Protocol for: Expression cloning for the discovery of viral antigens and epitopes recognized by T cells
Abstract or Description:
Knowledge of the antigens that are recognized by
virus-specific
T cells can identify candidate
subunit vaccine compounds.
Viral antigens are frequently used in cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of the immune response in
pathogenesis research.
Peptide epitopes are required for the construction of
fluorescent major histocompatibility complex""?
peptide tetramers, which are used to track specific
T-cell responses. Expression
cloning is a family of methods of
antigen discovery that are particularly suitable for
DNA viruses with large
genomes. Libraries of
viral nucleic acid are expressed in formats suitable for presentation to either CD4 or CD8
T cells. Pools of antigens representing fragments of
viral open reading frames are loaded into
cells expressing the necessary
antigen processing and presentation machinery. Highly sensitive
T-cell readouts such as lymphokine secretion,
proliferation, and
gene activation are used to detect active pools, which are then broken down in a reiterative process until a single active clone can be isolated and sequenced. These methods are most applicable if
T-cell clones reactive with the whole
virus can be obtained by
in vitro restimulation or
sampling of infected
tissues. Alternative methods of
antigen discovery are better suited for nonculturable
viruses. Expression
cloning methods are somewhat generic and are adaptable between infectious diseases,
autoimmunity, and
tumor immunology research projects.
Citation: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1046-2023(02)00344-4
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