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1.
Six regions (T sites) of myoglobin (Mb) were found by a comprehensive synthetic strategy to stimulate Mb-primed lymph-node cells. To define precisely the N-terminal boundary of the immunodominant T site (residues 107-120) with site-specific T-cell clones and to determine the effects of peptide size on their stimulation, two sets of peptides were employed. In one set, the peptides were elongated to the left from His-113 by one-residue increments of the Mb sequence. The other set represented an identical stepwise elongation by one-residue increments of the Mb sequence, but which were extended by additional unrelated ('nonsense') residues to a uniform size of 14 residues. Examination of the proliferative responses of eight T-cell clones, derived from Mb-primed DBA/2 (H-2d) or SJL (H-2s) mice, revealed a dramatic non-specific size requirement. In every clone, the longer nonsense-extended peptides achieved maximum stimulating activity at a lower optimum peptide dose than its natural-sequence, but shorter, analogue. In addition, slight (one-residue) differences in the N-terminal boundaries among the clones was observed. Thus, the fine specificity of each clone was mapped to the region from residue 111 or 112 to about residue 120 of Mb, which coincides with the site of B-cell recognition and resides in a small discrete surface region of the protein chain.  相似文献   

2.
Fifteen T-cell clones were derived from BALB/c or DBA/2 mice immunized with a synthetic peptide corresponding to the C-terminal 24 residues (residues 305 to 328) of the HA1 chain of H3 subtype influenza virus hemagglutinin. All of the clones proliferated when the peptide was presented in association with I-Ed. By using shorter homologs, it was shown that the T-cell response was focused predominantly on the region at the N-terminal end of the peptide encompassed by residues 306 to 319. Individual clones recognizing this region differed in their absolute requirements for residues at the extremities of the site and also in their patterns of efficiency of recognition of shorter homologs. One particular clone defined another site of T-cell recognition within residues 314 to 328. The response of the clones to peptide analogs identified certain residues within the sites that were critical for recognition, with the substitution Gln-311----Ser having a differential effect on clones responding to the N-terminal site. Only one of the clones responded well to influenza virus itself. This clone also required relatively low concentrations of the parent peptide for optimum stimulation and was suppressed by higher concentrations. The data demonstrate striking heterogeneity in the T-cell response even to a short synthetic peptide, with different T-cell clones recognizing slightly different but overlapping areas of the molecule.  相似文献   

3.
G S Bixler  Jr  M Bean    M Z Atassi 《The Biochemical journal》1986,240(1):139-146
In previous studies, six T sites within myoglobin (Mb) were localized. To define precisely the boundaries of the T sites, a new approach is introduced and applied here to the T site residing within residues 107-120 of Mb. Two sets of peptides were synthesized. One set represents a stepwise elongation by one-residue increments of the Mb sequence. The other set represents an identical stepwise addition of one-residue increments of the Mb sequence, but which were extended by additional unrelated (nonsense) residues to a uniform size of 14 residues. The longer peptides (nonsense-extended) usually gave higher proliferative responses than did their shorter counterparts having the same Mb region. Thus a minimum peptide size is required for optimal T-cell stimulation. The T site subtends, in three high-responder mouse strains, residues 109-119 or 110-120, depending on strain, and, in three low-responder strains, maps to residues 108-120. Thus, in this case, the T site coincides with the site of B-cell recognition and resides in a small discrete surface region of the protein chain.  相似文献   

4.
We have determined that certain altered peptide ligands (APLs) can induce T-cells specific for the native peptide myelin basic protein (MBP) p85-99 to secrete Th2-type cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-5 in the absence of significant Th1-type cytokines. However, it is not known whether stimulation with APLs will activate autoreactive T cells or a distinct population of cells. In the present study, 18 T-cell clones that reacted with either MBP p85-99 or one of three APLs of the peptide substituted at TCR contact residues were generated. T-cells were tested functionally for their reactivity to the original stimulating peptide as well as to the MBP APLs. In addition, the T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha and beta chains of each of these clones were sequenced. In a series of T-cell clones isolated from a multiple sclerosis patient, stimulation of T-cells with the APL 93A, which has an alanine for lysine substitution at the TCR contact residue 93, did not induce substantial proliferation of MBPp85-99-specific T-cell clones, indicating that a distinct set of T-cell clones was induced. However, this was not the case for another set of T-cell clones from a different individual in which the 93A peptide induced clonal expansion of T-cells highly reactive with the native MBPp85-99 antigen. Thus, the potential beneficial effect of using APLs to induce downregulatory cytokines appears to depend on the specific T-cell repertoire of the individual patient.  相似文献   

