Publication | Closed Access
Immunoaffinity Purification of a 72K Early Antigen of Human Cytomegalovirus: Analysis of Humoral and Cell-mediated Immunity to the Purified Polypeptide
28
Citations
28
References
1987
Year
VaccinationPersistent Hcmv InfectionMolecular VirologyAllergyMedicineViral PathogenesisImmunologyAntiviral ResponseVirologyAntigen ProcessingAutoimmunityChronic Viral InfectionHuman CytomegalovirusImmunotherapyPurified PolypeptideViral ImmunityMonoclonal AntibodyEarly Antigen
An early antigen of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) was purified from infected cells as a 72K polypeptide by immunoaffinity chromatography using a monoclonal antibody. It was located in both nucleus and cytoplasm, and was non-glycosylated and undetectable on the surface of infected cells. Known seropositive subjects had antibody against the purified protein and it elicited proliferative T cell responses in 10 of 16 subjects. Five of 14 T cell lines established in response to the purified protein were predominantly CD8+ and of these two showed major histocompatibility complex-restricted cytotoxicity against HCMV-infected cells. This provides further evidence that antigens expressed at early times may be targets for the immune response during persistent HCMV infection.
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