4.6 Article

A Cell Internalizing Antibody Targeting Capsid Protein (p24) Inhibits the Replication of HIV-1 in T Cells Lines and PBMCs: A Proof of Concept Study

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145986

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FRGS grant from Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE), Government of Malaysia [203/CIPPT/6711206]
  2. MOHE [KPT (B) 890416075223]
  3. Advanced Medical and Dental Institute (AMDI), Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) [USM/IPPT/2000/G-2/xiv]
  4. RU-PRGS grant from USM [1001/CIPPT/846048]

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There remains a need for newer therapeutic approaches to combat HIV/AIDS. Viral capsid protein p24 plays important roles in HIV pathogenesis. Peptides and small molecule inhibitors targeting p24 have shown to inhibit virus replication in treated cell. High specificity and biological stability of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) make them an attractive contender for in vivo treatments. However, mAbs do not enter into cells, thus are restricted to target surface molecules. This also makes targeting intracellular HIV-1 p24 a challenge. A mAb specific to p24 that can internalize into the HIV-infected cells is hypothesized to inhibit the virus replication. We selected a mAb that has previously shown to inhibit p24 polymerization in an in vitro assay and chemically conjugated it with cell penetrating peptides (CPP) to generate cell internalizing anti-p24 mAbs. Out of 8 CPPs tested, kappa FGF-MTS -conjugated mAbs internalized T cells most efficiently. At nontoxic concentration, the kappa FGF-MTS-anti-p24-mAbs reduced the HIV-1 replication up to 73 and 49% in T-lymphocyte and PBMCs respectively. Marked inhibition of HIV-1 replication in relevant cells by kappa FGF-MTS-anti-p24-mAbs represents a viable strategy to target HIV proteins present inside the cells.

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