Publications by authors named "Scott M Ennis"

We have examined whether active immunization with c13 protein, a hybrid protein of the first 81 amino acids of the viral NS1 nonstructural protein and the HA2 subunit of A/PR/8 (H1N1) hemagglutinin, could protect BALB/c mice from challenge with A/PR/8 H1 subtype virus. Mice immunized with the c13 protein had a significant reduction of pulmonary virus titers with A/PR/8 (H1) virus, but failed to limit the replication of A/PC (H3) virus, which reflects the in vitro CTL activity of c13 immune spleen cells. We observed that the epitope recognized by HA2 specific CTL, which are induced by a derivative of c13 protein, is highly conserved among H1 and H2 subtype virus strains.

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Influenza H1 subtype-specific CTL can be induced by secondary stimulation of a hybrid protein of the first 81 amino acids of the viral NS1 non-structural protein and the HA2 subunit of A/Puerto Rico/8/34(H1N1) hemagglutinin. In addition, a derivative of this protein with 65 amino acids deleted from the N-terminal end of HA2 can also generate H1 subtype-specific CTL in bulk cultures. CTL clones established by stimulation with the derivative protein demonstrated cross-reactive lysis of target cells infected with virus strains of the H1 and H2 subtypes.

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We have studied the kinetics and specificity of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response to influenza A/PR/8 (H1N1) virus pulmonary infection in the mouse detected using spleen cells from infected mice which were stimulated in bulk and limiting dilution cultures. A hybrid protein designated D-peptide, which contains the terminal 157 amino acids of the HA2 subunit of A/PR/8 virus, was used to stimulate influenza virus subtype-specific secondary CTL in vitro. Infection induced two specificities of precursor CTL, cross-reactive and subtype-specific.

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