Résumé:
The conformation of HIV-1 envelope (Env) glycoprotein trimers is key in ensuring protection
against waves of neutralizing antibodies generated during infection, while maintaining sufficient exposure of the CD4 binding site (CD4bs) for viral entry. The CD4 binding loop on Env
is an early contact site for CD4 while penetration of a proximal cavity by CD4 triggers Env
conformational changes for entry. The role of residues in the CD4 binding loop in regulating
the conformation of the trimer and trimer association domain (TAD) was investigated using
a novel saturation mutagenesis approach. Single mutations identified, resulted in distinct
trimer conformations affecting CD4bs exposure, the glycan shield and the TAD across
diverse HIV-1 clades. Importantly, mutations that improve access to the CD4bs without
exposing the immunodominant V3 loop were identified. The different trimer conformations
identified will affect the specificity and breadth of nabs elicited in vivo and are important to
consider in design of Env immunogens for vaccines.