%0 Journal Article %A Cleveland, S. Matthew %A Jones, Tim D. %A Dimmock, Nigel J. %T Properties of a neutralizing antibody that recognizes a conformational form of epitope ERDRD in the gp41 C-terminal tail of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 %D 2000 %J Journal of General Virology, %V 81 %N 5 %P 1251-1260 %@ 1465-2099 %R https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-81-5-1251 %I Microbiology Society, %X The possibility that epitopes from the C-terminal tail of the gp41 transmembrane protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) are exposed the surface of the virion has long been contentious. Resolution of this has been hampered by the absence of any neutralizing monoclonal antibodies, but we have recently epitope-purified a neutralizing polyclonal IgG specific for one of the putative gp41 tail epitopes, 746ERDRD750. This was obtained from mice immunized parenterally with a plant virus chimera expressing residues 731–752 from the gp41 tail. The ERDRD epitope is highly conformational and is conserved in 81% of B clade viruses. Here, it is shown that this polyclonal ERDRD-specific IgG is highly potent, with an affinity of 2·2×108 M−1, and a neutralization rate constant (−K neut) of 7·8×104 M−1 s−1 that exceeds that of nearly all other known HIV-1-neutralizing antibodies. ERDRD-specific IgG gave 50% neutralization at 0·1–0·2 μg/ml and 90% neutralization at approximately 3 μg/ml. It also neutralized virus that was already attached to target cells, and this and other data suggest that it neutralized by inhibiting a virion event that precedes the fusion–entry process. Consistent with this conclusion was the finding that neutralizing amounts of ERDRD-specific IgG did not inhibit the attachment of free virus to target cells. ERDRD-specific IgG was also cross-reactive and neutralized all but one of six B clade T cell line-adapted strains tested. %U https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/jgv/10.1099/0022-1317-81-5-1251