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Query: UMLS:C0019163 (
hepatitis B
)
38,309
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Knowledge of the immune effector mechanisms responsible for clearance of
hepatitis B
virus (HBV)-infected cells has been severely limited by the absence of reproducible systems to selectively expand and to characterize HBV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in the peripheral blood of patients with viral hepatitis. By using a strategy involving sequential stimulation with HBV nucleocapsid synthetic peptides followed by autologous, or HLA class I-matched, HBV nucleocapsid transfectants, we now report the existence of CTLs able to lyse target cells that express endogenously synthesized HBV nucleocapsid antigen in the peripheral blood of patients with acute viral hepatitis B. The CTL response is
HLA-A2
restricted, mediated by CD8-positive T cells, and specific for a single epitope, located between amino acid residues 11 and 27 of HBV core protein; these residues are shared with the secretable precore-derived
hepatitis B
e antigen. Equivalent lysis of target cells that express each of these proteins suggests that their intracellular trafficking pathways may intersect. The current report provides definitive evidence that HLA class I-restricted, CD8-positive CTLs that recognize endogenously synthesized HBV nucleocapsid antigen are induced during acute HBV infection in humans and establishes a strategy that should permit a detailed analysis of the role played by HBV-specific CTLs in the immunopathogenesis of viral hepatitis.
...
PMID:HLA class I-restricted human cytotoxic T cells recognize endogenously synthesized hepatitis B virus nucleocapsid antigen. 166 Jan 37
The absence of readily manipulable experimental systems to study the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response against
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) antigens has thus far precluded a definitive demonstration of the role played by this response in the pathogenesis of liver cell injury and viral clearance during HBV infection. To circumvent the problem that HBV infection of human cells in vitro for production of stimulator/target systems for CTL analysis is not feasible, a panel of 22 overlapping synthetic peptides covering the entire amino acid sequence of the HBV core (HBcAg) and e (HBeAg) antigens were used to induce and to analyze the HBV nucleocapsid-specific CTL response in nine patients with acute hepatitis B, six patients with chronic active hepatitis B, and eight normal controls. By using this approach, we have identified an
HLA-A2
-restricted CTL epitope, located within the NH2-terminal region of the HBV core molecule, which is shared with the e antigen and is readily recognized by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with self-limited acute hepatitis B but less efficiently in chronic HBV infection. Our study provides the first direct evidence of HLA class I-restricted T cell cytotoxicity against HBV in humans. Furthermore, the different response in HBV-infected subjects who successfully clear the virus (acute patients) in comparison with patients who do not succeed (chronic patients) suggests a pathogenetic role for this CTL activity in the clearance of HBV infection.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize an HLA-A2-restricted epitope within the hepatitis B virus nucleocapsid antigen. 172 Aug 13
Methylated DNA-binding protein (MDBP), a ubiquitous mammalian protein, recognizes a variety of related DNA sequences. Some of these sequences require methylation of their CpG dinucleotides for binding and others do not. We report that MDBP binds, in a DNA methylation-independent fashion, to two sites in the mouse polyomavirus enhancer, one in the enhancer of the human
hepatitis B
virus, and to one in the long terminal repeat of equine infectious anemia proviral DNA. We have also found a number of MDBP sites in human and rodent DNAs which bind much better to MDBP when they are methylated at CpG dinucleotides within the recognition site. These include sites at the beginning of the human genes for hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase,
HLA-A2
, -A3, and -A25 antigens, and alpha-galactosidase A. In the case of methylation-responsive MDBP sites, changes in their methylation status during differentiation or DNA replication could help drive development by modulating transcription.
...
PMID:Binding sites in mammalian genes and viral gene regulatory regions recognized by methylated DNA-binding protein. 217 24
Naturally processed self-peptides bound to human histocompatibility leukocyte antigens (HLA) class I molecules of human hepatocellular carcinoma tissues (
HLA-A2
.1, -B44, -B13) in vivo were isolated for sequence analysis. Acid-eluted peptides were subjected to reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic separation and single-fraction sequencing was performed by Edman degradation. The peptides were found to be octamers or nonamers and they were derived from the processing of intracellular proteins. Three independent sequences were obtained from
HLA-A2
.1 molecules. One of the peptides showed sequence homology to the
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) pre-S protein, one to aldehyde dehydrogenase, and the other to no known protein. Two independent sequences were obtained from HLA-B44, B13 molecules: one showed sequence homology to the human c-abl protein, the other showed no homology to any known protein. A synthetic biotinylated peptide based on the HBV pre-S peptide sequence was confirmed to bind to
HLA-A2
.1 gene-transfected L cells. These data suggested that peptides potentially recognized by cytotoxic T cells can bind to HLA class I molecules on tumor cells in vivo.
...
