Q1 · CROSS-FIELD
ArticleOA
Author: Beninga, Jochen ; Todd, John-Paul ; March, Kylie ; Connors, Mark ; Mascola, John R ; Levit, Mikhail ; Shen, Junqing ; Hait, Sabrina Helmold ; Casazza, Joseph P ; Almasri, Cassandra G ; Hataye, Jason ; McCarthy, Elizabeth ; Koup, Richard A ; Furtmann, Norbert ; Xu, Ling ; DeMouth, Megan E ; Fabozzi, Giulia ; Birkenfeld, Joerg ; Petrovas, Constantinos ; Rao, Ercole ; Yang, Zhi-Yong ; McKee, Krisha ; Lovelace, Sarah E ; Nabel, Gary J ; Talana, Chloe Adrienna ; Zhang, Bailin ; Ambrozak, David ; Hebert, Andrew T ; Doria-Rose, Nicole A ; Beck, Jeremy ; Promsote, Wanwisa ; Wei, Ronnie R ; Pegu, Amarendra
Agents that can simultaneously activate latent HIV, increase immune activation and enhance the killing of latently-infected cells represent promising approaches for HIV cure. Here, we develop and evaluate a trispecific antibody (Ab), N6/αCD3-αCD28, that targets three independent proteins: (1) the HIV envelope via the broadly reactive CD4-binding site Ab, N6; (2) the T cell antigen CD3; and (3) the co-stimulatory molecule CD28. We find that the trispecific significantly increases antigen-specific T-cell activation and cytokine release in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Co-culturing CD4+ with autologous CD8+ T cells from ART-suppressed HIV+ donors with N6/αCD3-αCD28, results in activation of latently-infected cells and their elimination by activated CD8+ T cells. This trispecific antibody mediates CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation in non-human primates and is well tolerated in vivo. This HIV-directed antibody therefore merits further development as a potential intervention for the eradication of latent HIV infection.