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Dive into the research topics where Robert Parks is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Parks.


Nature | 2013

Co-evolution of a broadly neutralizing HIV-1 antibody and founder virus

Hua-Xin Liao; Rebecca M. Lynch; Tongqing Zhou; Feng Gao; S. Munir Alam; Scott D. Boyd; Andrew Fire; Krishna M. Roskin; Chaim A. Schramm; Z. F. Zhang; Jiang Zhu; Lawrence Shapiro; Nisc Comparative Sequencing Program; James C. Mullikin; S. Gnanakaran; Peter Hraber; Kevin Wiehe; Garnett Kelsoe; Guang Yang; Shi-Mao Xia; David C. Montefiori; Robert Parks; Krissey E. Lloyd; Richard M. Scearce; Kelly A. Soderberg; Myron S. Cohen; Gift Kamanga; Mark K. Louder; Lillian Tran; Yue Chen

Current human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) vaccines elicit strain-specific neutralizing antibodies. However, cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies arise in approximately 20% of HIV-1-infected individuals, and details of their generation could provide a blueprint for effective vaccination. Here we report the isolation, evolution and structure of a broadly neutralizing antibody from an African donor followed from the time of infection. The mature antibody, CH103, neutralized approximately 55% of HIV-1 isolates, and its co-crystal structure with the HIV-1 envelope protein gp120 revealed a new loop-based mechanism of CD4-binding-site recognition. Virus and antibody gene sequencing revealed concomitant virus evolution and antibody maturation. Notably, the unmutated common ancestor of the CH103 lineage avidly bound the transmitted/founder HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein, and evolution of antibody neutralization breadth was preceded by extensive viral diversification in and near the CH103 epitope. These data determine the viral and antibody evolution leading to induction of a lineage of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies, and provide insights into strategies to elicit similar antibodies by vaccination.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Initial B-Cell Responses to Transmitted Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: Virion-Binding Immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgG Antibodies Followed by Plasma Anti-gp41 Antibodies with Ineffective Control of Initial Viremia

Georgia D. Tomaras; Nicole L. Yates; Pinghuang Liu; Li Qin; Genevieve G. Fouda; Leslie L. Chavez; Allan C. deCamp; Robert Parks; Vicki C Ashley; Judith T. Lucas; Myron S. Cohen; Joseph J. Eron; Charles B. Hicks; Hua-Xin Liao; Steven G. Self; Gary Landucci; Donald N. Forthal; Kent J. Weinhold; Brandon F. Keele; Beatrice H. Hahn; Michael L. Greenberg; Lynn Morris; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; William A. Blattner; David C. Montefiori; George M. Shaw; Alan S. Perelson; Barton F. Haynes

ABSTRACT A window of opportunity for immune responses to extinguish human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exists from the moment of transmission through establishment of the latent pool of HIV-1-infected cells. A critical time to study the initial immune responses to the transmitted/founder virus is the eclipse phase of HIV-1 infection (time from transmission to the first appearance of plasma virus), but, to date, this period has been logistically difficult to analyze. To probe B-cell responses immediately following HIV-1 transmission, we have determined envelope-specific antibody responses to autologous and consensus Envs in plasma donors from the United States for whom frequent plasma samples were available at time points immediately before, during, and after HIV-1 plasma viral load (VL) ramp-up in acute infection, and we have modeled the antibody effect on the kinetics of plasma viremia. The first detectable B-cell response was in the form of immune complexes 8 days after plasma virus detection, whereas the first free plasma anti-HIV-1 antibody was to gp41 and appeared 13 days after the appearance of plasma virus. In contrast, envelope gp120-specific antibodies were delayed an additional 14 days. Mathematical modeling of the earliest viral dynamics was performed to determine the impact of antibody on HIV replication in vivo as assessed by plasma VL. Including the initial anti-gp41 immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgM, or both responses in the model did not significantly impact the early dynamics of plasma VL. These results demonstrate that the first IgM and IgG antibodies induced by transmitted HIV-1 are capable of binding virions but have little impact on acute-phase viremia at the timing and magnitude that they occur in natural infection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Vaccine-induced plasma IgA specific for the C1 region of the HIV-1 envelope blocks binding and effector function of IgG

Georgia D. Tomaras; Guido Ferrari; Xiaoying Shen; S. Munir Alam; Hua-Xin Liao; Justin Pollara; Mattia Bonsignori; M. Anthony Moody; Youyi Fong; Xi Chen; Brigid Poling; Cindo O. Nicholson; Ruijun Zhang; Xiaozhi Lu; Robert Parks; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Sorachai Nitayaphan; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Supachai Rerks-Ngarm; Peter B. Gilbert; Jerome H. Kim; Nelson L. Michael; David C. Montefiori; Barton F. Haynes

