Role of intrastructural/intermolecular help in immunization with peptide-phospholipid complexes

  • Goodman-Snitkoff G
  • Good M
  • Berzofsky J
  • et al.
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Abstract

The design of effective subunit vaccines requires the inclusion of both B and T cell epitopes. The best mechanism for including both types of epitopes within an Ag is dependent upon how the Ag is processed by the APC for presentation to a responsive Th cell. If it is more efficient to process a single molecule for both helper and primary epitopes, than covalent linkage of B cells and T cell epitopes for intramolecular presentation of help would be recommended. If however, separate peptides containing either B or Th cell epitopes could be included within a single complex for the elicitation of intermolecular/intrastructural help, more antigenically diverse structures could be designed. This paper reports that it is possible to generate intermolecular/intrastructural help within an antigenic peptide-phospholipid (PL) complex. These peptide-PL complexes use well defined epitopes from Plasmodium falciparum as Ag. In addition to generating intrastructural help, we have shown that the Ir to these peptide-PL complexes is controlled by Ir genes and is similar to the Ir to the circumsporozoite protein of this pathogen.

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Goodman-Snitkoff, G., Good, M. F., Berzofsky, J. A., & Mannino, R. J. (1991). Role of intrastructural/intermolecular help in immunization with peptide-phospholipid complexes. The Journal of Immunology, 147(2), 410–415. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.147.2.410

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