Publication | Open Access
Procaryotic expression of phosphorylated tegument protein pp65 of human cytomegalovirus and application of recombinant peptides for immunoblot analyses
23
Citations
40
References
1990
Year
ImmunologyViral PathogenesisAntigen ProcessingViral Structural ProteinImmunotherapyHuman CytomegalovirusProteomicsViral GeneticsMonoclonal AntibodyVirologyHumoral ImmunityCell BiologyRecombinant PeptidesLambda ClonesMolecular VirologyPathogenesisProcaryotic ExpressionAntiviral ResponseMicrobiologyMonoclonal AntibodiesMedicineViral Immunity
The tegument of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) contains a phosphorylated protein of 65 kilodaltons, termed pp65, which was reported to carry significant epitopes for the stimulation of the humoral immune response during natural infection. A monoclonal antibody directed against this protein was used to screen a lambda gt11 cDNA library for recombinant polypeptides. Two DNA fragments from purified lambda clones and one fragment from genomic DNA were used for cloning in a bacterial high-level expression vector. The resulting fusion proteins were tested for their reactivity with a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against pp65 and with polyspecific anti-HCMV rabbit antisera. The binding site for all the monoclonal antibodies tested was found to be contained in one of the recombinant proteins with a viral portion of 26 amino acids. Immunoblot analyses with HCMV-positive human sera revealed that pp65 alone is not a reliable antigen for serodiagnosis but may be very useful in combination with other HCMV proteins.
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