Analysis of correlates of risk of infection in the RV144 HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trial demonstrated that plasma IgG against the HIV-1 envelope (Env) variable region 1 and 2 inversely correlated with risk, whereas HIV-1 Env-specific plasma IgA responses directly correlated with risk. In the secondary analysis, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) was another inverse correlate of risk, but only in the presence of low plasma IgA Env-specific antibodies. Thus, we investigated the hypothesis that IgA could attenuate the protective effect of IgG responses through competition for the same Env binding sites. We report that Env-specific plasma IgA/IgG ratios are higher in infected than in uninfected vaccine recipients in RV144. Moreover, Env-specific IgA antibodies from RV144 vaccinees blocked the binding of ADCC-mediating mAb to HIV-1 Env glycoprotein 120 (gp120). An Env-specific monomeric IgA mAb isolated from an RV144 vaccinee also inhibited the ability of natural killer cells to kill HIV-1–infected CD4+ T cells coated with RV144-induced IgG antibodies. We show that monomeric Env-specific IgA, as part of postvaccination polyclonal antibody response, may modulate vaccine-induced immunity by diminishing ADCC effector function.


AIDS | 2009

Heterogeneous neutralizing antibody and antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity responses in HIV-1 elite controllers.

Olivier Lambotte; Guido Ferrari; Christiane Moog; Nicole L. Yates; Hua-Xin Liao; Robert Parks; Charles B. Hicks; Kouros Owzar; Georgia D. Tomaras; David C. Montefiori; Barton F. Haynes; Jean-François Delfraissy

Objective:To determine the spectrum of antiviral antibodies in HIV-1-infected individuals in whom viral replication is spontaneously undetectable, termed HIV controllers (HICs). Design:Multicenter French trial ANRS EP36 studying the viral control in HICs. Methods:Neutralizing Antibody (nAb) activities (neutralization assay, competition with broadly reactive monoclonal antibodies, and reactivity against the viral MPER gp41 region), FcγR-mediated antiviral activities, antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC), as well as autoantibody levels, were quantified in plasma from 22 controllers and from viremic individuals. The levels of these different antibody responses and HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISPOT) IFNγ assay were compared in each controller. Results:The levels of antibody against the gp120 CD4 binding site, gp41, as well as Env epitopes near to the sites bound by broadly nAbs 2F5 and 1b12 were not different between HICs and viremic individuals. We did not find significant autoantibody levels in HICs. The magnitude and breadth of nAbs were heterogeneous in HICs but lower than in viremic individuals. The levels of nAbs using FcγR-mediated assay inhibition were similar in both groups. Regardless of the type of antibody tested, there was no correlation with HIV-specific CD8 T cell responses. ADCC was detectable in all controllers tested and was significantly higher than in viremic individuals (P < 0.0002). Conclusion:There was no single anti-HIV-1 antibody specificity that was a clear correlate of immunity in controllers. Rather, for most antibody types, controllers had the same or lower levels of nAbs than viremic individuals, with the possible exception of ADCC antibodies.


Nature Medicine | 2010

Mosaic vaccines elicit CD8 + T lymphocyte responses that confer enhanced immune coverage of diverse HIV strains in monkeys

Sampa Santra; Hua-Xin Liao; Ruijin Zhang; Mark Muldoon; Sydeaka Watson; Will Fischer; James Theiler; James Szinger; Harikrishnan Balachandran; Adam P. Buzby; David S. Quinn; Robert Parks; Chun-Yen Tsao; Angela Carville; Keith G. Mansfield; George N. Pavlakis; Barbara K. Felber; Barton F. Haynes; Bette T. Korber; Norman L. Letvin

An effective HIV vaccine must elicit immune responses that recognize genetically diverse viruses. It must generate CD8+ T lymphocytes that control HIV replication and CD4+ T lymphocytes that provide help for the generation and maintenance of both cellular and humoral immune responses against the virus. Creating immunogens that can elicit cellular immune responses against the genetically varied circulating isolates of HIV presents a key challenge for creating an HIV vaccine. Polyvalent mosaic immunogens derived by in silico recombination of natural strains of HIV are designed to induce cellular immune responses that recognize genetically diverse circulating virus isolates. Here we immunized rhesus monkeys by plasmid DNA prime and recombinant vaccinia virus boost with vaccine constructs expressing either consensus or polyvalent mosaic proteins. As compared to consensus immunogens, the mosaic immunogens elicited CD8+ T lymphocyte responses to more epitopes of each viral protein than did the consensus immunogens and to more variant sequences of CD8+ T lymphocyte epitopes. This increased breadth and depth of epitope recognition may contribute both to protection against infection by genetically diverse viruses and to the control of variant viruses that emerge as they mutate away from recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2013

