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Dive into the research topics where Tommy Tong is active.

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Featured researches published by Tommy Tong.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Polyclonal B Cell Responses to Conserved Neutralization Epitopes in a Subset of HIV-1-infected Individuals

Georgia D. Tomaras; James M. Binley; Elin S. Gray; Emma T. Crooks; Keiko Osawa; Penny L. Moore; Nancy Tumba; Tommy Tong; Xiaoying Shen; Nicole L. Yates; Julie M. Decker; Constantinos Kurt Wibmer; Feng Gao; S. Munir Alam; Philippa Easterbrook; Salim Safurdeen. Abdool Karim; Gift Kamanga; John A. Crump; Myron S. Cohen; George M. Shaw; John R. Mascola; Barton F. Haynes; David C. Montefiori; Lynn Morris

ABSTRACT A small proportion of HIV-infected individuals generate a neutralizing antibody (NAb) response of exceptional magnitude and breadth. A detailed analysis of the critical epitopes targeted by broadly neutralizing antibodies should help to define optimal targets for vaccine design. HIV-1-infected subjects with potent cross-reactive serum neutralizing antibodies were identified by assaying sera from 308 subjects against a multiclade panel of 12 “tier 2” viruses (4 each of subtypes A, B, and C). Various neutralizing epitope specificities were determined for the top 9 neutralizers, including clade A-, clade B-, clade C-, and clade A/C-infected donors, by using a comprehensive set of assays. In some subjects, neutralization breadth was mediated by two or more antibody specificities. Although antibodies to the gp41 membrane-proximal external region (MPER) were identified in some subjects, the subjects with the greatest neutralization breadth targeted gp120 epitopes, including the CD4 binding site, a glycan-containing quaternary epitope formed by the V2 and V3 loops, or an outer domain epitope containing a glycan at residue N332. The broadly reactive HIV-1 neutralization observed in some subjects is mediated by antibodies targeting several conserved regions on the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Enzyme Digests Eliminate Nonfunctional Env from HIV-1 Particle Surfaces, Leaving Native Env Trimers Intact and Viral Infectivity Unaffected

Ema T. Crooks; Tommy Tong; Keiko Osawa; James M. Binley

ABSTRACT HIV-1 viruses and virus-like particles (VLPs) bear nonnative “junk” forms of envelope (Env) glycoprotein that may undermine the development of antibody responses against functional gp120/gp41 trimers, thereby blunting the ability of particles to elicit neutralizing antibodies. Here, we sought to better understand the nature of junk Env with a view to devising strategies for its removal. Initial studies revealed that native trimers were surprisingly stable in the face of harsh conditions, suggesting that junk Env is unlikely to arise by trimer dissociation or gp120 shedding. Furthermore, the limited gp120 shedding that occurs immediately after synthesis of primary HIV-1 isolate Envs is not caused by aberrant cleavage at the tandem gp120/gp41 cleavage sites, which were found to cleave in a codependent manner. A major VLP contaminant was found to consist of an early, monomeric form of gp160 that is glycosylated in the endoplasmic reticulum (gp160ER) and then bypasses protein maturation and traffics directly into particles. gp160ER was found to bind two copies of monoclonal antibody (MAb) 2G12, consistent with its exclusively high-mannose glycan profile. These findings prompted us to evaluate enzyme digests as a way to remove aberrant Env. Remarkably, sequential glycosidase-protease digests led to a complete or near-complete removal of junk Env from many viral strains, leaving trimers and viral infectivity largely intact. “Trimer VLPs” may be useful neutralizing antibody immunogens.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Vaccine-Elicited Tier 2 HIV-1 Neutralizing Antibodies Bind to Quaternary Epitopes Involving Glycan-Deficient Patches Proximal to the CD4 Binding Site

