Immunological properties of hepatitis B core antigen fusion proteins.
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 87 (7) , 2545-2549
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.87.7.2545
Abstract
The immunogenicity of a 19 amino acid peptide from foot-and-mouth disease virus has previously been shown to approach that of the inactivated virus from which it was derived after multimeric particulate presentation as an N-terminal fusion with hepatitis B core antigen. In this report we demonstrate that rhinovirus peptide-hepatitis B core antigen fusion protein are 10-fold more immunogenic than peptide coupled to keyhole limpet hemocyanin and 100-fold more immunogenic than uncoupled peptide with an added helper T-cell epitope. The fusion proteins can be readily administered without adjuvant or with adjuvants acceptable for human and veterinary application and can elicit a response after nasal or oral dosing. The fusion proteins can also act as T-cell-independent antigens. These properties provide further support for their suitability as presentation systems for "foreign" epitopes in the development of vaccines.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microparticles as potentially orally active immunological adjuvantsVaccine, 1989
- Improved immunogenicity of a peptide epitope after fusion to hepatitis B core proteinNature, 1987
- A Synthetic Peptide Which Elicits Neutralizing Antibody against Human Rhinovirus Type 2Journal of General Virology, 1987
- The Nucleocapsid of Hepatitis B Virus Is Both a T-Cell-Independent and a T-Cell-Dependent AntigenScience, 1986
- A Poliovirus Neutralization Epitope Expressed on Hybrid Hepatitis B Surface Antigen ParticlesScience, 1986
- Unusually high-level expression of a foreign gene (hepatitis B virus core antigen) in Saccharomyces cerevisiaeGene, 1986
- Hepatitis B virus genes and their expression in E. coliNature, 1979
- The Detection of Viruses by Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA)Journal of General Virology, 1976
- ANTIBODY TO HEPATITIS-B-VIRUS CORE IN MANThe Lancet, 1973
- NEW ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY SYSTEM IN AUSTRALIA-ANTIGEN-POSITIVE HEPATITISThe Lancet, 1971