George M Shaw

George M Shaw

University of Pennsylvania

H-index: 135

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

University of Pennsylvania

Position

Professor of Medicine and Microbiology

Citations(all)

80319

Citations(since 2020)

13928

Cited By

72160

hIndex(all)

135

hIndex(since 2020)

59

i10Index(all)

324

i10Index(since 2020)

204

Email

University Profile Page

University of Pennsylvania

Research & Interests List

Virology

Top articles of George M Shaw

Antibodies targeting the fusion peptide on the HIV envelope provide protection to rhesus macaques against mucosal SHIV challenge

The fusion peptide (FP) on the HIV-1 envelope (Env) trimer can be targeted by broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). Here, we evaluated the ability of a human FP-directed bNAb, VRC34.01, along with two vaccine-elicited anti-FP rhesus macaque mAbs, DFPH-a.15 and DF1W-a.01, to protect against simian-HIV (SHIV)BG505 challenge. VRC34.01 neutralized SHIVBG505 with a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 0.58 μg/ml, whereas DF1W-a.01 and DFPH-a.15 were 4- or 30-fold less potent, respectively. VRC34.01 was infused into four rhesus macaques at a dose of 10 mg/kg and four rhesus macaques at a dose of 2.5 mg/kg. The animals were intrarectally challenged 5 days later with SHIVBG505. In comparison with all 12 control animals that became infected, all four animals infused with VRC34.01 (10 mg/kg) and three out of four animals infused with VRC34.01 (2.5 mg/kg) remained uninfected. Because of …

Authors

Amarendra Pegu,Sarah E Lovelace,Megan E DeMouth,Michelle D Cully,Daniel J Morris,Yingying Li,Keyun Wang,Stephen D Schmidt,Misook Choe,Cuiping Liu,Xuejun Chen,Elise Viox,Ariana Rowshan,Justin D Taft,Baoshan Zhang,Kai Xu,Hongying Duan,Li Ou,John-Paul Todd,Rui Kong,Hui Li,George M Shaw,Nicole A Doria-Rose,Peter D Kwong,Richard A Koup,John R Mascola

Journal

Science Translational Medicine

Published Date

2024/1/17

Neutralizing antibodies evolve to exploit vulnerable sites in the HCV envelope glycoprotein E2 and mediate spontaneous clearance of infection

Individuals who clear primary hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections clear subsequent reinfections more than 80% of the time, but the mechanisms are poorly defined. Here, we used HCV variants and plasma from individuals with repeated clearance to characterize longitudinal changes in envelope glycoprotein E2 sequences, function, and neutralizing antibody (NAb) resistance. Clearance of infection was associated with early selection of viruses with NAb resistance substitutions that also reduced E2 binding to CD81, the primary HCV receptor. Later, peri-clearance plasma samples regained neutralizing capacity against these variants. We identified a subset of broadly NAbs (bNAbs) for which these loss-of-fitness substitutions conferred resistance to unmutated bNAb ancestors but increased sensitivity to mature bNAbs. These data demonstrate a mechanism by which neutralizing antibodies contribute to repeated …

Authors

Nicole Frumento,Ariadne Sinnis-Bourozikas,Harry T Paul,Georgia Stavrakis,Muhammad N Zahid,Shuyi Wang,Stuart C Ray,Andrew I Flyak,George M Shaw,Andrea L Cox,Justin R Bailey

Journal

Immunity

Published Date

2024/1/9

Nucleoside-modified mRNA-lipid nanoparticle lineage vaccine for hepatitis C virus

The present invention relates to compositions and methods for inducing an adaptive immune response against Hepatitis C virus (HCV) in a subject. In some embodiments, the present invention provides a composition comprising a nucleoside-modified nucleic acid molecule encoding a HCV antigen, adjuvant, or a combination thereof. For example, in some embodiments, the composition comprises a vaccine comprising a nucleoside-modified nucleic acid molecule encoding a HCV antigen, adjuvant, or a combination thereof.

Published Date

2023/5/30

Hepatitis C virus gene sequences and methods of use therefor

The present disclosure relates to compositions and methods for inducing an adaptive immune response against Hepatitis C virus (HCV) in a subject. In some embodiments, the present disclosure provides a composition comprising a nucleic acid molecule encoding a HCV antigen, an HCV antigen, an adjuvant, or a combination thereof. For example, in some embodiments, the composition comprises a vaccine comprising a nucleic acid molecule encoding a HCV antigen, an HCV antigen, an adjuvant, or a combination thereof.