PMID:Analysis of naturally processed human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen class I-bound peptides from hepatocellular carcinoma tissues in vivo. 749 16
We prepared and crystallized five complexes of the human histocompatibility molecule
HLA-A2
with peptides derived from human immunodeficiency virus type 1, human T lymphotropic virus type 1, influenza A virus and
hepatitis B
virus proteins. Each
HLA-A2
complex was refolded in vitro from insoluble proteins produced in bacteria; to crystallize, two of the complexes required seeding with microcrystals of another complex. Maintained at -160 degrees C, single co-crystals of each of the five peptide-
HLA-A2
complexes yielded complete X-ray diffraction data sets to a resolution of approximately 2.5 A. After a sufficient number of diffraction peaks were acquired during data collection, the direct analysis of integrated intensities established the point group of the co-crystal, thus allowing an efficient data collection strategy to be designed. The subsequent examination of systematic absences revealed that the five peptide-
HLA-A2
co-crystals formed in space groups P1, P2(1), or P2(1)2(1)2(1). Molecular replacement structure solutions yielded unambiguous protein electron density maps, thus confirming the space group determinations. The system of obtaining
HLA-A2
co-crystal structures described here is applicable to other crystallographic problems where structures of several related molecules from uncharacterized single crystals are required.
...
PMID:Five viral peptide-HLA-A2 co-crystals. Simultaneous space group determination and X-ray data collection. 751 39
Mutations that abrogate recognition of a viral epitope by class I-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) can lead to viral escape if the CTL response against that epitope is crucial for viral clearance. The likelihood of this type of event is low when the CTL response is simultaneously directed against multiple viral epitopes, as has been recently reported for patients with acute self-limited
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) infection. The CTL response to HBV is usually quite weak, however, during chronic HBV infection, and it is generally acknowledged that this is a major determinant of viral persistence in this disease. If such individuals were to produce a mono- or oligospecific CTL response, however, negative selection of the corresponding mutant viruses might occur. We have recently studied two
HLA-A2
-positive patients with chronic hepatitis B who, atypically, developed a strong
HLA-A2
-restricted CTL response against an epitope (FLPSDFFPSV) that contains an
HLA-A2
-binding motif located between residues 18-27 of the viral nucleocapsid protein,
hepatitis B
core antigen (HBcAg). These patients failed, however, to respond to any of other
HLA-A2
-restricted HBV-derived peptides that are generally immunogenic in acutely infected patients who successfully clear the virus. Interestingly, DNA sequence analysis of HBV isolates from these two patients demonstrated alternative residues at position 27 (V --> A and V --> I) and position 21 (S --> N, S --> A, and S --> V) that reduced the HLA and T cell receptor-binding capacities of the variant sequences, respectively. Synthetic peptides containing these alternative sequences were poorly immunogenic compared to the prototype HBc18-27 sequence, and they could not be recognized by CTL clones specific for the prototype peptide. While we do not know if the two patients were originally infected by these variant viruses or if the variants emerged subsequent to infection because of immune selection, the results are most consistent with the latter hypothesis. If this is correct, the data suggest that negative selection of mutant viral genomes might contribute to viral persistence in a subset of patients with chronic HBV infection who express a narrow repertoire of anti-HBV CTL responses.
...
PMID:Cytotoxic T lymphocyte response to a wild type hepatitis B virus epitope in patients chronically infected by variant viruses carrying substitutions within the epitope. 752 Apr 76
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) are thought to contribute to viral clearance and liver cell injury during
hepatitis B
virus (HBV) infection. Using a strategy involving the in vitro stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) with HBV-derived synthetic peptides containing
HLA-A2
.1, -A31, and -Aw68 binding motifs, we have previously described CTL responses to several epitopes within the HBV nucleocapsid and envelope antigens in patients with acute hepatitis. In this study we define six
HLA-A2
-restricted CTL epitopes located in the highly conserved reverse transcriptase and RNase H domains of the viral polymerase protein, and we show that the CTL response to polymerase is polyclonal, multispecific, and mediated by CD8+ T cells in patients with acute viral hepatitis, but that it is not detectable in patients with chronic HBV infection or uninfected healthy blood donors. Importantly, the peptide-activated CTL recognize target cells that express endogenously synthesized polymerase protein, suggesting that these peptides represent naturally processed viral epitopes. DNA sequence analysis of the viruses in patients who did not respond to peptide stimulation indicated that CTL nonresponsiveness was not due to infection by viral variants that differed in sequences from the synthetic peptides. CTL specific for one of the epitopes were unable to recognize several naturally occurring viral variants, except at high peptide concentration, underlining the HBV subtype specificity of this response. Furthermore, CTL responses against polymerase, core, and envelope epitopes were detectable for more than a year after complete clinical recovery and seroconversion, reflecting either the persistence of trace amounts of virus or the presence of long lived memory CTL in the absence of viral antigen. Finally, we demonstrated that wild type viral DNA and RNA can persist indefinitely, in trace quantities, in the serum and PBMC after complete clinical and serological recovery, despite a concomitant, vigorous, and sustained polyclonal CTL response. Since viral persistence is not due to escape from CTL recognition under these conditions, the data suggest that HBV may retreat into immunologically privileged sites from which it can seed the circulation and reach CTL-inaccessible tissues, thereby maintaining the CTL response in apparently cured individuals and, perhaps, prolonging the liver disease in patients with chronic hepatitis.
