Author:
Klinkert M Q,Theilmann L,Pfaff E,Schaller H
Abstract
The presence of the two "large" surface proteins of hepatitis B virus (HBV), P39 and GP42 of pre-S1-hepatitis B surface antigen, was assayed in the serum of an experimentally infected chimpanzee by using antibodies to a pre-S1-specific fusion protein synthesized in Escherichia coli. The immune response to pre-S1-hepatitis B surface antigen was monitored by using the pre-S1 fusion protein as an antigen. pre-S1 proteins were detected in the serum early in the course of infection and prevailed as long as hepatitis B surface antigen did, together with hepatitis B e antigen and viral DNA. Thus, the pre-S1 antigen can be considered a novel diagnostic marker for acute HBV infection. Antibodies to pre-S1, both immunoglobulin M and G classes, were also detected early in infection, shortly after the appearance of the pre-S1 antigen, suggesting its strong immunogenicity in vivo. The anti-pre-S1 antibodies therefore also represent an early serological marker for acute HBV infection and, owing to their early appearance and persistence, may play a role in the neutralization of the virus.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
70 articles.
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