Published Date

2023/3/7

Assessing the effect of antibody responses on viral rebound dynamics in postnatally SHIV-infected infant Rhesus macaques.

While the benefits of early antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation in perinatally infected infants are well documented, early ART initiation is not always possible in postnatal pediatric HIV infections, which account for the majority of pediatric HIV cases worldwide. The timing of onset of ART initiation is likely to affect the size of the latent viral reservoir established, as well as the development of adaptive immune responses, such as the generation of neutralizing antibody responses against the virus. How these parameters impact the ability of infants to control viremia and the time to viral rebound after ART interruption is unclear. To gain insight into the dynamics, we utilized mathematical models to investigate the effect of time of ART initiation via latent reservoir size and autologous virus neutralizing antibody responses in delaying viral rebound when treatment is interrupted. We used an infant nonhuman primate Simian/Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV) infection model that mimics breast milk HIV transmission in human infants. Infant Rhesus macaques (RMs) were orally challenged with SHIV. C. CH505 375H dCT and either given ART at 4-7 days post-infection (early ART condition), at 2 weeks post-infection (intermediate ART condition), or at 8 weeks post-infection (late ART condition). These infants were then monitored for up to 60 months post-infection with serial viral load and immune measurements. We develop a stochastic mathematical model to investigate the joint effect of latent reservoir size, the autologous neutralizing antibody potency, and CD4+ T cell levels on the time to viral rebound and control of post-rebound viral loads. We find that …

Authors

E Mainou,SJ Berendam,V Obregon-Perko,EA Uffman,CT Phan,GM Shaw,KJ Bar,MR Kumar,EJ Fray,JM Siliciano,RF Siliciano,G Silvestri,SR Permar,GG Fouda,J McCarthy,A Chahroudi,JM Conway,C Chan

Journal

Biorxiv: the Preprint Server for Biology

Published Date

2023/7/22

A germline-targeting chimpanzee SIV envelope glycoprotein elicits a new class of V2-apex directed cross-neutralizing antibodies

HIV-1 and its SIV precursors share a broadly neutralizing antibody (bNAb) epitope in variable loop 2 (V2) at the envelope glycoprotein (Env) trimer apex. Here, we tested the immunogenicity of germ line-targeting versions of a chimpanzee SIV (SIVcpz) Env in human V2-apex bNAb heavy-chain precursor-expressing knock-in mice and as chimeric simian-chimpanzee immunodeficiency viruses (SCIVs) in rhesus macaques (RMs). Trimer immunization of knock-in mice induced V2-directed NAbs, indicating activation of V2-apex bNAb precursor-expressing mouse B cells. SCIV infection of RMs elicited high-titer viremia, potent autologous tier 2 neutralizing antibodies, and rapid sequence escape in the canonical V2-apex epitope. Six of seven animals also developed low-titer heterologous plasma breadth that mapped to the V2-apex. Antibody cloning from two of these animals identified multiple expanded lineages with …

Authors

Frederic Bibollet-Ruche,Ronnie M Russell,Wenge Ding,Weimin Liu,Yingying Li,Kshitij Wagh,Daniel Wrapp,Rumi Habib,Ashwin N Skelly,Ryan S Roark,Scott Sherrill-Mix,Shuyi Wang,Juliette Rando,Emily Lindemuth,Kendra Cruickshank,Younghoon Park,Rachel Baum,John W Carey,Andrew Jesse Connell,Hui Li,Elena E Giorgi,Ge S Song,Shilei Ding,Andrés Finzi,Amanda Newman,Giovanna E Hernandez,Emily Machiele,Derek W Cain,Katayoun Mansouri,Mark G Lewis,David C Montefiori,Kevin J Wiehe,S Munir Alam,I-Ting Teng,Peter D Kwong,Raiees Andrabi,Laurent Verkoczy,Dennis R Burton,Bette T Korber,Kevin O Saunders,Barton F Haynes,Robert J Edwards,George M Shaw,Beatrice H Hahn

Journal

Mbio

Published Date

2023/2/28

Adaptation of a transmitted/founder simian-human immunodeficiency virus for enhanced replication in rhesus macaques