5.
T-cell epitopes on the E2 protein of rubella virus were studied by using 15 overlapping synthetic peptides covering the E2 protein sequence. The most frequently recognized epitopes on E2 were E2-4 (residues 54 to 74), with 5 of 10 tested T-cell lines responding to it. Two CD4+ cytotoxic T-cell cloned isolated from one T-cell line responded strongly in proliferation assays with peptide E2-4 and were cytotoxic to target cells presenting the E2-4 determinant. Truncated peptides contained within the E2-4 peptide sequence were used to define the T-cell determinants. Results indicated that amino acid residues 54 to 65 were directly involved. Human cell lines with different HLA phenotypes were tested for the capacity to present the antigenic determinants. The results suggested that recognition of peptide E2-4 by T-cell clones was associated with HLA DR7.  相似文献   

6.
A total of 14 I-Ad-restricted helper T-cell clones specific for the hemagglutinin (HA) molecule of influenza virus were isolated from spleens of BALB/c or (BALB/c X C57BL/10)F1 mice immunized with the H3 subtype influenza virus A/Memphis/71 (Mem 71) and from lymph nodes of BALB/c mice primed with purified HA. The specificity of these T-cell clones was assessed in proliferation assays by reactivity with naturally occurring strains of viruses that arose by antigenic drift and contain known amino acid sequence changes in HA and with a panel of monoclonal antibody (MAb)-selected mutants of Mem 71 with single amino acid substitutions in HA. The HA genes of those mutant viruses that failed to stimulate one or more of the T-cell clones were sequenced. The clones could be allocated to at least four groups, each group having a distinct pattern of reactivity with the panel of natural field strains. The epitopes recognized by the four groups of clones were found, by reactivity with MAb-selected mutants, to be in very close proximity to one another and probably overlapping. All of the distinct epitopes recognized by the T-cell clones were adversely affected by a single amino acid substitution, either at residue 60 or at residue 63 in the HA1 polypeptide chain, within the region known from antibody-binding studies as site E. Some, but not all, of the epitopes may be influenced by the addition of a carbohydrate side chain to the HA of a particular MAb-selected mutant and certain field strains containing an Asp----Asn substitution at residue 63. Site E is therefore a major site of H-2d helper T-cell recognition on the H3 HA.  相似文献   

