Identification of T cell stimulatory epitopes from the 18 kDa protein of Mycobacterium leprae |
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Authors: | Doherty, T. Mark Backstrom, B. Thomas Love, Steven G. Harding, David R. K. Watson, James D. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Auckland School of Medicine Auckland, New Zealand 1 DNAX Research Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology Inc. 901 California Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA 2 Basel Institute for Immunology Grenzacherstrasse 487, Postfach, CH-4005 Basel, Switzerland 3 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Massey University Palmerston North, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | We have used different mouse strains to examine in vivo andin vitro responses to the 18 kDa protein of Mycobacterium leprae,which appears to be strongly immunogenic in both mice and humans.B and T cell stimulatory epitopes recognised by different strainsof mice have been mapped using overlapping peptides that spanthe entire 18 kDa protein. Previous work established that Immunizationof mice with the 18 kDa protein results in specific antibodyproduction to common B cell epitopes and immunization of micewith peptides containing these B cell epitopes resulted in theinduction of specific IgG to only a limited subset of epitopesin each strain. Now we report that T cells purified from miceimmunized with peptides that stimulate antibody production,proliferate in vitro when rechallenged. The proliferating Tcells produce levels of IL-2 and IFN-, that indicate antigen-specificT helper type 1 cells are present in significant numbers. Thus,a comparison of in vivo and in vitro data suggests that T cellsbearing the phenotype associated with potentially protectivecell-mediated responses can be primed in vivo by epitopes onsmall peptides. Since T cells from both strains of mice arecapable of responding to the immunogenic synthetic peptidesin vitro, but give different responses to the same peptidesin vivo, factors other than epltope structure appear to influenceT cell subset activation. This may have important implicationsfor diseases such as leprosy where a polarized T cell responseappears to develop and for the development of synthetic subunitvaccines. |
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Keywords: | antigen presentation leprosy T helper subsets |
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