Affiliation:
1. Department
of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clearance
of the intracellular bacterial pathogen
Listeria monocytogenes
requires antigen-specific CD8
+
T cells. Recently it
was shown that activation of class Ib major histocompatibility complex
(MHC)-restricted CD8
+
T cells alone is sufficient
for immune protection against listeriae. A major component of the class
Ib MHC-restricted T-cell response is T cells that recognize formylated
peptide antigens presented by M3 molecules. Although three
N
-formylated peptides derived from
L. monocytogenes
are known to bind to M3 molecules, fMIGWII is the immunodominant
epitope presented by M3 during infection of mice. The source of fMIGWII
peptide is the
L. monocytogenes lemA
gene, which encodes a
30-kDa protein of unknown function. In this report, we describe the
generation of two
L. monocytogenes lemA
deletion mutants. We
show that
lemA
is not required for growth of listeriae in
tissue culture cells or for virulence during infection of mice.
Surprisingly, we found that fMIGWII-specific T cells were still primed
following infection with
lemA
mutant listeriae, suggesting
that
L. monocytogenes
contains at least one additional antigen
that is cross-reactive with the fMIGWII epitope. This cross-reactive
antigen appears to be a small protease-resistant molecule that is
secreted by
L.
monocytogenes
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
12 articles.
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