Ema T. Crooks; Tommy Tong; Bimal K. Chakrabarti; Kristin Narayan; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Sergey Menis; Xiaoxing Huang; Daniel W. Kulp; Keiko Osawa; Janelle Muranaka; Guillaume Stewart-Jones; Joanne DeStefano; Sijy O’Dell; Celia C. LaBranche; James E. Robinson; David C. Montefiori; Krisha McKee; Sean X. Du; Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Peter D. Kwong; John R. Mascola; Ping Zhu; William R. Schief; Richard T. Wyatt; Robert G. Whalen; James M. Binley

Eliciting broad tier 2 neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) is a major goal of HIV-1 vaccine research. Here we investigated the ability of native, membrane-expressed JR-FL Env trimers to elicit nAbs. Unusually potent nAb titers developed in 2 of 8 rabbits immunized with virus-like particles (VLPs) expressing trimers (trimer VLP sera) and in 1 of 20 rabbits immunized with DNA expressing native Env trimer, followed by a protein boost (DNA trimer sera). All 3 sera neutralized via quaternary epitopes and exploited natural gaps in the glycan defenses of the second conserved region of JR-FL gp120. Specifically, trimer VLP sera took advantage of the unusual absence of a glycan at residue 197 (present in 98.7% of Envs). Intriguingly, removing the N197 glycan (with no loss of tier 2 phenotype) rendered 50% or 16.7% (n = 18) of clade B tier 2 isolates sensitive to the two trimer VLP sera, showing broad neutralization via the surface masked by the N197 glycan. Neutralizing sera targeted epitopes that overlap with the CD4 binding site, consistent with the role of the N197 glycan in a putative “glycan fence” that limits access to this region. A bioinformatics analysis suggested shared features of one of the trimer VLP sera and monoclonal antibody PG9, consistent with its trimer-dependency. The neutralizing DNA trimer serum took advantage of the absence of a glycan at residue 230, also proximal to the CD4 binding site and suggesting an epitope similar to that of monoclonal antibody 8ANC195, albeit lacking tier 2 breadth. Taken together, our data show for the first time that strain-specific holes in the glycan fence can allow the development of tier 2 neutralizing antibodies to native spikes. Moreover, cross-neutralization can occur in the absence of protecting glycan. Overall, our observations provide new insights that may inform the future development of a neutralizing antibody vaccine.


Journal of Virology | 2012

HIV-1 Virus-Like Particles Bearing Pure Env Trimers Expose Neutralizing Epitopes but Occlude Nonneutralizing Epitopes

Tommy Tong; Ema T. Crooks; Keiko Osawa; James M. Binley

ABSTRACT Hypothetically, since native HIV-1 Env trimers are exclusively recognized by neutralizing antibodies, they might induce the neutralizing antibodies in a vaccine setting. This idea has not been evaluated due to the difficulty of separating trimers from nonfunctional Env (uncleaved gp160 and gp41 stumps). The latter are immunodominant and induce nonneutralizing antibodies. We previously showed that nonfunctional Env can be selectively cleared from virus-like particle (VLP) surfaces by enzyme digests (E. T. Crooks, T. Tong, K. Osawa, and J. M. Binley, J.Virol. 85:5825, 2011). Here, we investigated the effects of these digests on the antigenicity of VLPs and their sensitivity to neutralization. Before digestion, WT VLPs (bearing wild-type Env) and UNC VLPs (bearing uncleaved gp160) were recognized by various Env-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), irrespective of their neutralizing activity, a result which is consistent with the presence of nonfunctional Env. After digestion, only neutralizing MAbs recognized WT VLPs, consistent with selective removal of nonfunctional Env (i.e., “trimer VLPs”). Digests eliminated the binding of all MAbs to UNC VLPs, again consistent with removal of nonfunctional Env. An exception was MAb 2F5, which weakly bound to digested UNC VLPs and bald VLPs (bearing no Env), perhaps due to lipid cross-reactivity. Trimer VLPs were infectious, and their neutralization sensitivity was largely comparable to that of undigested WT VLPs. However, they were ∼100-fold more sensitive to the MAbs 4E10 and Z13e1, suggesting increased exposure of the gp41 base. Importantly, a scatterplot analysis revealed a strong correlation between MAb binding and neutralization of trimer VLPs. This suggests that trimer VLPs bear essentially pure native trimer that should allow its unfettered evaluation in a vaccine setting.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Targeting HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers to B Cells by Using APRIL Improves Antibody Responses