Transmitted/founder (TF) simian-human immunodeficiency viruses (SHIVs) express HIV-1 envelopes modified at position 375 to efficiently infect rhesus macaques while preserving authentic HIV-1 Env biology. SHIV.C.CH505 is an extensively characterized virus encoding the TF HIV-1 Env CH505 mutated at position 375 shown to recapitulate key features of HIV-1 immunobiology, including CCR5-tropism, a tier 2 neutralization profile, reproducible early viral kinetics, and authentic immune responses. SHIV.C.CH505 is used frequently in nonhuman primate studies of HIV, but viral loads after months of infection are variable and typically lower than those in people living with HIV. We hypothesized that additional mutations besides Δ375 might further enhance virus fitness without compromising essential components of CH505 Env biology. From sequence analysis of SHIV.C.CH505-infected macaques across multiple experiments, we identified a signature of envelope mutations associated with higher viremia. We then used short-term in vivo mutational selection and competition to identify a minimally adapted SHIV.C.CH505 with just five amino acid changes that substantially improve virus replication fitness in macaques. Next, we validated the performance of the adapted SHIV in vitro and in vivo and identified the mechanistic contributions of selected mutations. In vitro, the adapted SHIV shows improved virus entry, enhanced replication on primary rhesus cells, and preserved neutralization profiles. In vivo, the minimally adapted virus rapidly outcompetes the parental SHIV with an estimated growth advantage of 0.14 days-1 and persists through …

Authors

Anya Bauer,Emily Lindemuth,Francesco Elia Marino,Ryan Krause,Jaimy Joy,Steffen S Docken,Suvadip Mallick,Kevin McCormick,Clinton Holt,Ivelin Georgiev,Barbara Felber,Brandon F Keele,Ronald Veazey,Miles P Davenport,Hui Li,George M Shaw,Katharine J Bar

Journal

PLoS Pathogens

Published Date

2023/7/3

Germline-targeting chimpanzee SIV Envelopes induce V2-apex broadly neutralizing-like B cell precursors in a rhesus macaque infection model

Eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies-(bnAbs) remains a major goal of HIV-1 vaccine research. Previously, we showed that a soluble chimpanzee SIV Envelope-(Env) trimer, MT145K, bound several human V2-apex bnAb-precursors and stimulated an appropriate response in V2-apex bnAb precursor-expressing knock-in mice. Here, we tested the immunogenicity of three MT145 variants (MT145, MT145K, MT145K.dV5) expressed as chimeric simian-chimpanzee-immunodeficiency-viruses-(SCIVs) in rhesus macaques-(RMs). All three viruses established productive infections with high setpoint vRNA titers. RMs infected with the germline-targeting SCIV_MT145K and SCIV_MT145K.dV5 exhibited larger and more clonally expanded B cell lineages featuring long anionic heavy chain complementary-determining-regions-(HCDR3s) compared with wildtype SCIV_MT145. Moreover, antigen-specific B cell analysis revealed enrichment for long-CDHR3-bearing antibodies in SCIV_MT145K.dV5 infected animals with paratope features resembling prototypic V2-apex bnAbs and their precursors. Although none of the animals developed bnAbs, these results show that germline-targeting SCIVs can activate and preferentially expand B cells expressing V2-apex bnAb-like precursors, the first step in bnAb elicitation.

Authors

Rami Musharrafieh,Yana Safonova,Ge Song,Ryan S Roark,Fang-Hua Lee,Shiyu Zhang,Jonathan Hurtado,Peter Yong,Shuyi Wang,Ronnie M Russell,Wenge Ding,Yingying Li,Juliette Rando,Alexander I Murphy,Emily Lindemuth,Chengyan Zhao,Andrew Jesse Connell,Wen-Hsin Lee,Nitesh Mishra,Gabriel Avillion,Wanting He,Sean Callaghan,Katharina Dueker,Anh L Vo,Xuduo Li,Tazio Capozzola,Collin Joyce,Fangzhu Zhao,Fabio Anzanello,Weimin Liu,Frederic Bibollet-Ruche,Alejandra Ramos,Hui Li,Mark G Lewis,Gabriel Ozorowski,Elise Landais,Brian T Foley,Kshitij Wagh,Devin Sok,Bryan Briney,Andrew B Ward,Beatrice H Hahn,Dennis R Burton,George M Shaw,Raiees Andrabi

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2023

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