A synthetic peptide spontaneously self-assembles to reconstruct a group- specific, conformational determinant of hepatitis B surface antigen

Manivel, V. ; Ramesh, R. ; Panda, S. K. ; Rao, K. V. (1992) A synthetic peptide spontaneously self-assembles to reconstruct a group- specific, conformational determinant of hepatitis B surface antigen The Journal of Immunology, 148 (12). pp. 4006-4011. ISSN 0022-1767

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Official URL: http://www.jimmunol.org/content/148/12/4006.short

Abstract

A cysteine-rich peptide of sequence 124 to 147 of the major protein of hepatitis B surface Ag (HBsAg) was synthesized. On cleavage and subsequent work-up it was found that all of the cysteine sulfhydryl groups had spontaneously formed disulfide bonds to yield a heterogenous mixture of multiple forms with molecular masses ranging from 8 to 35 kDa (peptide OS[124-147]). In a direct ELISA peptide OS[124-147] showed a high degree of cross-reactivity with polyclonal anti-HBsAg antiserum whereas the HBsAg-related antigenicity of its disulfide-reduced analogs was insignificant. Peptide OS[124-147] was also recognized by all 15 of the anti-HBsAg-positive human sera tested. Further studies revealed that peptide OS[124-147] represents the conformational, disulfide- dependent "a" determinant of HBsAg and elicits antibodies that cross- react with a variety of HBsAg subtypes. Anti-peptide antibodies bound to the corresponding native epitope with an apparent affinity higher than that of homologous antisera. Finally, polyclonal anti-OS[124-147] antibodies could also immunoprecipitate purified Dane particles in solution. Together these studies indicate that peptide OS[124-147] represents an excellent candidate component of a peptide-based vaccine for hepatitis B.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Association of Immunologists.
ID Code:41343
Deposited On:28 May 2011 07:52
Last Modified:28 May 2011 07:52

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