Mark Melchers; Ilja Bontjer; Tommy Tong; Nancy P. Y. Chung; Per Johan Klasse; Dirk Eggink; David C. Montefiori; Maurizio Gentile; Andrea Cerutti; William C. Olson; Ben Berkhout; James M. Binley; John P. Moore; Rogier W. Sanders

ABSTRACT An HIV-1 vaccine remains elusive, in part because various factors limit the quantity and quality of the antibodies raised against the viral envelope glycoprotein complex (Env). We hypothesized that targeting Env vaccines directly to B cells, by fusing them to molecules that bind and activate these cells, would improve Env-specific antibody responses. Therefore, we fused trimeric Env gp140 to A PRoliferation-Inducing Ligand (APRIL), B-cell Activating Factor (BAFF), and CD40 Ligand (CD40L). The Env-APRIL, Env-BAFF, and Env-CD40L gp140 trimers all enhanced the expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), the enzyme responsible for inducing somatic hypermutation, antibody affinity maturation, and antibody class switching. They also triggered IgM, IgG, and IgA secretion from human B cells in vitro. The Env-APRIL trimers induced higher anti-Env antibody responses in rabbits, including neutralizing antibodies against tier 1 viruses. The enhanced Env-specific responses were not associated with a general increase in total plasma antibody concentrations, indicating that the effect of APRIL was specific for Env. All the rabbit sera raised against gp140 trimers, irrespective of the presence of CD40L, BAFF, or APRIL, recognized trimeric Env efficiently, whereas sera raised against gp120 monomers did not. The levels of trimer-binding and virus-neutralizing antibodies were strongly correlated, suggesting that gp140 trimers are superior to gp120 monomers as immunogens. Targeting and activating B cells with a trimeric HIV-1 Env-APRIL fusion protein may therefore improve the induction of humoral immunity against HIV-1.


Immunity | 2017

Virus-like Particles Identify an HIV V1V2 Apex-Binding Neutralizing Antibody that Lacks a Protruding Loop

Evan M. Cale; Jason Gorman; Nathan A. Radakovich; Ema T. Crooks; Keiko Osawa; Tommy Tong; Jiaqi Li; Raju Nagarajan; Gabriel Ozorowski; David R. Ambrozak; Mangai Asokan; Robert T. Bailer; Anthony K. Bennici; Xuejun Chen; Nicole A. Doria-Rose; Aliaksandr Druz; Yu Feng; M. Gordon Joyce; Mark K. Louder; Sijy O’Dell; Courtney Oliver; Marie Pancera; Mark Connors; Thomas J. Hope; Thomas B. Kepler; Richard T. Wyatt; Andrew B. Ward; Ivelin S. Georgiev; Peter D. Kwong; John R. Mascola

Summary Most HIV‐1‐specific neutralizing antibodies isolated to date exhibit unusual characteristics that complicate their elicitation. Neutralizing antibodies that target the V1V2 apex of the HIV‐1 envelope (Env) trimer feature unusually long protruding loops, which enable them to penetrate the HIV‐1 glycan shield. As antibodies with loops of requisite length are created through uncommon recombination events, an alternative mode of apex binding has been sought. Here, we isolated a lineage of Env apex‐directed neutralizing antibodies, N90‐VRC38.01‐11, by using virus‐like particles and conformationally stabilized Env trimers as B cell probes. A crystal structure of N90‐VRC38.01 with a scaffolded V1V2 revealed a binding mode involving side‐chain‐to‐side‐chain interactions that reduced the distance the antibody loop must traverse the glycan shield, thereby facilitating V1V2 binding via a non‐protruding loop. The N90‐VRC38 lineage thus identifies a solution for V1V2‐apex binding that provides a more conventional B cell pathway for vaccine design. HighlightsVLPs and stabilized Env trimers identify HIV‐1‐neutralizing N90‐VRC38 Ab lineageCo‐crystal structure of Ab N90‐VRC38.01 with scaffolded V1V2‐Env apexN90‐VRC38 lineage targets the apex of HIV‐1 Env trimer with non‐protruding loopsNew mechanism of Ab:trimer‐apex binding informs V1V2 vaccine strategies &NA; To date, long recognition loops have been a hallmark of apex‐targeting antibodies. Cale et al. identify a lineage of HIV‐1‐neutralizing antibodies that target the envelope trimer apex. The N90‐VRC38 lineage uses a loop of average length—a feature that may make it a useful prototype for vaccine design.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A human antibody to the CD4 binding site of gp120 capable of highly potent but sporadic cross clade neutralization of primary HIV-1.

