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Session 50
Poster Presentations Neutralizing Antibodies Session Day and Time: Wednesday 1:30 - 3:30 pm Room: Hall D |
Background: A better understanding of maturation of humoral
immune response in HIV infection may help in the evaluation of antibody
responses in different subtype infections and development of
subtype-independent serologic assays for detecting recent HIV infection for
incidence estimates.
Methods: Longitudinal specimens (n = 529) from 90
seroconverters with subtype B (n = 18) or subtype E (n = 72) infections were
tested by a variety of quantitative assays to determine the changing parameters
of HIV antibody following seroconversion. Multi-subtype peptide antigens from
gp41-immunodominant region (BED peptide) and V3 (B+E) of gp120 were used. We
used BED-less sensitive EIA as a surrogate for titer, IgG-Capture BED-EIA to
measure proportion of HIV-IgG, and gp41-BED-EIA (±8 M urea) to measure antibody
avidity. V3 (B+E)-specific EIA was used to detect anti-V3 antibodies.
Results: Titer, proportion, and avidity of antibodies to
gp41-BED increased following seroconversion. However, the increase was at a
slower rate in subtype B than in E infections. In most subtype B-infected
individuals, titer and proportion of HIV-IgG increased for over 2 years,
whereas those parameters reached plateau in many subtype E-infected individuals
within 1 year. Antibody avidity to BED reached peak levels in about 4–5 months
after seroconversion but was slower in subtype B than in E infections. Kinetics
of antibodies to V3 loop epitope was also slower in subtype B than in E
infections with significant differences in median slopes.
Conclusions: These data suggest that humoral antibody to HIV may
be elicited at somewhat different rates in subtype B or E infections and may be
related to differences in early viral load. These findings have implications
for development of subtype-independent assays for detecting recent infection
and they shed further light to host-virus interactions.