학술논문

A Synthetic Peptide Vaccine Involving the Product of the Pre-S(2) Region of Hepatitis B Virus DNA: Protective Efficacy in Chimpanzees
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1986 Dec 01. 83(23), 9174-9178.
Subject
Medical Sciences
Immunogenicity
Subtypes
Hepatitis B virus
Vaccination
Antigens
Amino acids
Antibodies
Infections
Synthetic vaccines
Dosage
Hepatitis B vaccines
Yeasts
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
Abstract
The S gene encoding the major surface polypeptide of hepatitis B virus is preceded by the region pre-S(2) with a capacity to code for 55 amino acid residues. In the product of region pre-S(2), the sequence of 19 amino acid residues (amino acids 14-32 from the N terminus) representing an area of high local hydrophilicity is shared by viral strains of subtypes adr, ayw, and ayr; residue 22, phenylalanine, is replaced by leucine in a strain of the other subtype, adw. A synthetic peptide vaccine involving these 19 amino acid residues, when given to two chimpanzees, raised antibodies that bound to viral particles and protected the animals from challenge with 106 chimpanzee infectious doses of hepatitis B virus.