7.
The main functions of the T-cell receptor (TCR) involve its specific interaction with short and linear antigenic peptides bound to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. In the absence of a 3D structure for TCR and for the TCR/peptide/MHC complex, several attempts to characterize the structural components of the TCR/peptide/MHC interaction have been made. However, this subject is still troublesome. In this paper a computer-based 3D model for a TCR/peptide/MHC complex (5C.C7/moth cytochrome c [MCC] peptide 93-103/I-Ek) was obtained. The complex surface shows a high complementarity between the 5C.C7 structure and the peptide/I-Ek molecule. The mapping of residues involved in the TCR/peptide/MHC interaction shows close agreement with mutational experiments (Jorgensen JL, Reay PA, Ehrich EW, Davis MM, 1992b, Annu Rev Immunol 10:835-873). Moreover, the results are consistent with a recent variability analysis of TCR sequences using three variability indexes (Almagro JC, Zenteno-Cuevas R, Vargas-Madrazo E, Lara-Ochoa F, 1995b, Int J Pept Protein Res 45:180-186). Accordingly, the 3D model of the 5C.C7/MCC peptide 93-103/I-Ek complex provides a framework to generate testable hypotheses about TCR recognition. Thus, starting from this model, the role played by each loop that forms the peptide/MHC binding site of the TCR is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Antigen peptide fn20 representing Friend murine leukemia virus env122-141 (DEPLTSLTPRCNTAWNRLKL) is recognized by two independent Friend virus-induced, FBL-3 tumor-specific helper T-cell (Th) clones. We isolated more Th clones from mice immunized with fn20 peptide. We examined the fine structure of the peptide required to activate a large group of fn20-specific Th clones. A systematic analysis of peptides of decreasing lengths eliciting Th proliferation defined the minimum core length as 13 amino acids (LTSLTPRCNTAWN). Functional proliferation and competition assays with variant peptides with alanine substitutions permitted the assignment of five peptide residues in two major histocompatibility complex-interacting and three T-cell-receptor-interacting sites. Th clones were different in their reactivities toward peptides of various lengths and the variant peptides.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of mitogen-induced nonspecific suppressor T cells (Ts)2 on T-helper-cell activity was investigated using isolated clones of murine T-helper cells as targets. TNP-self-reactive Thy1+, Ly1+ T-cell clones were isolated after continuous culture of T cells derived from picryl chloride-sensitized mice and were characterized by their ability to proliferate in an antigen-specific and MHC-restricted manner. In addition, selected T-cell clones were found to produce both interleukin-2 (Il-2) and T-cell replacing factor (TRF), lymphokines characteristic of helper T cells. Concanavalin A (Con A)-induced Ts cells inhibited the antigen-specific proliferation of these helper-T cell clones in a noncytotoxic manner even in the presence of exogenous Il-2. This implied that failure to proliferate was not merely due to an inability of these clones to produce Il-2. The kinetics of suppression also suggested that early T-cell activation signals were not affected. Furthermore, coculture experiments indicated that while proliferation could be severely inhibited, the actual secretion of lymphokines such as Il-2 and TRF by the T-helper clones was not. Our data suggest that nonspecific Ts modulation of proliferation versus helper factor production are under separate control in cloned T-cell populations, with lymphokine secretion remaining intact in the presence of Con A-induced Ts cells.  相似文献   

10.
Cancer testis antigens exhibit physiological expression within germ cells and are frequently expressed in malignant tissue. Interestingly, immunological tolerance to cancer testis proteins does not appear to be established, and the expression of CTAg proteins within malignant cells can therefore lead to induction of cellular and humoral immunity. A considerable body of evidence now indicates that CD8-specific immunity plays an important role in the control of cancer cell growth, and a number of vaccine studies are in progress to boost CTAg-specific cellular immune responses. We have previously identified CTAg-specific immune responses in patients with multiple myeloma and reported that recognition of the MAGE-A1289–298 peptide, which is described as being restricted by HLA-B*0702, was the most frequent response seen with our peptide panel. Here, we studied seven CD8+ T-cell clones specific for this peptide which were isolated from three patients with myeloma at several time-points. The affinity of peptide recognition was high with 50% maximal interferon-γ production observed at a peptide concentration of 10−10 M and variation of only one order of magnitude between the affinities of the clones. Importantly, all the clones were able to recognise and kill multiple myeloma cell lines. Interestingly, one patient did not express HLA-B*0702, but three clones from this patient recognised the MAGE-A1289–298 peptide on a lymphoblastoid cell line (LCLs) expressing HLA-Cw7, and we now show evidence that the MAGE-A1289–298 peptide is expressed and recognised through Cw7. The T-cell receptor gene usage was determined in five clones and showed conserved features in both the α and the β chain genes indicating correlation between T-cell receptor usage and peptide specificity of cancer testis antigen-specific T-cell clones.  相似文献   

11.
Several major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) complexes with known minimal immunogenic peptides have now been solved by X-ray crystallography. Specificity pockets within the MHC II binding groove provide distinct peptide contacts that influence peptide conformation and define the binding register within different allelic MHC II molecules. Altering peptide ligands with respect to the residues that contact the T-cell receptor (TCR) can drastically change the nature of the ensuing immune response. Here, we provide an example of how MHC II (I-A) molecules may indirectly effect TCR contacts with a peptide and drive functionally distinct immune responses. We modeled the same immunogenic 12-amino acid peptide into the binding grooves of two allelic MHC II molecules linked to distinct cytokine responses against the peptide. Surprisingly, the favored conformation of the peptide in each molecule was distinct with respect to the exposure of the N- or C-terminus of the peptide above the MHC II binding groove. T-cell clones derived from each allelic MHC II genotype were found to be allele-restricted with respect to the recognition of these N- vs. C-terminal residues on the bound peptide. Taken together, these data suggest that MHC II alleles may influence T-cell functions by restricting TCR access to specific residues of the I-A-bound peptide. Thus, these data are of significance to diseases that display genetic linkage to specific MHC II alleles, e.g. type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

12.
In recent years, synthetic peptides have been utilized extensively to characterize the minimal essential immunodominant sites on model protein Ag. However, little work has focused on the effect that sequences flanking these minimal recognition sites may exert on T cell recognition. Previous work with staphylococcal nuclease (Nase) demonstrated that I-Ek-restricted clones recognize the peptide 81-100, whereas I-Ab-restricted clones recognize the over-lapping but non-cross-reacting peptide 91-110. Further analysis with 15 or 10 residue peptides within the region 81-110 reveals that the minimal sequence capable of stimulating I-Ek-restricted clones is contained within the decapeptide 91-100. Addition of residues 86-90, to give the peptide 86-100, enhanced the recognition substantially, whereas addition of residues 101-105 produced a 91-105 peptide with no stimulatory ability. These results suggest that interactions between the antigenic peptide 91-100 and residues within the flanking 101-105 sequence have negative consequences for presentation of the immunodominant epitope to T cell clones. Introduction of single amino acid substitutions within 91-105 produced peptides that induce responses comparable to those seen with 91-100. These results are consistent with the suggestion of negative interactions between the minimal immunodominant site and flanking sequences in that single residue substitutions may remove these negative interactions and lead to restoration of stimulatory ability. The negative effect of flanking sequences on T cell recognition of immunodominant sites presents new considerations for development of synthetic vaccines as well as for understanding the biology of Ag processing and presentation.  相似文献   

13.
Presentation of a protein antigen to T cells is believed to follow its intracellular breakdown by the antigen-presenting cell, with the fragments constituting the trigger of immune recognition. It should then be expected that T-cell recognition of protein antigens in vitro will be independent of protein conformation. Three T-cell lines were made by passage in vitro with native lysozyme of T cells from two mouse strains (B10.BR and DBA/1) that had been primed with the same protein. These cell lines responded well to native lysozyme and very poorly to unfolded (S-sulphopropyl) lysozyme. The response of the T-cell lines to the antigen was major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted. A line from B10.BR was selected for further studies. This line responded to the three surface-simulation synthetic sites of lysozyme (representing the discontinuous antigenic, i.e. antibody binding, sites) and analogues that were extended to a uniform size by a nonsense sequence. T-cell clones prepared from this line were specific to native lysozyme and did not respond to the unfolded derivative. Furthermore, several of these clones showed specificity to a given surface-simulation synthetic site. The exquisite dependency of the recognition by the clones on the conformation of the protein antigen and their ability to recognize the surface-simulation synthetic sites indicate that the native (unprocessed) protein was the trigger of MHC-restricted T-cell recognition.  相似文献   

14.
Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) clones specific for the influenza A/PR/8/34 virus hemagglutinin (HA) were isolated by priming CBA mice with a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing the HA molecule. The epitopes recognized by two of these clones, which were CD8+, Kk restricted, and HA subtype specific, were defined by using a combination of recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing HA fragments and synthetic peptides. One epitope is in the HA1 subunit at residues 259 to 266 (numbering from the initiator methionine), amino acid sequence FEANGNLI, and the other epitope is in the HA2 subunit at residues 10 to 18 (numbering from the amino terminus of the HA2 subunit), sequence IEGGWTGMI. These two peptides are good candidates for naturally processed HA epitopes presented during influenza infection, as they are the same length (eight and nine residues) as other naturally processed viral peptides presented to CTL. A comparison of the sequences of these two new epitopes with those of the three previously published Kk-restricted T-cell epitopes showed some homology among all of the epitopes, suggesting a binding motif. In particular, an isoleucine residue at the carboxy-terminal end is present in all of the epitopes. On the basis of this homology, we predicted that the Kk-restricted epitope in influenza virus nucleoprotein, previously defined as residues 50 to 63, was contained within residues 50 to 57, sequence SDYEGRLI. This shorter peptide was found to sensitize target cells at a 200-fold lower concentration than did nucleoprotein residues 50 to 63 when tested with a CTL clone, confirming the alignment of Kk-restricted epitopes.  相似文献   

