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Researchers Identify Novel Type of Antibody that
Potently Inhibits HIV Infection

A small antibody fragment that is highly effective in neutralizing the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) by preventing the virus from entering cells has been identified
by researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health
(NIH). This finding may provide insight into the development of new treatments against HIV
and other viruses, hopefully in the not too distant future. The study appeared online Oct. 20,
2008, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Treating HIV-infected individuals is difficult because the virus is able to mutate and become
resistant to antiretroviral drugs. "In the United States, it is estimated that more than 50
percent of patients who are receiving antiretroviral therapy for their HIV infection carry strains
of the virus that are resistant to treatment with at least one of the currently available
antiretroviral drugs," said NCI Director John E. Niederhuber, M.D. "The development of new
drugs against HIV is an urgent public health need."

Antibodies are large proteins naturally produced by the immune system to help fight
disease-causing foreign invaders, such as viruses and bacteria. Although the general
structure of all antibodies is very similar, a small region at the tip of the protein is extremely
variable, allowing millions of antibodies, characterized by slightly different tip structures, to
exist and bind to different targets, known as antigens. Previous research has shown that
reducing antibodies to the smallest independently functional fragment, known as a variable
domain, can extend their utility as therapeutic agents. These fragments, called domain
antibodies (dAbs), retain the variable tip structure and, therefore, the antigen-binding
specificity of the parent antibody. Because of their small size, they are able to access targets
that cannot be reached by much larger, whole antibodies.

In an earlier study, the researchers identified a unique antibody, called m0, while screening
a large library of antibodies against the HIV protein, Env (also known as gp120). The library
contained the variable portions of antibodies that can bind to Env antigens. "We found an
antibody fragment that exhibited the ability to neutralize HIV and had properties that allowed
us to construct a novel library containing dAbs directed against HIV," said Dimiter S.
Dimitrov, Ph.D., of NCI's Center for Cancer Research.

Based on m0's framework, the leading author of the study, Weizao Chen, Ph.D., constructed
a very large library of dAbs (25 billion different dAbs), screened it against Env proteins from
two different strains of HIV, and identified a dAb, m36, that bound strongly to different Env
proteins and blocked the infectivity of a broad range of HIV strains. The researchers believe
that m36 represents the first human dAb against HIV reported.

"The antibody fragment that we identified, m36, could have potential in the development of a
therapeutic that inhibits HIV," said Dimitrov. "Further research with this molecule also could
offer insight about how the virus infects cells and how it evades neutralization by the
immune system."

The research team is working to test various combinations of m36 with other inhibitors that
may be effective against HIV. The team is also attempting to construct more potent versions
of m36. Partnership with industry could speed the ability to evaluate m36 as a potential
treatment for HIV. Dimitrov's team is also using this approach to identify dAbs against
cancer and other disease-related antigens.

---

Chen, W, Zhu Z, Feng Y, Dimitrov DS. Human domain antibodies to conserved sterically
restricted regions on gp120 as exceptionally potent cross-reactive HIV-1 neutralizers.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Online October 20, 2008.

For more information on Dr. Dimitrov's research, please go to
http://ccr.cancer.gov/staff/staff.asp?profileid=5749