Structural basis for diverse N-glycan recognition by HIV-1–neutralizing V1–V2–directed antibody PG16

Marie Pancera; Syed Shahzad-ul-Hussan; Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Jason S. McLellan; Robert T. Bailer; Kaifan Dai; Sandra Loesgen; Mark K. Louder; Ryan P. Staupe; Yongping Yang; Baoshan Zhang; Robert Parks; Joshua Eudailey; Krissey E. Lloyd; Julie Blinn; S. Munir Alam; Barton F. Haynes; Mohammed N. Amin; Lai-Xi Wang; Dennis R. Burton; Wayne C. Koff; Gary J. Nabel; John R. Mascola; Carole A. Bewley; Peter D. Kwong

HIV-1 uses a diverse N-linked-glycan shield to evade recognition by antibody. Select human antibodies, such as the clonally related PG9 and PG16, recognize glycopeptide epitopes in the HIV-1 V1–V2 region and penetrate this shield, but their ability to accommodate diverse glycans is unclear. Here we report the structure of antibody PG16 bound to a scaffolded V1–V2, showing an epitope comprising both high mannose–type and complex-type N-linked glycans. We combined structure, NMR and mutagenesis analyses to characterize glycan recognition by PG9 and PG16. Three PG16-specific residues, arginine, serine and histidine (RSH), were critical for binding sialic acid on complex-type glycans, and introduction of these residues into PG9 produced a chimeric antibody with enhanced HIV-1 neutralization. Although HIV-1–glycan diversity facilitates evasion, antibody somatic diversity can overcome this and can provide clues to guide the design of modified antibodies with enhanced neutralization.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Vaccine-Induced IgG Antibodies to V1V2 Regions of Multiple HIV-1 Subtypes Correlate with Decreased Risk of HIV-1 Infection

Susan Zolla-Pazner; Allan C. deCamp; Peter B. Gilbert; Constance Williams; Nicole L. Yates; William T. Williams; Robert Howington; Youyi Fong; Daryl Morris; Kelly A. Soderberg; Carmela Irene; Charles Reichman; Abraham Pinter; Robert Parks; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Supachai Rerks-Ngarm; Sorachai Nitayaphan; Charla Andrews; Robert J. O'Connell; Zhi Yong Yang; Gary J. Nabel; Jerome H. Kim; Nelson L. Michael; David C. Montefiori; Hua-Xin Liao; Barton F. Haynes; Georgia D. Tomaras

In the RV144 HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trial, IgG antibody (Ab) binding levels to variable regions 1 and 2 (V1V2) of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp120 were an inverse correlate of risk of HIV-1 infection. To determine if V1V2-specific Abs cross-react with V1V2 from different HIV-1 subtypes, if the nature of the V1V2 antigen used to asses cross-reactivity influenced infection risk, and to identify immune assays for upcoming HIV-1 vaccine efficacy trials, new V1V2-scaffold antigens were designed and tested. Protein scaffold antigens carrying the V1V2 regions from HIV-1 subtypes A, B, C, D or CRF01_AE were assayed in pilot studies, and six were selected to assess cross-reactive Abs in the plasma from the original RV144 case-control cohort (41 infected vaccinees, 205 frequency-matched uninfected vaccinees, and 40 placebo recipients) using ELISA and a binding Ab multiplex assay. IgG levels to these antigens were assessed as correlates of risk in vaccine recipients using weighted logistic regression models. Levels of Abs reactive with subtype A, B, C and CRF01_AE V1V2-scaffold antigens were all significant inverse correlates of risk (p-values of 0.0008–0.05; estimated odds ratios of 0.53–0.68 per 1 standard deviation increase). Thus, levels of vaccine-induced IgG Abs recognizing V1V2 regions from multiple HIV-1 subtypes, and presented on different scaffolds, constitute inverse correlates of risk for HIV-1 infection in the RV144 vaccine trial. The V1V2 antigens provide a link between RV144 and upcoming HIV-1 vaccine trials, and identify reagents and methods for evaluating V1V2 Abs as possible correlates of protection against HIV-1 infection. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00223080


Journal of Virological Methods | 2009

High-throughput isolation of immunoglobulin genes from single human B cells and expression as monoclonal antibodies.

