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1.
MD-2, a eukaryotic accessory protein, is an essential component for the molecular pattern recognition of bacterial endotoxins. MD-2 interacts with lipid A of endotoxins [lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or lipooligosaccharide (LOS)] to activate human toll-like receptor (TLR) 4. The structure of lipid A influences the subsequent activation of human TLR4 and the immune response, but the basis for the discrimination of lipid A structures is unclear. A recombinant human MD-2 (rMD-2) protein was produced in the Pichia pastoris yeast expression system. Human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells were transfected with human TLR4 and were stimulated with highly purified LOS (0.56 pmol) from Neisseria meningitidis or LPS from other structurally defined bacterial endotoxins in the presence or absence of human rMD-2. Human rMD-2 restored, in a dose-dependent manner, interleukin (IL-8) responsiveness to LOS or LPS in TLR4-transfected HEK293 cells. The interaction of endotoxin with human rMD-2 was then assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Wild-type meningococcal LOS (Wt m LOS) bound human rMD-2, and binding was inhibited by an anti-MD-2 antibody to MD-2 dose-dependently (P < 0.005). Wt m LOS or meningococcal KDO(2)-lipid A had the highest binding affinity for human rMD-2; unglycosylated meningococcal lipid A produced by meningococci with defects in the 3-deoxy-d-manno-2-octulosonic acid (KDO) biosynthesis pathway did not appear to bind human rMD-2 (P < 0.005). The affinity of meningococcal LOS with a penta-acylated lipid A for human rMD-2 was significantly less than that for hexa-acylated LOS (P < 0.05). The hierarchy in the binding affinity of different lipid A structures for human rMD-2 was directly correlated with differences in TLR4 pathway activation and cytokine production by human macrophages.  相似文献   

2.
Neisseria meningitidis inhibits the alternative pathway (AP) of complement using diverse mechanisms, including expression of capsule (select serogroups), Neisserial surface protein A (NspA), factor H (fH) binding protein (fHbp), and lipooligosaccharide (LOS) sialylation. The contribution of the latter three molecules in AP regulation in encapsulated meningococci was studied using isogenic mutants. When LOS was unsialylated, deleting NspA alone from group A strain A2594 (low fHbp/high NspA) significantly increased AP-mediated C3 deposition. C3 deposition further increased ~2-fold in a ΔfHbpΔNspA double mutant, indicating cooperative fHbp function. LOS sialylation of A2594 ΔfHbpΔNspA decreased the rate of C3 deposition, revealing AP inhibition by LOS sialic acid. Maximal C3 deposition on group B strain H44/76 (high fHbp/low NspA) occurred when all three molecules were absent; again, LOS sialylation attenuated the AP in the absence of both fHbp and NspA. When H44/76 LOS was unsialylated, both fHbp and NspA independently inhibited the AP. LOS sialylation enhanced binding of fH C-terminal domains 18-20 to C3 fragments deposited on bacteria. Interaction of meningococci with nonhuman complement is relevant for animal models and vaccine evaluation studies that use nonhuman complement. Consistent with their human-specific fH binding, neither fHbp nor NspA regulated the rat AP. However, LOS sialylation inhibited the rat AP and, as with human serum, enhanced binding of rat fH to surface-bound C3. These data highlight the cooperative roles of meningococcal NspA and fHbp in regulating the human AP and broaden the molecular basis for LOS sialylation in AP regulation on meningococci in more than one animal species.  相似文献   

