Missale G, Redeker A, Person J, Fowler P, Guilhot S, Schlicht H J, Ferrari C, Chisari F V
Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037.
J Exp Med. 1993 Mar 1;177(3):751-62. doi: 10.1084/jem.177.3.751.
We have recently developed the technology to identify and characterize the human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I-restricted, CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to hepatitis B virus (HBV)-encoded antigens in patients with acute viral hepatitis. CTL are expanded in vitro by stimulation with HBV-derived synthetic peptides and selected by restimulation with a panel of HLA-matched stable transfectants that express the corresponding HBV protein. We have recently reported the existence of an HLA-A2-restricted, CD8+ CTL response to an epitope located between residues 18 and 27 of the HBV nucleocapsid core antigen (HBcAg). We now report the discovery of a CTL epitope located between HBcAg residues 141 and 151 that completely overlaps a critical domain in the viral nucleocapsid protein that is essential for its nuclear localization and genome packaging functions as well as processing of the precore protein. The CTL response to this epitope is dually restricted by the HLA-A31 and HLA-Aw68 alleles, which, unexpectedly, appear to use a common binding motif based on the results of alanine substitution and competition analysis, and the binding properties of these two alleles predicted from their known primary sequence, and from the three-dimensional structure of HLA-Aw68. We have also demonstrated that the HBV-specific CTL response to this epitope is polyclonal during acute viral hepatitis, since these two restriction elements can present the HBcAg 141-151 epitope to independent CTL clones derived from a single patient; and that the CTL response is multispecific, since HLA-A2-restricted and HLA-Aw68-restricted CTL responses to HBcAg 18-27 and HBcAg 141-151, respectively, have been identified to coexist in another patient. The foregoing argue against the emergence of CTL escape mutants as a significant problem during HBV infection, especially at this locus, where mutations might be incompatible with viral replication. Finally, our data suggest an association between the HBV-specific CTL response and viral clearance, and they have implications for the design of immunotherapeutic strategies to terminate HBV infection in chronically infected patients.
我们最近开发了一项技术,用于识别和表征急性病毒性肝炎患者中针对乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)编码抗原的人类组织相容性白细胞抗原(HLA)I类限制性CD8 + 细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(CTL)反应。通过用HBV衍生的合成肽刺激,CTL在体外得以扩增,并通过用一组表达相应HBV蛋白的HLA匹配稳定转染子进行再刺激来进行筛选。我们最近报道了存在一种针对HBV核衣壳核心抗原(HBcAg)第18至27位氨基酸之间表位的HLA - A2限制性CD8 + CTL反应。我们现在报告发现了一个位于HBcAg第141至151位氨基酸之间的CTL表位,该表位与病毒核衣壳蛋白中的一个关键结构域完全重叠,该结构域对于其核定位、基因组包装功能以及前核心蛋白的加工至关重要。对该表位的CTL反应受到HLA - A31和HLA - Aw68等位基因的双重限制,出乎意料的是,基于丙氨酸替代和竞争分析的结果,以及从它们已知的一级序列和HLA - Aw68的三维结构预测的这两个等位基因的结合特性,它们似乎使用共同的结合基序。我们还证明,在急性病毒性肝炎期间,针对该表位的HBV特异性CTL反应是多克隆的,因为这两个限制性元件可以将HBcAg 141 - 151表位呈递给来自单个患者的独立CTL克隆;并且CTL反应是多特异性的,因为在另一名患者中已鉴定出分别针对HBcAg 18 - 27和HBcAg 141 - 151的HLA - A2限制性和HLA - Aw68限制性CTL反应共存。上述情况表明,CTL逃逸突变体的出现并非HBV感染期间的一个重大问题,尤其是在该位点,突变可能与病毒复制不相容。最后,我们的数据表明HBV特异性CTL反应与病毒清除之间存在关联,并且它们对设计用于终止慢性感染患者中HBV感染的免疫治疗策略具有启示意义。