Immunogenic and Functional Organization of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Glycoprotein E2 on Infectious HCV Virions
Open Access
- 15 January 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 81 (2) , 1043-1047
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01710-06
Abstract
Development of full-length hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNAs replicating efficiently and producing infectious cell-cultured virions, HCVcc, in hepatoma cells provides an opportunity to characterize immunogenic domains on viral envelope proteins involved in entry into target cells. A panel of immunoglobulin G1 human monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) to three immunogenic conformational domains (designated A, B, and C) on HCV E2 glycoprotein showed that epitopes within two domains, B and C, mediated HCVcc neutralization, whereas HMAbs to domain A were all nonneutralizing. For the neutralizing antibodies to domain B (with some to conserved epitopes among different HCV genotypes), the inhibitory antibody concentration reducing HCVcc infection by 90%, IC90, ranged from 0.1 to 4 μg/ml. For some neutralizing HMAbs, HCVcc neutralization displayed a linear correlation with an antibody concentration between the IC50 and the IC90 while others showed a nonlinear correlation. The differences between IC50/IC90 ratios and earlier findings that neutralizing HMAbs block E2 interaction with CD81 suggest that these antibodies block different facets of virus-receptor interaction. Collectively, these findings support an immunogenic model of HCV E2 having three immunogenic domains with distinct structures and functions and provide added support for the idea that CD81 is required for virus entry.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- How to build a biofilm: a fungal perspectiveCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2006
- Hepatitis C virus molecular clones: from cDNA to infectious virus particles in cell cultureCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2006
- Construction and characterization of infectious intragenotypic and intergenotypic hepatitis C virus chimerasProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Host-microbe interaction: bacteriaCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2006
- Robust Production of Infectious Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) from Stably HCV cDNA-Transfected Human Hepatoma CellsJournal of Virology, 2005
- Analysis of a Highly Flexible Conformational Immunogenic Domain A in Hepatitis C Virus E2Journal of Virology, 2005
- Production of infectious hepatitis C virus in tissue culture from a cloned viral genomeNature Medicine, 2005
- Hepatitis C Virus E2 Has Three Immunogenic Domains Containing Conformational Epitopes with Distinct Properties and Biological FunctionsJournal of Virology, 2004
- Characterization of Functional Hepatitis C Virus Envelope GlycoproteinsJournal of Virology, 2004
- The Hepatitis C Virus Non-structural NS5A Protein Inhibits Activating Protein–1 Function by Perturbing Ras-ERK Pathway SignalingJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003