3.
Human mannose-binding lectin (MBL) provides a first line of defense against microorganisms by complement activation and/or opsonization in the absence of specific Ab. This serum collectin has been shown to activate complement when bound to repeating sugar moieties on several microorganisms, including encapsulated serogroup B and C meningococci, which leads to increased bacterial killing. In the present study, we sought to identify the meningococcal cell surface components to which MBL bound and to characterize such binding. Outer membrane complex containing both lipooligosaccharide (LOS) and proteins and LOS from Neisseria meningitidis were examined for MBL binding by dot blot and ELISA. MBL bound outer membrane complex but not LOS. The binding to bacteria by whole-cell ELISA did not require calcium and was not inhibited by N-acetyl-glucosamine or mannose. With the use of SDS-PAGE, immunoblot analysis, and mAbs specific for meningococcal opacity (Opa) proteins and porin proteins, we determined that MBL bound to Opa and porin protein B (porB). The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two MBL binding proteins confirmed Opa and PorB. Purified PorB inhibited the binding of MBL to meningococci. Escherichia coli with surface-expressed gonococcal Opa bound significantly more MBL than did the control strain. The binding of human factor H to purified PorB was markedly inhibited by MBL in a dose-dependent manner. Meningococci incubated with human serum bound MBL as detected by ELISA. We conclude that MBL binds to meningococci by a novel target recognition of two nonglycosylated outer membrane proteins, Opa and PorB.  相似文献   

4.
We have identified and defined the function of kpsF of Neisseria meningitidis and the homologues of kpsF in encapsulated K1 and K5 Escherichia coli. KpsF was shown to be the arabinose-5-phosphate isomerase, an enzyme not previously identified in prokaryotes, that mediates the interconversion of ribulose 5-phosphate and arabinose 5-phosphate. KpsF is required for 3-deoxy-d-manno-octulosonic acid (Kdo) biosynthesis in N. meningitidis. Mutation of kpsF or the gene encoding the CMP-Kdo synthetase (kpsU/kdsB) in N. meningitidis resulted in expression of a lipooligosaccharide (LOS) structure that contained only lipid A and reduced capsule expression in the five invasive disease-associated meningococcal serogroups (A, B, C, Y, and W-135). The step linking meningococcal capsule and LOS biosynthesis was shown to be Kdo production as the expression of capsule was wild type in a Kdo transferase (kdtA) mutant. Thus, in addition to lipooligosaccharide assembly, Kdo is required for meningococcal capsular polysaccharide expression. Furthermore, N. meningitidis, unlike enteric Gram-negative bacteria, can survive and synthesize only unglycosylated lipid A.  相似文献   

5.
In vivo anti-polysaccharide Ig responses to isolated polysaccharide (PS) are T cell independent, rapid, and fail to generate memory. However, little is known regarding PS-specific Ig responses to intact gram-positive and gram-negative extracellular bacteria. We previously demonstrated that intact heat-killed Streptococcus pneumoniae, a gram-positive bacterium, elicited a rapid primary pneumococcal capsular PS (PPS) response in mice that was dependent on CD4(+) T cells, B7-dependent costimulation, and CD40-CD40L interactions. However, this response was ICOS independent and failed to generate a boosted PPS-specific secondary IgG response. In the current study, we analyzed the murine meningococcal type C PS (MCPS)-specific Ig response to i.p.-injected intact, heat-killed Neisseria meningitidis, serogroup C (MenC), a gram-negative bacterium. In contrast to S. pneumoniae, the IgG anti-MCPS response to MenC exhibited delayed primary kinetics and was highly boosted after secondary immunization, whereas the IgG anti-MCPS response to isolated MCPS was rapid, without secondary boosting, and consisted of only IgG1 and IgG3, as opposed to all four IgG isotypes in response to intact MenC. The secondary, but not primary, IgG anti-MCPS response to MenC was dependent on CD4(+) T cells, CD40L, CD28, and ICOS. The primary and secondary IgG anti-MCPS responses were lower in TLR4-defective (C3H/HeJ) but not TLR2(-/-) or MyD88(-/-) mice, but secondary boosting was still observed. Of interest, coimmunization of S. pneumoniae and MenC resulted in a boosted secondary IgG anti-PPS response to S. pneumoniae. Our data demonstrate that the nature of the in vivo anti-PS response is markedly influenced by the composition and/or architecture of the bacterial subcapsular domain.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Group B Neisseria meningitidis is a human pathogen, for which a universally effective vaccine is still not available. Immune responses to bacteria are initiated by dendritic cells (DC), which internalize and process bacterial antigens for presentation to T cells. We show here that optimal IL-12 and TNF-alpha production by human monocyte derived DC in response to killed serogroup B N. meningitidis depends on physical contact and internalization of the bacteria by DC. The majority of DC producing cytokines had internalized N. meningitidis while inhibition of bacterial internalization markedly impaired IL-12 and TNF-alpha, but not IL-6 production. Internalization of N. meningitidis was shown to depend on lipooligosaccharide (LOS) expressed by the bacteria with poor internalization of LOS deficient bacteria compared to wild-type bacteria. Restoration of LOS biosynthesis in a LOS regulatory strain also restored both internalization and cytokine production and was enhanced in the presence of LPS binding protein (LBP). These results suggest that DC phagocytosis depends on expression of LOS within the bacteria and that optimal cytokine production, particularly IL-12, requires internalization of the bacteria. These findings have important implications for designing vaccines that will induce protective immune responses to group B N. meningitidis.  相似文献   

