Quantitative analysis of cell-mediated immune responses induced by candidate HIV vaccines requires robust procedures for collecting and processing human peripheral mononuclear blood cells (PBMCs). We evaluated several parameters in order to optimize a sample handling process that would be suitable for a multicenter clinical trial. Among the findings, systematic increases in the magnitude of IFN-gamma ELISpot responses were observed when the time from blood collection to PBMC freezing was reduced to <12 h. By implementing these improvements within an ongoing clinical trial, the estimated immunologic response rates to an adenovirus- based HIV vaccine increased by more than 20 percentage points to approximately 80% of the vaccine recipients against any of the vaccine antigens and the average levels of T cell response improved more than 3-fold. These studies establish the importance of optimal conditions for PBMC collection and handling to the success of a clinical development program.
Identification of a hepatitis A virus (HAV) receptor is important for understanding HAV tissue tropism and replication sites and in the design of vaccines and antiviral therapy. The attachment of HAV to cultured cell lines was evaluated: Calcium-dependent specific attachment of four HAV strains to permissive cells occurred, whereas binding to nonpermissive cells did not. Investigation of HAV antigenic variant strains (neutralization escape mutants) demonstrated identical attachment properties with neutralization-susceptible strains, suggesting that the immunodominant neutralization antigenic site of HAV is not directly involved in cell attachment. Unlike foot-and-mouth-disease virus, a related picornavirus, RGD peptides (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid) were unable to interfere with HAV attachment. These studies demonstrate that HAV has a calcium-dependent receptor on cultured cell lines and suggest that the HAV binding region does not involve an RGD sequence or the HAV immunodominant neutralization site.
Density is known to be an important factor in population size regulation. Several mechanisms of density limitation have been identified in colonial birds. We studied competition in Common Terns Sterna hirundo to assess whether the factor limiting reproductive output was competition for nest-sites, which is dependent on local nest density, or density-dependent competition for food resources, which is dependent on overall colony size using the same foraging area. We found strong associations of both colony size and nest density with reproductive output in five colonies of Common Terns in three different habitats (one marine, two freshwater). Based on detailed long-term datasets of six separate sub-colonies of the Banter See colony that differed in nest density, we found that reproductive success was not related to nest density but to overall colony size, possibly a result of resource depletion and food competition. We also found carry-over effects of colony size during rearing on post-fledging return rate. These results have important implications for the conservation management plans aimed at recovering declining populations of Common Terns.
A sensitive mumps virus plaque neutralization test has been developed based on the potentiation of virus-antibody complexes by heterologous anti-immunoglobulins (AIG). The enhanced neutralization test was approximately 100 times more sensitive than the conventional neutralization test or the hemagglutination-inhibition test. Using AIG against human immunoglobulin G (IgG) or human IgM permitted determination of the relative titers of the two classes of mumps antibody. The test does not require special equipment or expertise and can be readily introduced in virological laboratories.
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