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Diversity in the acute CD8 T cell response to vaccinia virus in humans.

TitleDiversity in the acute CD8 T cell response to vaccinia virus in humans.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsJing, L, Chong, TM, McClurkan, CL, Huang, J, Story, BT, Koelle, DM
JournalJ Immunol
Volume175
Issue11
Pagination7550-9
Date Published2005 Dec 1
ISSN0022-1767
KeywordsAdult, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Antigens, Viral, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Clone Cells, DNA, Viral, Epitope Mapping, Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte, Flow Cytometry, Genomic Library, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear, Middle Aged, Molecular Sequence Data, Peptides, Vaccinia virus
Abstract

Orthopoxviruses have complex proteomes. Infection provokes a brisk CD8 response, which is required in some systems for recovery from primary infection. Little is known concerning the Ags and epitopes recognized by CD8 T cells. We examined the fine specificity of cloned and bulk human vaccinia-specific CD8 CTL by expressing polypeptide fragments from a library of vaccinia genomic DNA. This epitope discovery method emphasizes virus-specific biological activity, as the responder cells are all reactive with whole vaccinia virus. Sixteen novel epitopes, restricted by several HLA A and B alleles, were defined to the nomamer peptide level in diverse vaccinia open reading frames. An additional seven epitope were mapped to short regions of vaccinia proteins. Targets of the CD8 response included proteins assigned to structural, enzymatic, transcription factor, and immune evasion functions, and included members of all viral kinetic classes. Most epitopes were conserved in other orthopoxviruses. Responses to at least 18 epitopes were detected within a single blood sample, revealing a surprising degree of diversity. These epitopes will be useful in natural history studies of CD8 responses to vaccinia, a nonpersisting virus with long-term memory, and in the design and evaluation of attenuated and replication-incompetent vaccinia strains being tested for variola and monkeypox prevention and for the delivery of heterologous Ags.

Alternate JournalJ. Immunol.
PubMed ID16301664