| Literature DB >> 8341285 |
H Deulofeut1, A Iglesias, N Mikael, D H Bing, Z Awdeh, J Yunis, D Marcus-Bagley, M S Kruskall, C A Alper, E J Yunis.
Abstract
Vaccination with native HBsAg results in both a humoral and a cellular immune response in humans. In individuals who responded to vaccination, the HBsAg (S region) specific response, as measured by cell proliferation, diminished significantly after 12 weeks, a time when the antibody response was still vigorous. Reduced and nonreduced HBsAg were equivalent in eliciting lymphocyte proliferation. Anti-MHC class II monoclonal antibodies were used in blocking studies to demonstrate that anti-HLA-DR but not anti-HLA-DQ or anti-HLA-DP inhibited specific lymphocyte proliferation to HBsAg. Both the monomer (reduced) and dimer (nonreduced) forms of an immunodominant midsequence HBsAg peptide (amino acid residues 139-146) produced lymphocyte proliferation roughly comparable to that induced by whole HBsAg in 6 of 7 responders immunized with whole HBsAg and the peptide-induced proliferation was blocked by anti-HLA-DR but not by anti-HLA-DP antibodies. These results suggest that HBsAg p 139-146 is a major immunodominant peptide of HBsAg and is restricted by HLA-DR.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8341285 DOI: 10.1016/0161-5890(93)90019-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Immunol ISSN: 0161-5890 Impact factor: 4.407