Therapeutic use of an enhanced form of CD4-Ig

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R37 · $884,320 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

eCD4-Ig is a potent and exceptionally broad fusion of the first two domains of CD4 to an antibody Fc domain and a short tyrosine-sulfated coreceptor-mimetic peptide. In rhesus macaques, adeno-associated virus (AAV)-expressed eCD4-Ig mediates consistent and very effective long-term protection against SHIV- AD8 and SIVmac239. eCD4-Ig also has properties that make it especially useful for establishing a functional cure in rhesus macaques and perhaps in humans. These include its potency, breadth, difficulty- of-escape, low immunogenicity when expressed by AAV, consistent expression by AAV, potent intrinsic ADCC activity, and collaboration with serum antibodies to mediate ADCC. These properties allow eCD4- Ig to circumvent two major problems associated with using AAV-expressed antibodies to establish functional cures, namely immune clearance and viral escape. In the forthcoming award period, we will improve the technologies allowing AAV-mediated delivery of eCD4-Ig by optimizing its expression as an AAV transgene, by eliminating residual antibody responses to AAV-delivered eCD4-Ig, and by assessing the role of the eCD4-Ig Fc domain in anti-eCD4-Ig antibody responses and in control an established SIVmac239 infection. These efforts will develop technologies that can be applied to the ongoing efforts by many laboratories to prevent new infections, to provide long- acting alternatives to combined antiretroviral therapies, and to reduce the scale of the viral reservoir.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10747324
Project number
5R37AI091476-16
Recipient
BOSTON CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
Principal Investigator
Michael R. Farzan
Activity code
R37
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$884,320
Award type
5
Project period
2020-12-04 → 2025-11-30