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Query: UMLS:C0019163 (
hepatitis B
)
38,309
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Determination of the amino acid sequence of the immunogenic polypeptides of
hepatitis B
surface antigen may not only permit molecular localization of the distinct determinants a, d, and y but may also lead to the synthesis of a hapten useful in prophylactic immunization against
hepatitis B
virus infection. For this purpose, purified monotypic
hepatitis B
surface antigen of adw subtype was resolved into equal amounts of two major polypeptides (22,000 and 28,000 daltons) and up to six other minor polypeptides by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. With the periodate staining reaction, only the 28,000-dalton polypeptide stained as a glycoprotein. Guinea pigs immunized with the 22,000-dalton polypeptide produced potent antisera against determinants a and d, but the 28,000-dalton glycoprotein did not induce a response. Both polypeptides isolated by preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed amino acid composition identical with that of the intact antigen. For both polypeptides, hydrazinolysis gave Ile as the carboxyterminus, and carboxypeptidase A digestion gave the same terminal sequence, Val-Tyr-Ile. Both peptides also yielded an identical sequence of amino acids in nine steps of Edman degradation--Met-Glu-Asn-Ile-
Thr
-Ser(Cys)-Gly-Phe-Leu. Our data suggest that
hepatitis B
surface antigen contains a single major immunogenic 22,000-dalton polypeptide component, part of which is modified by the addition of carbohydrate to give rise to the glycopeptide of apparent molecular weight 28,000.
...
PMID:Partial amino acid sequence of two major component polypeptides of hepatitis B surface antigen. 26 93
A variant of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) having a specific mutation within the S gene has been found to infect vaccinees. To know whether similar variants were involved in Japan, we analyzed two cases of maternal transmission of HBV in infants immunized with
hepatitis B
immune globulin and
hepatitis B
vaccine. DNA clones of HBV S genes were propagated from patients and family members and sequenced. In one family, the DNA clones from the baby patient had a Gly-to-Arg mutation at the 145th codon of the S gene, whereas those from her mother had no such mutations. In the other family, all the DNA clones obtained from the two infected children had the 145th codon intact, but they had a missense mutation at the 126th codon of the S gene, causing an amino acid substitution of Asn for
Thr
or Ile. This same mutation was observed in 12 of 17 clones of DNA obtained from their mother. In comparison with the wild type HBV-derived
hepatitis B
surface antigen, the two types of S gene mutations, either at the 145th or the 126th codon, were associated with a significant decrease in the antigenicity of some determinants on the
hepatitis B
surface antigen, measured by MAb. Amino acid substitution at these sites, therefore, would have induced the escape from conventional vaccines that were S gene products of wild type HBV and also from
hepatitis B
immune globulin, whose main components were probably also antibodies against the S gene products expressed by wild type HBV.
...
PMID:Mutations within the S gene of hepatitis B virus transmitted from mothers to babies immunized with hepatitis B immune globulin and vaccine. 138 17
Amino acid residues 101 to 180 of
hepatitis B
surface antigen (HBsAg) were predicted by sequencing the corresponding part of the S gene of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) DNA in 46 HBsAg-positive sera, which had been subtyped by immunodiffusion with respect to d/y, w/r, w1 to w4 and q. The sequences of the nine different HBV serotypes defined by these specificities were found to be homogeneous proving that they represent consistent variations of HBV at the genomic level. Residue 127 was found to be important as were Pro,
Thr
and Leu for w1/w2, w3 and w4, respectively. Five residues were found to differ between ayw1 and ayw2. These were at positions 134 (Phe instead of Tyr), 143 (
Thr
instead of Ser), 159 (Ala instead of Gly), 161 (Tyr instead of Phe) and 168 (Val instead of Ala). However, all these residues were shared by ayw1 and adw2, implying that Arg122 was also important for w1 expression. All genomes expressing r, apart from one ayr strain, had an Ile126, which might explain the pseudo-allelism of w1 to w4 in relation to r, since this substitution might influence the w epitope. There were two regions where adw4q- and adrq- differed from all the q+ subtypes. These were located at residues 158 and 159, and at residues 177 and 178, where both the q- subtypes had amino acid substitutions in adjacent positions. The mapping of the epitopes defining these antigenic specificities will help to link information on the world-wide distribution of HBsAg subtypes to future molecular epidemiology with regard to HBV.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of hepatitis B virus serotype variations within the four major subtypes. 146 53
Two determinants of
hepatitis B
surface Ag (HBsAg), identified by mAb raised against polypeptide components, were characterized immunochemically. One was expressed on HBsAg irrespective of the four major subtypes, i.e., adw, adr, ayw, and ayr, whereas the other was subtypic but not identical to any of d, y, w, and r determinants. The common determinant was generated by a synthetic pentadecapeptide with a sequence of
Thr
-
Thr
-Ser-
Thr
-Gly-Pro-Cys-Lys-
Thr
-Cys-
Thr
