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Journal of Virology, February 1999, p. 1205-1212, Vol. 73, No. 2
Department of Pathology, Stanford University
School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305
Received 24 July 1998/Accepted 2 November 1998
Individuals infected with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) develop a robust immune response to the surface envelope
glycoprotein gp46 that is partially protective. The relative contribution of antibodies to conformation-dependent epitopes, including those mediating virus neutralization as part of the humoral
immune response, is not well defined. We assess in this report the
relationship between defined linear and conformational epitopes and the
antibodies elicited to these domains. First, five monoclonal antibodies
to linear epitopes within gp46 were evaluated for their ability to
abrogate binding of three human monoclonal antibodies that inhibit
HTLV-1-mediated syncytia formation and recognize conformational
epitopes. Binding of antibodies to conformational epitopes was
unaffected by antibodies to linear epitopes throughout the
carboxy-terminal half and central domain of HTLV-1 gp46. Second, an
enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay was developed and used to measure
serum antibodies to native and denatured gp46 from HTLV-1-infected
individuals. In sera from infected individuals, reactivity to denatured
gp46 had an average of 15% of the reactivity observed to native gp46.
Third, serum antibodies from 24 of 25 of HTLV-1-infected individuals
inhibited binding of a neutralizing human monoclonal antibody, PRH-7A,
to a conformational epitope on gp46 that is common to HTLV-1 and -2. Thus, antibodies to conformational epitopes comprise the majority of
the immune response to HTLV-1 gp46, and the epitopes recognized by
these antibodies do not appear to involve sequences in previously described immunodominant linear epitopes.
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Humoral Immune Response to Human T-Cell Lymphotropic Virus
Type 1 Envelope Glycoprotein gp46 Is Directed Primarily against
Conformational Epitopes
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Stanford Medical
School Blood Center, 800 Welch Rd., Room 260, Palo Alto, CA
94304. Phone: (650) 723-0073. Fax: (650) 498-5809. E-mail:
khadlock{at}leland.stanford.edu.
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