Journal of Virology, July 2001, p. 6273-6278, Vol. 75, No. 14
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.14.6273-6278.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Division of Virology, Department of Neuropharmacology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037,1 and Institut de Pharmacologie et de Biologie Structurale, CNRS, 31400 Toulouse, France2
Received 24 January 2001/Accepted 8 April 2001
Members of the Arenaviridae family have been
isolated from mammalian hosts in disparate geographic locations,
leading to their grouping as Old World types (i.e., lymphocytic
choriomeningitis virus [LCMV], Lassa fever virus [LFV], Mopeia
virus, and Mobala virus) and New World types (i.e., Junin,
Machupo, Tacaribe, and Sabia viruses) (C. J. Peters,
M. J. Buchmeier, P. E. Rollin, and T. G. Ksiazek, p.
1521-1551, in B. N. Fields, D. M. Knipe, and P. M. Howley [ed.], Fields virology, 3rd ed., 1996;
P. J. Southern, p. 1505-1519, in B. N. Fields, D. M. Knipe, and P. M. Howley [ed.], Fields
virology, 3rd ed., 1996). Several types in both groups
LFV, Junin,
Machupo, and Sabia viruses
cause severe and often lethal human
diseases. By sequence comparison, we noted that eight Old World and New
World arenaviruses share several amino acids with the nucleoprotein
(NP) that consists of amino acids (aa) 118 to 126 (NP 118-126)
(RPQASGVYM) of LCMV that comprise the immunodominant cytotoxic
T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope for
H-2d mice (32). This
Ld-restricted epitope constituted >97% of the total
bulk CTLs produced in the specific antiviral or clonal responses of
H-2d BALB mice. NP 118-126 of the Old
World arenaviruses LFV, Mopeia virus, and LCMV and the New World
arenavirus Sabia virus bound at high affinity to Ld. The
primary H-2d CTL anti-LCMV response as
well as that of a CTL clone responsive to LCMV NP 118-126 recognized
target cells coated with NP 118-126 peptides derived from LCMV, LFV,
and Mopeia virus but not Sabia virus, indicating that a common
functional NP epitope exists among Old World arenaviruses.
Use of site-specific amino acid exchanges in the NP CTL epitope
among these arenaviruses identified amino acids involved in major
histocompatibility complex binding and CTL recognition.
Publication no. 13460-NP from the Division of Virology, Department
of Neuropharmacology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, Calif.
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