-Ile-Pro-Ala-Gln representing amino acids 115-129 of the S gene product, and detected invariably in 366 HBsAg samples in sera from asymptomatic carriers in Japan. The activity of the S gene product, as well as the peptide (115-129), to bind with the mAb was not affected by alkylation alone, but was completely lost after reductive alkylation. The antigenic activity was lost when the S gene product was severed between Lys122 and Thr123 by trypsin. A microconformation maintained by the -Cys121-Cys124 bond, therefore, would be required for the common determinant. The other mAb identified an epitope of HBsAg that was mimicked by a synthetic tetradecapeptide with a sequence of
Thr
-Cys-
Thr
-Ile-Pro-Ala-Gln-Gly-
Thr
-Ser-Met-Phe-Pro-Ser, representing amino acids 123-136 of the S gene product. Among 16 HBsAg samples with known S gene sequences, 5 with Ile126 possessed this subtypic determinant, but the remaining 11 with Thr126 did not. The 5
hepatitis B
virus genomes encoding the subtypic determinant differed less than 5.6% from each other in the entire nucleotide sequence, but by 8.0% or more from any of the other 11 genomes without the capacity to encode it.
...
PMID:Synthetic oligopeptides bearing a common or subtypic determinant of hepatitis B surface antigen. 169 80
Epitopes defined by monoclonal antibodies (mAb) specific for the Bordetella pertussis outer membrane protein P.69 (pertactin) were mapped using a series of amino- and carboxy-terminal deletion mutants expressed in Escherichia coli. mAb were found to bind predominantly to a region of pertactin spanning a (Pro-Gln-Pro)5 repeat motif and one mAb was found to bind to another region spanning a (Gly-Gly-Xaa-Xaa-Pro)5 repeat motif. To localize further the mAb-binding sites, a panel of synthetic peptides, a series of 94 overlapping hexameric peptides, and a P.69 30-amino acid fusion to a
hepatitis B
core protein (HBcAg-69), were synthesized. This combined approach has identified the binding site for the mAb BBO5: Pro-Gly-Pro-Gln-Pro-Pro; mAb BBO7, E4A8 and E4D7: Ala-Pro-Gln-Pro-Pro-Ala-Gly-Arg; and mAb BPE3:
Thr
-Leu-Trp-Tyr-Ala-Glu-Ser-Asn-Ala-Leu-Ser-Lys-Arg. We have used a non-lethal murine respiratory model of B. pertussis infection to investigate the ability of a peptide containing the epitope of the mAb BBO5 to elicit protective immunity. Immunization of mice with the HBcAg-69 protein prevented growth of B. pertussis in the lungs compared to mice receiving HBcAg alone, and protection correlated with high titers of anti-P.69 antibodies.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of a protective immunodominant B cell epitope of pertactin (P.69) from Bordetella pertussis. 170 65
Expression of the
hepatitis B
virus core antigen (HBcAg) in mouse NIH 3T3 fibroblasts has been shown previously (A. McLachlan et al., J. Virol. 61:683-692, 1987) to result in the nuclear localization of this polypeptide. Since the carboxyl terminus of HBcAg contains four clusters of arginine residues which resemble nuclear localization sequences identified in other nuclear proteins, a series of carboxyl-terminus-truncated HBcAg polypeptides were expressed in mouse fibroblasts to examine the role of these sequences in the cellular localization of HBcAg. By immunofluorescence and cell fractionation analysis, it was demonstrated that regions of the HBcAg polypeptide including the most carboxyl-terminal (cluster 1) and amino-terminal (cluster 4) clusters of arginine residues represent distinct and independent nuclear localization sequences for this polypeptide. Substitution of a
threonine
residue for the second arginine residue in cluster 4 inactivates the nuclear localization signal in this region of the HBcAg polypeptide, demonstrating the importance of this residue to this signal sequence. However, HBcAg fails to accumulate in the nucleus only when both nuclear localization signal sequences are simultaneously deleted or disrupted by mutation. The possible significance of the nuclear localization sequences identified in the HBcAg polypeptide is discussed in the context of the role of the nucleocapsid in the
hepatitis B
virus life cycle.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus core antigen has two nuclear localization sequences in the arginine-rich carboxyl terminus. 198 70
The cloning and expression of the
hepatitis B
middle-protein surface antigen gene in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is described. A generalized expression vector carrying the yeast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase gene promoter was used. Expressed material, in the form of supramolecular particles, was purified and characterized. Severe proteolysis within the pre-S(2) region was observed for material expressed in a wild-type yeast host. This proteolysis was substantially reduced by utilization of a protease-deficient host. Immunoblotting of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels with several antibodies of differing specificity was performed to characterize the various protein species present. All species were analyzed by N-terminal sequencing after electroelution from gels. Carbohydrate staining of gels and glycosidase treatments of the purified antigen material indicated that full-length antigen was present in both glycosylated and unglycosylated forms. Glycosylation appeared to be of both asparagine-linked and
threonine
/serine-linked types. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to convert two arginine residues in the pre-S(2) region of the antigen to glutamine residues. The changes abolished reactivity with one polyclonal and two monoclonal antibodies specific for epitopes within the pre-S(2) region.
