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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 144, Issue 9 3529-3534, Copyright © 1990 by American Association of Immunologists
ARTICLES |
KJ Kim, S McKinness and CR Manclark
Laboratory of Pertussis, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, Bethesda, MD 20892.
To understand the immunologic characteristics of pertussis toxin molecule and to explore the possibility of developing a synthetic vaccine, T cell epitopes on the enzymatic S1 subunit of pertussis toxin were studied by measuring the proliferative response of immune murine lymph node cells and T cell lines to Ag and to synthetic peptides. The maximum in vitro T cell proliferative response was obtained by stimulating immune lymphoid cells with 20 nM of the enzymatic S1 subunit. When the T cell proliferative response of murine lymphoid cells with different MHC backgrounds was tested, only mice bearing the H-2d haplotype were high responder to the S1 subunit. To determine T cell epitopes on the S1 subunit, the proliferative response of BALB/c immune lymphoid cells to several synthetic S1 peptides was measured. Only the peptide containing amino acid residues, 65-79, was recognized by BALB/c lymphoid cells and was confirmed to contain a T cell epitope by generating S1 specific BALB/c T cell line. By using this T cell line, the response of BALB/c mice to the S1 subunit as well as to peptide 65-79 was shown to be restricted to the I-Ad sublocus of class II Ag. Finally, we showed that lymph node cells of mice immunized with peptide 65-79 respond to the native S1 subunit.
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