Hua-Xin Liao; Marc C. Levesque; Ashleigh Nagel; Ashlyn Dixon; Ruijun Zhang; Emmanuel B. Walter; Robert Parks; John Whitesides; Dawn J. Marshall; Kwan-Ki Hwang; Yi Yang; Xi Chen; Feng Gao; Supriya Munshaw; Thomas B. Kepler; Thomas N. Denny; M. Anthony Moody; Barton F. Haynes

Defining human B cell repertoires to viral pathogens is critical for design of vaccines that induce broadly protective antibodies to infections such as HIV-1 and influenza. Single B cell sorting and cloning of immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy- and light-chain variable regions (V(H) and V(L)) is a powerful technology for defining anti-viral B cell repertoires. However, the Ig-cloning step is time-consuming and prevents high-throughput analysis of the B cell repertoire. Novel linear Ig heavy- and light-chain gene expression cassettes were designed to express Ig V(H) and V(L) genes isolated from sorted single B cells as IgG1 antibody without a cloning step. The cassettes contain all essential elements for transcriptional and translational regulation, including CMV promoter, Ig leader sequences, constant region of IgG1 heavy- or Ig light-chain, poly(A) tail and substitutable V(H) or V(L) genes. The utility of these Ig gene expression cassettes was established using synthetic V(H) or V(L) genes from an anti-HIV-1 gp41 mAb 2F5 as a model system, and validated further using V(H) and V(L) genes isolated from cloned EBV-transformed antibody-producing cell lines. Finally, this strategy was successfully used for rapid production of recombinant influenza mAbs from sorted single human plasmablasts after influenza vaccination. These Ig gene expression cassettes constitute a highly efficient strategy for rapid expression of Ig genes for high-throughput screening and analysis without cloning.


Nature | 2017

Zika virus protection by a single low-dose nucleoside-modified mRNA vaccination

Norbert Pardi; Michael J. Hogan; Rebecca S. Pelc; Hiromi Muramatsu; Hanne Andersen; Christina R. DeMaso; Kimberly A. Dowd; Laura L. Sutherland; Richard M. Scearce; Robert Parks; Wendeline Wagner; Alex Granados; Jack Greenhouse; Michelle Walker; Elinor Willis; Jae-Sung Yu; Charles E. McGee; Gregory D. Sempowski; Barbara L. Mui; Ying K. Tam; Yan-Jang Huang; Dana L. Vanlandingham; Veronica M. Holmes; Harikrishnan Balachandran; Sujata Sahu; Michelle A. Lifton; Stephen Higgs; Scott E. Hensley; Thomas D. Madden; Michael J. Hope

Zika virus (ZIKV) has recently emerged as a pandemic associated with severe neuropathology in newborns and adults. There are no ZIKV-specific treatments or preventatives. Therefore, the development of a safe and effective vaccine is a high priority. Messenger RNA (mRNA) has emerged as a versatile and highly effective platform to deliver vaccine antigens and therapeutic proteins. Here we demonstrate that a single low-dose intradermal immunization with lipid-nanoparticle-encapsulated nucleoside-modified mRNA (mRNA–LNP) encoding the pre-membrane and envelope glycoproteins of a strain from the ZIKV outbreak in 2013 elicited potent and durable neutralizing antibody responses in mice and non-human primates. Immunization with 30 μg of nucleoside-modified ZIKV mRNA–LNP protected mice against ZIKV challenges at 2 weeks or 5 months after vaccination, and a single dose of 50 μg was sufficient to protect non-human primates against a challenge at 5 weeks after vaccination. These data demonstrate that nucleoside-modified mRNA–LNP elicits rapid and durable protective immunity and therefore represents a new and promising vaccine candidate for the global fight against ZIKV.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Two Distinct Broadly Neutralizing Antibody Specificities of Different Clonal Lineages in a Single HIV-1-Infected Donor: Implications for Vaccine Design

Mattia Bonsignori; David C. Montefiori; Xueling Wu; Xi Chen; Kwan-Ki Hwang; Chun-Yen Tsao; Daniel M. Kozink; Robert Parks; Georgia D. Tomaras; John A. Crump; Saidi Kapiga; Noel E. Sam; Peter D. Kwong; Thomas B. Kepler; Hua-Xin Liao; John R. Mascola; Barton F. Haynes

ABSTRACT Plasma from a small subset of subjects chronically infected with HIV-1 shows remarkable magnitude and breadth of neutralizing activity. From one of these individuals (CH0219), we isolated two broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs), CH01 and VRC-CH31, from two clonal lineages of memory B cells with distinct specificities (variable loop 1 and 2 [V1V2] conformational specificity and CD4-binding site specificity, respectively) that recapitulate 95% of CH0219 serum neutralization breadth. These data provide proof of concept for an HIV-1 vaccine that aims to elicit bnAbs of multiple specificities.

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