Cytolytic T-lymphocyte (CTL) activity specific for respiratory syncytial (RS) virus was investigated after intranasal infection of mice with RS virus, after intraperitoneal infection of mice with a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the F glycoprotein, and after intramuscular vaccination of mice with Formalin-inactivated RS virus or a chimeric glycoprotein, FG, expressed from a recombinant baculovirus. Spleen cell cultures from mice previously infected with live RS virus or the F-protein recombinant vaccinia virus had significant CTL activity after one cycle of in vitro restimulation with RS virus, and lytic activity was derived from a major histocompatibility complex-restricted, Lyt2.2+ (CD8+) subset. CTL activity was not restimulated in spleen cells from mice that received either the Formalin-inactivated RS virus or the purified glycoprotein, FG. The protein target structures for recognition by murine CD8+ CTL were identified by using target cells infected with recombinant vaccinia viruses that individually express seven structural proteins of RS virus. Quantitation of cytolytic activity against cells expressing each target structure suggested that 22K was the major target protein for CD8+ CTL, equivalent to recognition of cells infected with RS virus, followed by intermediate recognition of F or N, slight recognition of P, and no recognition of G, SH, or M. Repeated stimulation of murine CTL with RS virus resulted in outgrowth of CD4+ CTL which, over time, became the exclusive subset in culture. Murine CD4+ CTL were highly cytolytic for RS virus-infected cells, but they did not recognize target cells infected with any of the recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing the seven RS virus structural proteins. Finally, the CTL response in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of adult human volunteers was investigated. The detection of significant levels of RS virus-specific cytolytic activity in these cells was dependent on at least two restimulations with RS virus in vitro, and cytolytic activity was derived primarily from the CD4+ subset.
The lymphocyte proliferative responses to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were evaluated for 10 healthy adult donors and compared with proliferative responses to a chimeric glycoprotein (FG glycoprotein) which consists of the extracellular domains of both the F and G proteins of RSV and which is produced from a recombinant baculovirus. The lymphocytes of all 10 donors responded to RSV, and the proliferative responses to the whole virus were highly correlated with the responses to the FG glycoprotein. These data suggested that one or both of these glycoproteins of RSV were major target structures for stimulation of the human lymphocyte proliferative response among virus-specific memory T cells. The lymphocytes of four donors were evaluated further for their proliferative responses to a nested set of overlapping peptides modeled on the extracellular and cytoplasmic domains of the F protein of RSV. Strikingly, the lymphocytes of all 4 donors responded primarily to a region defined by a single peptide spanning residues 338 to 355, and the lymphocytes of 2 donors responded to an overlapping peptide spanning residues 328 to 342 also, thus defining a region of the F1 subunit within residues 328 to 355 that may circumscribe an immunodominant site for stimulation of human T cells from a variety of individuals. This region of the F protein is highly conserved among A and B subgroup viruses. As revealed by monoclonal antibody blocking studies, the lymphocytes responding to this antigenic site had characteristics consistent with T helper cells. Similar epitope mapping studies were performed with BALB/c mice immunized with the FG protein in which a relatively hydrophobic peptide spanning residues 51 to 65 within the F2 subunit appeared to be the major T cell recognition determinant. The data are discussed with respect to an antigenic map of the F protein and the potential construction of a synthetic vaccine for RSV.
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