8.
Experiments utilizing endotoxin aggregates, lipooligosaccharides (LOS) isolated from metabolically labeled Neisseria meningitidis serotype group B, demonstrate that albumin is an essential component of lipopolysaccharide binding protein- (LBP) and sCD14-dependent 1) disaggregation of LOS and 2) LOS activation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). Aggregates of LOS (LOS(agg)) with an apparent M(r) >or= 2 x 10(7) were isolated by gel sieving on Sephacryl HR S500 in buffered balanced salts solution plus albumin. Incubation of LOS(agg) with LBP and sCD14 promoted LOS(agg) disaggregation in an albumin-dependent fashion to complexes that contain LOS and sCD14, but no LBP, with an apparent M(r) approximately 60,000 (LOS:sCD14) as determined by Sephacryl S200 chromatography. Isolation by gel filtration of LOS(agg):protein aggregates formed by the interaction of LOS(agg) with either LBP or sCD14 alone revealed that the sequence of LOS-protein interactions as well as the step(s) at which albumin is necessary for the production of bioactive LOS:sCD14 were specific. Efficient generation of LOS:sCD14 required 1) interaction of LOS(agg) with LBP before interaction with CD14 and 2) the presence of albumin during the interaction of LBP with LOS(agg). Activation of HUVEC by LOS(agg), as measured by IL-8 production, required both LBP and sCD14 and was thirty times more potent in the presence of albumin. In contrast, LOS:sCD14 did not require additional LBP, sCD14, or albumin to activate HUVEC but depended on the presence of albumin for optimal solubility/stability once formed. The albumin effect is apparently specific, because neither ovalbumin nor gelatin substituted for albumin in facilitating LBP:sCD14-dependent disaggregation of LOS(agg) or activation of endothelial cells. These results indicate that albumin is an essential facilitator of LBP/sCD14-induced LOS disaggregation that is required for activation of endothelial cells by LOS(agg).  相似文献   

9.
Phagocytosis of microbial pathogens is essential for the host immune response to infection. Our previous work has shown that lipooligosaccharide (LOS) expression on the surface of Neisseria meningitidis (Nm) is essential for phagocytosis, but the receptor involved remained unclear. In this study, we show that human CR3 (CD11b/CD18) and CR4 (CD11c/CD18) are phagocytic receptors for Nm as illustrated by the capacity of CR3- and CR4-transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells to facilitate Nm uptake. A CR3-signalling mutant failed to internalize Nm, showing that the ability of CR3 to signal is essential for phagocytosis. Internalization of Nm by CR3-transfected CHO cells could be inhibited by the presence of CR3-specific antibodies. Furthermore, dendritic cells from leukocyte adhesion deficiency-1 patients, who have diminished expression of β2 integrins, showed markedly reduced phagocytosis of Nm. The CR3-mediated phagocytosis required the presence of lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP). Furthermore, the expression of LOS by Nm was essential for LBP binding and phagocytosis via CR3. These results reveal a critical role of CR3 and LBP in the phagocytosis of Nm and provide important insights into the initial interaction meningococci have with the immune system.  相似文献   