...
PMID:The cytotoxic T lymphocyte response to multiple hepatitis B virus polymerase epitopes during and after acute viral hepatitis. 753 75
It has been suggested that immune selection pressure exerted by the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response could be responsible for viral persistence during chronic hepatitis B virus infection. To address this question, in the current study we compared the DNA and amino acid sequences of, and the CTL responses to, multiple
HLA-A2
-restricted CTL epitopes in the
hepatitis B
virus in several
HLA-A2
-positive patients with acute and chronic hepatitis. Our results indicate that the CTL response to these epitopes is barely detectable in the majority of patients with chronic hepatitis. Further, we show that the weak CTL response is not secondary in infection by mutant viruses lacking these epitopes, and we show that the CTL response did not select for escape mutants in any of these patients. We conclude that an ineffective
hepatitis B
virus specific CTL response is the primary determinant of viral persistence in chronic hepatitis and that immune selection of viral variants is not a common event in the majority of patients.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B virus (HBV) sequence variation of cytotoxic T lymphocyte epitopes is not common in patients with chronic HBV infection. 754 9
Recombinant GPI-anchored
HLA-A2
.1 (
HLA-A2
.1-GPI/beta 2m) was used as a protein transfer vehicle to deliver a
hepatitis B
virus antigenic peptide to the surfaces of cytotoxic T cell targets. Empty
HLA-A2
.1-GPI/beta 2m was first produced in D. melanogaster cotransfectants and immunoaffinity purified. Cell coating with
HLA-A2
.1-GPI/beta 2m was shown to occur rapidly, and to be protein concentration dependent. Protein-transferred
HLA-A2
.1-GPI/beta 2m effectively presented a
hepatitis B
virus peptide to peptide-specific
HLA-A2
.1-restricted T cell clones in cytotoxicity assays. Protein transfer of functional GPI-modified class I MHC-antigenic peptide complexes represents a novel strategy for delivering functional antigenic complexes to cell surfaces that bypasses limitations of gene transfer and permits control of antigenic peptide densities at cell surfaces.
...
PMID:Protein transfer of preformed MHC-peptide complexes sensitizes target cells to T cell cytolysis. 760 Feb 89
To study the immunoreactivity genes in a heterogeneous human population needs a large number of individuals. Associations between HLA antigens and immunoresponse to viral or bacterial antigens have been studied with controversial results. As a homogeneous population, the MHC class I, II and III allele distribution was studied in 153 end-stage renal disease patients (ESRD, average duration of renal replacement: 8.2 + 5.1 years) immunized with a recombinant
hepatitis B
vaccine in accordance to the standard vaccination schedule. Thirty-four patients with an antibody titre of less than 10 U/l following the last booster injection were considered as non-responders while 119 patients with antibody titre equal to or more than 10 U/l were considered as responders. The responder group was divided into two subgroups: low responders (antibody titre: < or = 1000 U/l) and high responders (antibody titre: > 1000 U/1). Marked differences were observed between responders and non-responders in the occurrence of carriers of different MHC class I, II and III alleles. Homozygotes for HLA-A1, HLA-B8, HLA-DR3 and HLA-DQ2 were found almost exclusively in the non-responder group and significantly more heterozygotes for these alleles were found in the non-responder group compared to the responders. Similar albeit less marked differences were found in the frequency of some MHC class III alleles (C4A*6, C4A*QO, Bf*F, Bf*S0.7). Within the responder group, carriers of
HLA-A2
, HLA-B7 and HLA-DR4 were found to be clustered in the low responder sub-group whereas carriers of HLA-A1, HLA-B27, HLA-Cw2, C4A*6 and Bf*F were observed more frequently in the group of high responders. Similar differences were found with extended haplotypes as well. For example, the extended haplotypes HLA-A1, B8, BfS, C4AQO, C4B1, DR3, DQ2 and HLA-A1, B8, BfF, C4A6, C4B2, DR3, DQ2 were present in nine of 34 cases of non-responders but only in one of 119 case of responders (P < 0.000001). These observations indicate that the presence or absence of certain MHC alleles even in heterozygous form determine the responsiveness to
hepatitis B
vaccination in end-stage renal disease patients, and among responders, the intensity of antibody response is also markedly influence by immunogenetic factors.
...
PMID:Relationship between the reactivity to hepatitis B virus vaccination and the frequency of MHC class I, II and III alleles in haemodialysis patients. 763 Nov 46
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