| Literature DB >> 8393912 |
J R Crowther1, S Farias, W C Carpenter, A R Samuel.
Abstract
A monoclonal antibody (C3) produced against foot-and-mouth disease virus type O1Caseros was found to neutralize quadrivalent monoclonal antibody escape mutant (G67) of foot-and-mouth disease virus type O1Kaufbeuren. This mutant had been characterized at the sequence level as having distinct changes affecting four non-overlapping neutralizable sites. The C3 monoclonal antibody was used to prepare a quintuple escape mutant from the G67 and a single escape mutant from the parental O1Kaufbeuren viruses. Polyclonal post-vaccinated and infected cattle sera as well as polyclonal mouse and guinea-pig sera, which neutralized the quadrivalent mutant, no longer neutralized the quintuple mutant, indicating that a fifth site had been identified and that changing the fifth site eliminated all neutralization. The site was characterized using serological techniques and found to be conformationally dependent, trypsin-sensitive and independent of sites previously characterized by monoclonal antibodies. Amino acid sequencing comparing parental, single C3 and quintuple mutants showed that a single change from a glutamine to a histidine, at amino acid 149 in the structural protein VP1, (1D) characterized the C3 mutation. The fifth site probably represents a conformational epitope which is formed due to the interaction of the VP1 loop region with other surface amino acids.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8393912 DOI: 10.1099/0022-1317-74-8-1547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 3.891