1. Small molecule mimetics of an HIV-1 gp41 fusion intermediate as vaccine leads.
- Author
-
Caulfield MJ, Dudkin VY, Ottinger EA, Getty KL, Zuck PD, Kaufhold RM, Hepler RW, McGaughey GB, Citron M, Hrin RC, Wang YJ, Miller MD, and Joyce JG
- Subjects
- AIDS Vaccines pharmacology, Animals, Antibodies, Neutralizing blood, Antibodies, Viral blood, Female, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections prevention & control, Haptens immunology, Haptens pharmacology, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Peptidomimetics pharmacology, AIDS Vaccines immunology, Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antibodies, Viral immunology, HIV Envelope Protein gp41 immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Peptidomimetics immunology
- Abstract
We describe here a novel platform technology for the discovery of small molecule mimetics of conformational epitopes on protein antigens. As a model system, we selected mimetics of a conserved hydrophobic pocket within the N-heptad repeat region of the HIV-1 envelope protein, gp41. The human monoclonal antibody, D5, binds to this target and exhibits broadly neutralizing activity against HIV-1. We exploited the antigen-binding property of D5 to select complementary small molecules using a high throughput screen of a diverse chemical collection. The resulting small molecule leads were rendered immunogenic by linking them to a carrier protein and were shown to elicit N-heptad repeat-binding antibodies in a fraction of immunized mice. Plasma from HIV-1-infected subjects shown previously to contain broadly neutralizing antibodies was found to contain antibodies capable of binding to haptens represented in the benzylpiperidine leads identified as a result of the high throughput screen, further validating these molecules as vaccine leads. Our results suggest a new paradigm for vaccine discovery using a medicinal chemistry approach to identify lead molecules that, when optimized, could become vaccine candidates for infectious diseases that have been refractory to conventional vaccine development.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF