We have generated four mouse monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to bovine papillomavirus virions that bound type-specific, adjacent, and conformationally dependent epitopes on the L1 major capsid protein. All four MAbs were neutralizing at ratios of 1 MAb molecule per 5 to 25 L1 molecules, but only three effectively blocked binding of the virus to the cell surface. Therefore, antibodies can prevent papillomavirus infection by at least two mechanisms: inhibition of cell surface receptor binding and a subsequent step in the infectious pathway. The neutralizing epitopes of the bovine papillomavirus L2 minor capsid protein were mapped to the N-terminal half of L2 by blocking the neutralizing activity of full-length L2 antiserum with bacterially expressed peptides of L2. In addition, rabbit antiserum raised against amino acids 45 to 173 of L2 had a neutralizing titer of 1,000, confirming that at least part of the N terminus of L2 is exposed on the virion surface.
CITATION STYLE
Roden, R. B., Weissinger, E. M., Henderson, D. W., Booy, F., Kirnbauer, R., Mushinski, J. F., … Schiller, J. T. (1994). Neutralization of bovine papillomavirus by antibodies to L1 and L2 capsid proteins. Journal of Virology, 68(11), 7570–7574. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.68.11.7570-7574.1994
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