Quantification of antibody responses against multiple antigens of the two infectious forms of Vaccin

Author:  ["Mike M Pütz","Claire M Midgley","Mansun Law","Geoffrey L Smith"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Smallpox was eradicated without an adequate understanding of how vaccination induced protection. In response to possible bioterrorism with smallpox, the UK government vaccinated ∼300 health care workers with vaccinia virus (VACV) strain Lister. Antibody responses were analyzed using ELISA for multiple surface antigens of the extracellular enveloped virus (EEV) and the intracellular mature virus (IMV), plaque reduction neutralization and a fluorescence-based flow cytometric neutralization assay. Antibody depletion experiments showed that the EEV surface protein B5 is the only target responsible for EEV neutralization in vaccinated humans, whereas multiple IMV surface proteins, including A27 and H3, are targets for IMV-neutralizing antibodies. These data suggest that it would be unwise to exclude the B5 protein from a future smallpox vaccine. Repeated vaccination provided significantly higher B5-specific and thus EEV-neutralizing antibody responses. These data provide a benchmark against which new, safer smallpox vaccines and residual immunity can be compared.

Cite this article

Pütz, M., Midgley, C., Law, M. et al. Quantification of antibody responses against multiple antigens of the two infectious forms of Vaccinia virus provides a benchmark for smallpox vaccination. Nat Med 12, 1310–1315 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1457

View full text

>> Full Text:   Quantification of antibody responses against multiple antigens of the two infectious forms of Vaccin

Hyperoxia causes angiopoietin 2–mediated acute lung injury and necrotic cell death

Identification of a hormonal basis for gallbladder filling