Rubella virus (RV)-specific immunoglobulin G antibodies were studied by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques in sera from RV (RA 27/3)-vaccinated individuals, patients experiencing natural RV infection, congenital rubella syndrome patients, and individuals failing to respond to repeated RV immunization. Results obtained by using whole-RV ELISAs (detergent-solubilized M33 strain or intact Gilchrist strain) and hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) and neutralization (NT) assays were compared with results obtained with the same sera by using ELISAs employing a synthetic peptide, BCH-178, representing a putative neutralization domain on the RV E1 protein. Murine RV E1-specific monoclonal antibodies with HAI and NT activities exhibited strong reactivity in ELISAs with BCH-178 peptide. In sera from RA 27/3-vaccinated individuals collected at 0 (prevaccine), 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, and 24 to 52 weeks postvaccine, the development of E1-peptide-reactive antibodies closely paralleled increases in RV-specific antibodies measured by whole-RV ELISAs and HAI and NT assays. Similarly, sequential serum samples obtained from patients during acute and convalescent phases of natural RV infection showed a coordinate increase in RV-specific antibodies as measured by whole-RV and peptide ELISAs. Conversely, congenital rubella syndrome patient sera, although exhibiting high levels of antibody in whole-RV ELISAs, had little or no antibody directed to the neutralization domain peptide. Sera from patients failing to respond to repeated RV immunization contained very low levels of RV-specific antibody in all ELISAs. Our results that the sequence represented by BCH-178 peptide may be a previously unidentified neutralization epitope for human antibodies on the RV E1 protein and may prove useful in determining effective RV immunity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jcm.30.7.1841-1847.1992 | DOI Listing |
J Clin Virol
October 2008
Center for Diarrheal Disease Research, Department of Pediatrics, III Floor, Teaching Block, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Ansari Nagar, New Delhi 110029, India.
Background: Rotavirus (RV) is the commonest cause of severe gastroenteritis in young children worldwide. However the natural immune mechanisms controlling and preventing rotavirus disease in humans are not fully understood.
Objective: To examine cellular immune responses to whole rotavirus (vaccine strain, 116E) and non-structural protein-4 (116E-NSP4) in children during natural rotavirus-infection.
J Clin Microbiol
July 1992
Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Rubella virus (RV)-specific immunoglobulin G antibodies were studied by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques in sera from RV (RA 27/3)-vaccinated individuals, patients experiencing natural RV infection, congenital rubella syndrome patients, and individuals failing to respond to repeated RV immunization. Results obtained by using whole-RV ELISAs (detergent-solubilized M33 strain or intact Gilchrist strain) and hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) and neutralization (NT) assays were compared with results obtained with the same sera by using ELISAs employing a synthetic peptide, BCH-178, representing a putative neutralization domain on the RV E1 protein. Murine RV E1-specific monoclonal antibodies with HAI and NT activities exhibited strong reactivity in ELISAs with BCH-178 peptide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Virol
March 1992
Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Avidity maturation of IgG antibody responses directed against the structural proteins of rubella virus (E1, E2, and C) as well as whole rubella virus (RV) was assessed at sequential time intervals in 7 individuals following serologically confirmed wild rubella infection. Individual structural proteins were purified from tissue culture supernatants by differential centrifugation, followed by preparative SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions. Avidity of IgG anti-rubella responses was measured by using the 8 M urea elution technique and results expressed as an elution ratio [ER(%)].
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