complete glycosylation profile at every site in multiple HIV-1 Env trimers, accomplishing two goals. (i) We determined which glycosylation sites contain conserved glycan profiles across many trimeric Envs. (ii) We identified the variables that impact Envs glycosylation profile at sites with divergent glycosylation. Over half of the gp120 glycosylation sites on 11 different trimeric Envs have a conserved glycan profile, indicating that a native consensus glycosylation profile does indeed exist among trimers. We showed that some soluble gp120s and gp140s exhibit highly divergent glycosylation profiles compared to trimeric Env. We also assessed the impact of several variables on Env glycosylation: truncating the full-length Env; producing Env, instead of the more virologically relevant T lymphocytes, in CHO cells; and purifying Env with different chromatographic platforms, including nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid (Ni-NTA), 2G12, and PGT151 affinity. This report provides the first consensus glycosylation profile of Env trimers, which should serve as a useful benchmark for HIV-1 vaccine developers. This report also defines the sites where glycosylation may be impacted when Env trimers are truncated or produced in CHO cells. IMPORTANCE A protective HIV-1 vaccine will likely include a recombinant version of the viral envelope glycoprotein (Env). Env is highly glycosylated, and yet vaccine developers have lacked guidance on how to assess whether their immunogens have optimal glycosylation. The following important questions are still unanswered. (i) What is the “target” glycosylation profile, when the goal is to generate a natively glycosylated protein? (ii) What variables exert the greatest influence on Env glycosylation? We identified numerous sites on Env where the glycosylation profile does not deviate in 11 different Env trimers, and we investigated the impact on the divergent glycosylation profiles of changing the genotype of the Env sequence, the construct design, the purification method, and the producer cell type. The data presented here give vaccine developers a “glycosylation target” for their immunogens, and they show how protein production variables can impact Env glycosylation.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

HIV-1 autoreactive antibodies: are they good or bad for HIV-1 prevention?

Barton F. Haynes; Nathan I. Nicely; S. Munir Alam

A new crystal structure of an anti–HIV-1 envelope antibody bound to an envelope–receptor complex shows the antibody binding both the HIV-1 envelope and the CD4 receptor, raising the question of what the role of antibody autoreactivity in host responses to HIV-1 may be.

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