...
PMID:Characterization of purified hepatitis B surface antigen containing pre-S(2) epitopes expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 245 90
The
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) C gene directs the synthesis of two major gene products: HBV core antigen (HBcAg[p21c]), which forms the nucleocapsid, and HBV e antigen (HBeAg [p17e]), a secreted antigen that is produced by several processing events during its maturation. These proteins contain an amino acid sequence similar to the active-site residues of aspartic acid and retroviral proteases. On the basis of this sequence similarity, which is highly conserved among mammalian hepadnaviruses, a model has been put forward according to which processing to HBeAg is due to self-cleavage of p21c involving the proteaselike sequence. Using site-directed mutagenesis in conjunction with transient expression of HBV proteins in the human hepatoma cell line HepG2, we tested this hypothesis. Our results with HBV mutants in which one or two of the conserved amino acids have been replaced by others suggest strongly that processing to HBeAg does not depend on the presence of an intact proteaselike sequence in the core protein. Attempts to detect an influence of this sequence on the processing of HBV P gene products into enzymatically active viral polymerase also gave no conclusive evidence for the existence of an HBV protease. Mutations replacing the putatively essential aspartic acid showed little effect on polymerase activity. Additional substitution of the likewise conserved
threonine
residue by alanine, in contrast, almost abolished the activity of the polymerase. We conclude that an HBV protease, if it exists, is functionally different from aspartic acid and retroviral proteases.
...
PMID:Proteaselike sequence in hepatitis B virus core antigen is not required for e antigen generation and may not be part of an aspartic acid-type protease. 265 1
The molecular basis of the d or y immunological subtype of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg) has been investigated by mutation of specific amino acid residues. When combined with substitution of serine 113 by
threonine
, replacement of arginine 122 by lysine or of tyrosine 134 by phenylalanine, or both of these changes, altered the antigenic subtype of HBsAg from y+d- to y+d+. These same mutations had a more dramatic effect on the subtype of antibodies induced by the antigens, a combination of all three mutations completely changing the subtype from y to d. Our study thus identifies residues in HBsAg that not only affect the subtype but discriminate between changes in antigenic and immunogenic behaviour. It also shows how the y and d subtypes may be manifest by the same molecule.
...
PMID:Mutations that change the immunological subtype of hepatitis B virus surface antigen and distinguish between antigenic and immunogenic determination. 269 11
Sequential poly(Arg-
Thr
-Lys-Pro) consisting mainly of the repeat of tuftsin
Thr
-Lys-Pro-Arg was synthesized by condensing the p-nitrophenyl ester of Arg(HCl)-
Thr
-Lys-(2-Cl-Z)-Pro in the presence of HOBt. Two haptenic sequences of the Pre-S region of
hepatitis B
virus antigen (10-26 and 39-55) were prepared by solid phase and coupled to polytuftsin via glutaraldehyde. The peptides, either free or coupled to polytuftsin, were administrated to mice and the antisera were assayed by ELISA. Coupling the peptides to the polypeptide significantly improved the anti-peptide antibody titer in Freund complete adjuvant or in NaCl 0.9%. Cross-reaction between antibodies induced by the peptides and the native protein was also improved. Polytuftsin alone is very poorly immunogenic.
...
PMID:Synthesis of a new carrier for immunization: polytuftsin. Two examples of its use with peptides selected in the hepatitis B surface antigen. 366 78
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