- Schoofs, Till;
- Barnes, Christopher O;
- Suh-Toma, Nina;
- Golijanin, Jovana;
- Schommers, Philipp;
- Gruell, Henning;
- West, Anthony P;
- Bach, Franziska;
- Lee, Yu Erica;
- Nogueira, Lilian;
- Georgiev, Ivelin S;
- Bailer, Robert T;
- Czartoski, Julie;
- Mascola, John R;
- Seaman, Michael S;
- McElrath, M Juliana;
- Doria-Rose, Nicole A;
- Klein, Florian;
- Nussenzweig, Michel C;
- Bjorkman, Pamela J
Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) against HIV-1 envelope (Env) inform vaccine design and are potential therapeutic agents. We identified SF12 and related bNAbs with up to 62% neutralization breadth from an HIV-infected donor. SF12 recognized a glycan-dominated epitope on Env's silent face and was potent against clade AE viruses, which are poorly covered by V3-glycan bNAbs. A 3.3Å cryo-EM structure of a SF12-Env trimer complex showed additional contacts to Env protein residues by SF12 compared with VRC-PG05, the only other known donor-derived silentface antibody, explaining SF12's increased neutralization breadth, potency, and resistance to Env mutation routes. Asymmetric binding of SF12 was associated with distinct N-glycan conformations across Env protomers, demonstrating intra-Env glycan heterogeneity. Administrating SF12 to HIV-1-infected humanized mice suppressed viremia and selected for viruses lacking the N448gp120 glycan. Effective bNAbs can therefore be raised against HIV-1 Env's silent face, suggesting their potential for HIV-1 prevention, therapy, and vaccine development.