Johannes S. Gach; Heribert Quendler; Tommy Tong; Kristin Narayan; Sean X. Du; Robert G. Whalen; James M. Binley; Donald N. Forthal; Pascal Poignard; Michael B. Zwick

Primary isolates of HIV-1 resist neutralization by most antibodies to the CD4 binding site (CD4bs) on gp120 due to occlusion of this site on the trimeric spike. We describe 1F7, a human CD4bs monoclonal antibody that was found to be exceptionally potent against the HIV-1 primary isolate JR-FL. However, 1F7 failed to neutralize a patient-matched primary isolate, JR-CSF even though the two isolates differ by <10% in gp120 at the protein level. In an HIV-1 cross clade panel (n = 157), 1F7 exhibited moderate breadth, but occasionally achieved considerable potency. In binding experiments using monomeric gp120s of select resistant isolates and domain-swap chimeras between JR-FL and JR-CSF, recognition by 1F7 was limited by sequence polymorphisms involving at least the C2 region of Env. Putative N-linked glycosylation site (PNGS) mutations, notably at position 197, allowed 1F7 to neutralize JR-CSF potently without improving binding to the cognate, monomeric gp120. In contrast, flow cytometry experiments using the same PNGS mutants revealed that 1F7 binding is enhanced on cognate trimeric Env. BN-PAGE mobility shift experiments revealed that 1F7 is sensitive to the diagnostic mutation D368R in the CD4 binding loop of gp120. Our data on 1F7 reinforce how exquisitely targeted CD4bs antibodies must be to achieve cross neutralization of two closely related primary isolates. High-resolution analyses of trimeric Env that show the orientation of glycans and polymorphic elements of the CD4bs that affect binding to antibodies like 1F7 are desirable to understand how to promote immunogenicity of more conserved elements of the CD4bs.


Nature microbiology | 2016

HIV–host interactome revealed directly from infected cells

Yang Luo; Erica Y. Jacobs; Todd M. Greco; Kevin D. Mohammed; Tommy Tong; Sarah Keegan; James M. Binley; Ileana M. Cristea; David Fenyö; Michael P. Rout; Brian T. Chait; Mark A. Muesing

Although genetically compact, HIV-1 commandeers vast arrays of cellular machinery to sustain and protect it during cycles of viral outgrowth. Transposon-mediated saturation linker scanning mutagenesis was used to isolate fully replication-competent viruses harbouring a potent foreign epitope tag. Using these viral isolates, we performed differential isotopic labelling and affinity-capture mass spectrometric analyses on samples obtained from cultures of human lymphocytes to classify the vicinal interactomes of the viral Env and Vif proteins as they occur during natural infection. Importantly, interacting proteins were recovered without bias, regardless of their potential for positive, negative or neutral impact on viral replication. We identified specific host associations made with trimerized Env during its biosynthesis, at virological synapses, with innate immune effectors (such as HLA-E) and with certain cellular signalling pathways (for example, Notch1). We also defined Vif associations with host proteins involved in the control of nuclear transcription and nucleoside biosynthesis as well as those interacting stably or transiently with the cytoplasmic protein degradation apparatus. Our approach is broadly applicable to elucidating pathogen–host interactomes, providing high-certainty identification of interactors by their direct access during cycling infection. Understanding the pathophysiological consequences of these associations is likely to provide strategic targets for antiviral intervention.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Comparative Immunogenicity of Evolved V1V2-Deleted HIV-1 Envelope Glycoprotein Trimers.

