Abstract
We generated plasmid expression vectors encoding ubiquitin and beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) with different intervening amino acids, allowing for the production of processed protein products that have either stabilizing or destabilizing residues at their N-termini. P815 cells transfected with plasmids encoding beta-gal with a destabilizing N-terminus did not have detectable expression beta-gal unless they were treated with inhibitors specific for the proteasome. Inhibitors of other proteolysis pathways had no such effect. Nevertheless, transfectants expressing beta-gal with different amino acid residues were equally sensitive to cytolysis by a CTL clone specific for a beta-gal peptide presented in the context of H-2Ld. In contrast to vectors encoding native beta-gal, plasmid vectors encoding beta-gal with a destabilizing residue did not induce detectable anti-beta-gal Abs when injected into skeletal muscle of BALB/c mice. However, such vectors were significantly more effective than vectors encoding native beta-gal or beta-gal with a stabilizing residue in stimulating CTL specific for P13.2, a lacZ transfectant of P815. We conclude that incorporation of strategies that enhance proteasome-dependent degradation may generate DNA vaccines that are more effective in inducing cellular immunity against targeted Ags.
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CITATION STYLE
Wu, Y., & Kipps, T. J. (1997). Deoxyribonucleic acid vaccines encoding antigens with rapid proteasome-dependent degradation are highly efficient inducers of cytolytic T lymphocytes. The Journal of Immunology, 159(12), 6037–6043. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.159.12.6037
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