We have previously shown that an Escherichia coli-expressed, denatured spike (S) protein fragment of the severe acute respiratory coronavirus, containing residues 1029 to 1192 which include the heptad repeat 2 (HR2) domain, was able to induce neutralizing polyclonal antibodies (C. The virus-cell membrane fusion event is an essential step in the entry process of all enveloped animal viruses, including important human pathogens such as influenza virus, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (8, 23), and the newly emerged severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) (9). Following the binding to their receptors on the cell surface, virus-encoded membrane fusion proteins mediate the fusion process. In many but not all cases, the viral fusion proteins are proteolytically processed by host proteases into 2 subunits that remain closely associated with each other: a surface subunit with a receptor-binding site and a transmembrane subunit with a fusion peptide consisting of two or more heptad repeat domains. Upon interaction of the fusion protein with a cellular receptor, the buried fusion peptide is exposed and inserted into the membrane of the target cell. A series of conformational changes trigger virus-cell fusion activity (9) and lead to the unloading of the viral genome into cells. Additionally, many viral fusion proteins also induce cell-cell fusion, i.e., the formation of multinucleated syncytia, facilitating the rapid spread of virus infection.TThe spike (S) protein of coronaviruses is responsible for receptor binding and membrane fusion. It shares similarity with class I virus fusion proteins (2, 3). Typically, it is a type I integral membrane protein, which is N-glycosylated and trimerized in the endoplasmic reticulum. The N-terminal S1 protein contains the receptor-binding site (10,18,22,34). The C-terminal S2 protein is a fusion subunit and anchors on the viral envelope through a transmembrane domain. The S2 protein ectodomain contains two 4,3 hydrophobic heptad repeats (HR1 and HR2) and a putative, internal fusion peptide (3, 23). For the SARS-CoV S protein, the HR2 is located adjacent to the transmembrane domain, whereas the HR1 is 140 to 170 residues upstream of the HR2.Crystallographic, biophysical, and biochemical analysis of the fusion core of SARS-CoV S protein (2,12,19,27,30,35) and other class I fusion proteins (8, 25) supports a model of membrane fusion probably adopted by these enveloped viruses. After the attachment of the receptor-binding subunit to the receptor, the HR1 and HR2 domains in the membrane fusion subunit interact with each other and form a six-helix bundle, a complex consisting of a homotrimeric HR1 coiled coil surrounded by three HR2 helices. The spacer domain (or link, or interhelical domain) between HR1 and HR2 forms a loop and reverses the direction of the polypeptide chain so that the HR2 helices pack against the HR1 coiled coil in an antiparallel manner. This conformational change results in a close apposition of the fusion peptide, already exposed and inserted into th...
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a highly contagious and life threatening disease, with a fatality rate of almost 10%. The etiologic agent is a novel coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV), with animal reservoirs found in bats and other wild animals and thus the possibility of reemergence. In this study, we first investigated at 6 years postinfection whether SARS-specific memory T cells persist in SARS-recovered individuals, demonstrating that these subjects still possess polyfunctional SARS-specific memory CD4؉ and CD8 cells. Using T cell receptor gene transfer, we generated SARS-specific redirected T cells from the lymphocytes of normal individuals. These engineered CD8؉ T cells displayed avidity and functionality similar to that of natural SARS-specific memory CD8 ؉ T cells. They were able to degranulate and produce gamma interferon, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and macrophage inflammatory proteins 1␣ and 1 after antigenic stimulation. Since there is no effective treatment against SARS, these transduced T cells specific for an immunodominant SARS epitope may provide a new avenue for treatment during a SARS outbreak.
The hemagglutinin (HA) of influenza A virus plays an essential role in mediating the entry of the virus into host cells. Here, recombinant full-length HA5 protein from a H5N1 isolate (A/ chicken/hatay/2004(H5N1)) was expressed and purified from the baculovirus-insect cell system. As expected, full-length HA5 elicits strong neutralizing antibodies, as evaluated in microneutralization tests using HA5 pseudotyped lentiviral particles. In addition, two fragments of HA5 were expressed in bacteria and the N-terminal fragment, covering the ectodomain before the HA1/HA2 polybasic cleavage site, was found to elicit neutralizing antibodies. But the C-terminal fragment, which covers the remaining portion of the ectodomain, did not. Neutralizing titer of the anti-serum against the N-terminal fragment is only four times lower than the antiserum against the full-length HA5 protein. Using a novel membrane fusion assay, the abilities of these antibodies to block membrane fusion were found to correlate well with the neutralization activities.
Conditional ligands have enabled the high-throughput production of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) libraries that present defined peptides. Immunomonitoring platforms typically concentrate on restriction elements associated with European ancestry, and such tools are scarce for Asian HLA variants. We report 30 novel irradiation-sensitive ligands, specifically targeting South East Asian populations, which provide 93, 63, and 79% coverage for HLA-A, -B, and -C, respectively. Unique ligands for all 16 HLA types were constructed to provide the desired soluble HLA product in sufficient yield. Peptide exchange was accomplished for all variants as demonstrated by an ELISA-based MHC stability assay. HLA tetramers with redirected specificity could detect antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses against human cytomegalovirus, hepatitis B (HBV), dengue virus (DENV), and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infections. The potential of this population-centric HLA library was demonstrated with the characterization of seven novel T-cell epitopes from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, HBV, and DENV. Posthoc analysis revealed that the majority of responses would be more readily identified by our unbiased discovery approach than through the application of state-of-the-art epitope prediction. This flow cytometry-based technology therefore holds considerable promise for monitoring clinically relevant antigen-specific T-cell responses in populations of distinct ethnicity.
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