Ilja Bontjer; Mark Melchers; Tommy Tong; Thijs van Montfort; Dirk Eggink; David C. Montefiori; William C. Olson; John P. Moore; James M. Binley; Ben Berkhout; Rogier W. Sanders

Despite almost 30 years of research, no effective vaccine has yet been developed against HIV-1. Probably such a vaccine would need to induce both an effective T cell and antibody response. Any vaccine component focused on inducing humoral immunity requires the HIV-1 envelope (Env) glycoprotein complex as it is the only viral protein exposed on the virion surface. HIV-1 has evolved several mechanisms to evade broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies. One such a mechanism involves variable loop domains, which are highly flexible structures that shield the underlying conserved epitopes. We hypothesized that removal of such loops would increase the exposure and immunogenicity of these conserved regions. Env variable loop deletion however often leads to protein misfolding and aggregation because hydrophobic patches becoming solvent accessible. We have therefore previously used virus evolution to acquire functional Env proteins lacking the V1V2 loop. We then expressed them in soluble (uncleaved) gp140 forms. Three mutants were found to perform optimally in terms of protein expression, stability, trimerization and folding. In this study, we characterized the immune responses to these antigens in rabbits. The V1V2 deletion mutant ΔV1V2.9.VK induced a prominent response directed to epitopes that are not fully available on the other Env proteins tested but that effectively bound and neutralized the ΔV1V2 Env virus. This Env variant also induced more efficient neutralization of the tier 1 virus SF162. The immune refocusing effect was lost after booster immunization with a full-length gp140 protein with intact V1V2 loops. Collectively, this result suggests that deletion of variable domains could alter the specificity of the humoral immune response, but did not result in broad neutralization of neutralization-resistant virus isolates.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Topological analysis of HIV-1 glycoproteins expressed in situ on virus surfaces reveals tighter packing but greater conformational flexibility than for soluble gp120.

Tommy Tong; Keiko Osawa; James E. Robinson; Ema T. Crooks; James M. Binley

ABSTRACT In natural infection, antibodies interact with HIV-1 primarily through nonfunctional forms of envelope glycoproteins (Env), including uncleaved (UNC) gp160 and gp41 stumps. These antigens are important to fully characterize, as they may be decoys that promote nonneutralizing responses and may also be targets for nonneutralizing effector responses. In this study, we compared the antigenic properties of Env expressed in situ on pseudovirion virus-like particle (VLP) surfaces and soluble gp120 using harmonized enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) and a panel of 51 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). Only 32 of 46 soluble gp120-reactive MAbs recognized the primary UNC gp160 antigen of VLPs. Indeed, many epitopes were poorly exposed (C1, V2, C1-C4, C4, C4-V3, CD4 induced [CD4i], and PGT group 3) or obscured (C2, C5, and C1-C5) on VLPs. In further studies, VLP Env exhibited an increased degree of inter-MAb competition, the epicenter of which was the base of the V3 loop, where PGT, 2G12, V3, and CD4 binding site specificities competed. UNC gp160 also underwent more drastic soluble CD4 (sCD4)-induced conformational changes than soluble gp120, exposing CD4i, C1-C4, and V2 epitopes. A greater propensity of UNC gp160 to undergo conformational changes was also suggested by the induction of CD4i MAb binding to VLPs by a V3 MAb as well as by soluble CD4. The same effect was not observed for soluble gp120. Taken together, our data suggest that membrane-expressed UNC gp160 exists in a less “triggered” conformational state than soluble gp120 and that MAb binding to UNC gp160 tends to have greater conformational consequences.

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James M. Binley

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Ema T. Crooks

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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Keiko Osawa

Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies

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John R. Mascola

National Institutes of Health

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Ivelin S. Georgiev

National Institutes of Health

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Nicole A. Doria-Rose

National Institutes of Health

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Peter D. Kwong

National Institutes of Health

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Richard T. Wyatt

Scripps Research Institute

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