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Antibodies to the Major Linear Neutralizing Domains of Cytomegalovirus Glycoprotein B Among Natural Seropositives and CMV Subunit Vaccine Recipients
27
Citations
50
References
2000
Year
VaccinationMucosal VaccinationVaccine DevelopmentAllergyNeurovirologyVaccine TargetNatural SeropositivesImmunologyGb DomainsVirologyCytomegalovirus Glycoprotein BGb ProteinPolyvalent VaccineImmunotherapyMedicineVaccine ResearchGb Vaccine RecipientsVaccine Design
The gB protein (gpUL55) of human cytomegalovirus (CMV) contains C-terminal (AD-1) and N-terminal (AD-2) linear immunodominant neutralizing domains. To measure antibodies to these epitopes, a modified protein (delta-gB) lacking heavily glycosylated intervening regions, the transmembrane domain, and the cytoplasmic domain, was expressed in recombinant baculovirus-infected cells. Eighty-six percent of 600 naturally CMV-seropositive individuals and 93% of 121 gB vaccine recipients had antibodies to delta-gB as detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The antibody level in vaccinees (median optical density [OD] = 1.73) exceeded that in natural seropositives (median OD = 0.94; p < .0001). Eleven percent of 95 natural seropositives and 7% of 120 gB vaccinees lacked A-gB antibodies but had neutralizing activity. Among subjects with delta-gB antibody, there were weak correlations between antibody level and neutralizing titer. These data suggest that antibodies to linear neutralizing gB domains are highly prevalent in naturally-infected individuals and regularly develop in gB vaccinees. However, for some individuals, discontinuous and/or linear epitopes not represented on delta-gB may be more important in the generation of neutralizing responses.
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