15.
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV)-specific CD4-positive T cells are known to lyse targets expressing VZV antigen, but little is known of the glycoprotein specificity or phenotype of these cells. To test the ability of T cells to distinguish between gpI and gpIV (which share an antibody-defined epitope), we prepared clones from blood from four healthy individuals by limiting dilution. Among 68 T-cell clones from four donors which were VZV specific in tests of proliferation, 30 lysed autologous Epstein-Barr virus-transformed lymphoblasts which had been superinfected with a recombinant vaccinia virus which included the whole VZV gpI sequence. These clones were characterized as major histocompatibility complex class II restricted by inhibition of their cytotoxicity with HLA-DR and CD4 monoclonal antibodies. Twenty-one clones lysed targets expressing gpIV. Fifteen of these clones lysed targets expressing gpI and gpIV. Four clones with gpI-gpIV specificity were examined in detail, and their dual specificity was confirmed by cold target inhibition. These four clones failed to kill target cells infected with a mutant gpIV recombinant vaccinia virus from which amino acid residues 212 to 354 had been deleted. This region includes one of the two gpIV decapeptides which have 50% homology with amino acids 111 to 121 of gpI. Our data confirm that T-cell-receptor-associated structures are required for specific lysis of VZV targets and indicate that (i) gpI-specific CD4 cytotoxic T cells outnumber gpIV-specific T cells in blood and (ii) 50% of gpI-specific T-cell clones also lyse gpIV-expressing targets.  相似文献   

16.
The crystal structures of two human TCRs specific for a HTLV-I Tax peptide bound to HLA-A2 were recently determined, for the first time allowing a functional comparison of TCRs for which the MHC/peptide/TCR structures are known. Extensive amino acid substitutions show that the native Tax residues are optimal at each peptide position. A prominent feature of the TCR contact surface is a deep pocket that accommodates a tyrosine at position 5 of the peptide. For one of these TCRs, this pocket is highly specific for aromatic residues. In the other TCR structure, this pocket is larger, allowing many different residues to be accommodated. The CTL clones also show major differences in the specificity for several other peptide residues, including side chains that are not directly contacted by the TCR. Despite the specificity of these clones, peptides that are distinct at five or six positions from Tax11-19 induce CTL activity, indicating that substantial changes of the peptide surface are tolerated. Human peptides with limited sequence homology to Tax11-19 represent partial TCR agonists for these CTL clones. The distinct functional properties of these CTL clones highlight structural features that determine TCR specificity and cross-reactivity for MHC-bound peptides.  相似文献   

17.
The recognition of antigen-presenting cells (APCs) by T helper (TH) cells occurs in an antigen (Ag)-specific, MHC-restricted manner. Recent evidence, however, suggests that other interaction molecules may also be involved in TH:APC interaction in addition to the T-cell receptor (Ti) and class II or la antigens. We chose, therefore, to examine the role of various interaction molecules (Ia, Ti, L3T4, and LFA-1) in Ag presentation using several TH clones with distinct recognition patterns (self-Ia, self-Ia/Ag, and allogenic Ia). We describe here the use of a rapid clustering assay to study the initial binding events that occur between TH cells and APCs of various types. In all combinations of TH cells and APCs, conjugate formation was both Ag-specific and MHC-restricted. Moreover, with one exception cell clustering was prevented by the addition of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against either the T-cell receptor or class II MHC molecules. In contrast, mAb to L3T4 and LFA-1 generally failed to inhibit cluster formation even though T-cell proliferation was profoundly inhibited. The relative importance of these interaction molecules in conjugate formation appeared to depend on the APC type as well as on the T-cell clone used. The implications of these findings for the mechanisms of Ag presentation and T-cell activation are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The majority of T-cell clones derived from a donor who experienced dengue illness following receipt of a live experimental dengue virus type 3 (DEN3) vaccine cross-reacted with all four serotypes of dengue virus, but some were serotype specific or only partially cross-reactive. The nonstructural protein, NS3, was immuno-dominant in the CD4+ T-cell response of this donor. The epitopes of four NS3-specific T-cell clones were analyzed. JK15 and JK13 recognized only DEN3 NS3, while JK44 recognized DEN1, DEN2, and DEN3 NS3 and JK5 recognized DEN1, DEN3, and West Nile virus NS3. The epitopes recognized by these clones on the DEN3 NS3 protein were localized with recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing truncated regions of the NS3 gene, and then the minimal recognition sequence was mapped with synthetic peptides. Amino acids critical for T-cell recognition were assessed by using peptides with amino acid substitutions. One of the serotype-specific clones (JK13) and the subcomplex- and flavivirus-cross-reactive clone (JK5) recognized the same core epitope, WITDFVGKTVW. The amino acid at the sixth position of this epitope is critical for recognition by both clones. Sequence analysis of the T-cell receptors of these two clones showed that they utilize different VP chains. The core epitopes for the four HLA-DR15-restricted CD4+ CTL clones studied do not contain motifs similar to those proposed by previous studies on endogenous peptides eluted from HLA-DR15 molecules. However, the majority of these dengue virus NS3 core epitopes have a positive amino acid (K or R) at position 8 or 9. Our results indicate that a single epitope can induce T cells with different virus specificities despite the restriction of these T cells by the same HLA-DR15 allele. This finding suggests a previously unappreciated level of complexity for interactions between human T-cell receptors and viral epitopes with very similar sequences on infected cells.  相似文献   

19.
We used a silicon-based biosensor, a microphysiometer, to measure real-time extracellular acidification rate signals associated with T lymphocyte responses to peptide ligands interacting with the T-cell receptor (TCR). We compared these effector responses with those of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production, and T-cell proliferation. Within minutes, major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-bound peptides on antigen-presenting cells (APCs) engaged the TCR to increase acidification rates of the extracellular media was measured by microphysiometer. We exposed two myelin peptide-specific human T-cell clones, MSF132E11 (DRB1*1501 restricted) and TOM3A6 (DRB5*0101 restricted), to truncated analogues of the parent MBP 84-102 peptide, in the presence of MHC restricted human antigen-presenting cells, and measured the extracellular acidification rate signal changes, IFN-gamma production and T-cell proliferation. The core epitopes recognized by these clones were identified by microphysiometer and found to be MBP 88-100 and MBP 91-100, respectively. These epitopes were identical to those identified by the IFN-gamma and proliferation assays. We conclude that measurement of real-time extracellular acidification rate signals by the microphysiometer may facilitate rapid identification of human T-cell epitopes involved in immune disorders and the development of specific T-cell antagonists.  相似文献   

20.
A L Rothman  I Kurane    F A Ennis 《Journal of virology》1996,70(10):6540-6546
The target epitopes, serotype specificity, and cytolytic function of dengue virus-specific T cells may influence their theoretical roles in protection against secondary infection as well as the immunopathogenesis of dengue hemorrhagic fever. To study these factors in an experimental system, we isolated dengue virus-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell clones from dengue-2 virus-immunized BALB/c mice. The T-cell response to dengue virus in this mouse strain was heterogeneous; we identified at least five different CD4+ phenotypes and six different CD8+ phenotypes. Individual T-cell clones recognized epitopes on the dengue virus pre-M, E, NSl/NS2A, and NS3 proteins and were restricted by the I-Ad, I-Ed, Ld, and Kd antigens. Both serotype-specific and serotype-cross-reactive clones were isolated in the CD4+ and CD8+ subsets; among CD8+ clones, those that recognized the dengue virus structural proteins were serotype specific whereas those that recognized the nonstructural proteins were serotype cross-reactive. All of the CD8+ and one of five CD4+ clones lysed dengue virus-infected target cells. Using synthetic peptides, we identified an Ld-restricted epitope on the E protein (residues 331 to 339, SPCKIPFEI) and a Kd-restricted epitope on the NS3 protein (residues 296 to 310, ARGYISTRVEM GEAA). These data parallel previous findings of studies using human dengue virus-specific T-cell clones. This experimental mouse system may be useful for studying the role of the virus serotype and HLA haplotype on T-cell responses after primary dengue virus infection.  相似文献   

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