Litcius/Paper detail

Bispecific antibody-derived molecules to target persistent HIV infection

Jeffrey L. Nordstrom, Guido Ferrari, David M. Margolis

2022Journal of Virus Eradication14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

HIV infection persists despite durable and potent antiviral therapy. To target persistent HIV infection, one major strategy aims to induce HIV provirus expression using latency reversing agents and then eliminate these reservoir cells via immune responses enhanced by treatment with antibody-derived bispecific molecules. The specificities of anti-HIV-1 envelope monoclonal antibodies have been incorporated into bispecific molecules that can recognize infected cells and recruit cytotoxic immune cells to eliminate them. This concept seeks to engineer a unique and potent effector response based on the opportunity to target conserved viral epitopes on infected cells, and recruit broad populations of immune effector cells that are not limited by major histocompatibility complex restrictions or other programmed specificity constraints. This article provides a review of bispecific DART® molecules and other dual-specificity antibody-based molecules that function by co-engaging CD3-expressing T cells or CD16A-expressing NK cells with HIV-1-infected cells.

Topics & Concepts

EffectorEpitopeImmune systemBiologyMonoclonal antibodyAntibodyCytotoxic T cellProvirusImmunologyVirologyMajor histocompatibility complexAntibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicityCell biologyIn vitroGeneticsGeneGenomeHIV Research and TreatmentImmune Cell Function and InteractionMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research