Analysis of a major target of the human immune response to cytomegalovirus using monoclonal antibodies |
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Authors: | D Gold R Ashley H Abbo L Corey |
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Affiliation: | Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle. |
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Abstract: | Two murine monoclonal antibodies (C6D1 and D2B1) were found to react with a set of cytomegalovirus (CMV)-infected cell polypeptides, which comprise a major target of the human immune response to CMV. C6D1 reacted with proteins of 50 kilodaltons (KD) and 40KD molecular weight; D2B1 reacted with these two proteins plus a third of 35KD. Western blot analysis demonstrated that these protein targets also react with serum antibody from patients with acute or latent CMV infection. Immunofluorescence staining of CMV-infected diploid fibroblast cells by C6D1 and D2B1 showed that the protein targets are found in the nucleus throughout the course of viral infection. The proteins were shown to be late proteins dependent on viral DNA synthesis for their expression. Not all wild-type CMV strains tested expressed proteins that react with C6D1 and D2B1. Using an immunofluorescence stain of diploid fibroblasts infected with CMV strains from infected patients, we found that 70 of 76 (92%) wild-type strains reacted with C6D1 and 23 of 24 (96%) with D2B1. One strain was not reactive with either C6D1 or D2B1. Western blot analysis of 11 wild-type strains revealed that two isolates either lack the C6D1 and D2B1 protein targets or have forms of these proteins that migrate at different molecular weights. |
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Keywords: | murine monoclonal antibodies protein targets |
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