10.
Respiratory virus infections have been suggested to be predisposing factors for meningococcal disease. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) affects young children in the age range at greatest risk of disease caused by Neisseria meningitidis. It has been previously shown that glycoprotein G expressed on the surface of RSV-infected HEp-2 cells (a human epithelial cell line) contributed to higher levels of binding of meningococci compared with uninfected cells. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of RSV infection on expression of surface molecules native to HEp-2 cells and their role in bacterial binding. Flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy were used to assess bacterial binding and expression of host cell antigens. Some molecules analysed in this study have not been reported previously on epithelial cells. RSV infection significantly enhanced the expression of CD15 (P < 0.05), CD14 (P < 0.001) and CD18 (P < 0.01), and the latter two contributed to increased binding of meningococci to cells but not the Gram-positive Streptococcus pneumoniae.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The localization of the TCR and other signaling molecules in membrane rafts (MR) is essential for the activation of T lymphocytes. MR are stabilized by sphingolipids and cholesterol. Activation of T lymphocytes leads to the confluence of small MR and the formation of an immunological synapse that is essential for sustained activation and proliferation. In this study, we investigated the effect of statins on MR and T cell activation in superantigen-stimulated human PBMC. Atorvastatin significantly inhibited cellular activation and proliferation. The binding of cholera toxin B subunit to isolated MR and to whole cells was inhibited by low doses of statins. Statins reduce the association of critical signaling proteins such as Lck and linker of activation in T cells with MR in stimulated T cells. The expression of activation markers CD69 and CD25 was inhibited. Several statin-mediated mechanisms, such as a lower stimulation with MHC-II, an inhibition of costimulation by direct binding of statins to LFA-1, a reduced secretion of cytokines, or a depletion of cellular cholesterol pools, were excluded. Inhibition of protein prenylation had a similar effect on T cell proliferation, suggesting that a reduced protein prenylation might contribute to the statin-mediated inhibition of T cell activation. Statins induce both lower levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and inhibition of T cell activation, which might contribute to an inhibition of atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

13.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis both express the lacto-N-neotetraose (LNT) lipooligosaccharide (LOS) molecule that can be sialylated. Although gonococcal LNT LOS sialylation enhances binding of the alternative pathway complement inhibitor factor H and renders otherwise serum-sensitive bacteria resistant to complement-dependent killing, the role of LOS sialylation in meningococcal serum resistance is less clear. We show that only gonococcal, but not meningococcal, LNT LOS sialylation enhanced factor H binding. Replacing the porin (Por) B molecule of a meningococcal strain (LOS sialylated) that did not bind factor H with gonococcal Por1B augmented factor H binding. Capsule expression did not alter factor H binding to meningococci that express gonococcal Por. Conversely, replacing gonococcal Por1B with meningococcal PorB abrogated factor H binding despite LNT LOS sialylation. Gonococcal Por1B introduced in the background of an unsialylated meningococcus itself bound small amounts of factor H, suggesting a direct factor H-Por1B interaction. Factor H binding to unsialylated meningococci transfected with gonococcal Por1B was similar to the sialylated counterpart only in the presence of higher (20 microg/ml) concentrations of factor H and decreased in a dose-responsive manner by approximately 80% at 1.25 microg/ml. Factor H binding to the sialylated strain remained unchanged over this factor H concentration range however, suggesting that LOS sialylation facilitated optimal factor H-Por1B interactions. The functional counterpart of factor H binding showed that sialylated meningococcal mutants that possessed gonococcal Por1B were resistant to complement-mediated killing by normal human serum. Our data highlight the different mechanisms used by these two related species to evade complement.  相似文献   

14.
Molecular basis of reduced potency of underacylated endotoxins   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Potent TLR4-dependent cell activation by gram-negative bacterial endotoxins depends on sequential endotoxin-protein and protein-protein interactions with LPS-binding protein, CD14, myeloid differentiation protein 2 (MD-2), and TLR4. Previous studies have suggested that reduced agonist potency of underacylated endotoxins (i.e., tetra- or penta- vs hexa-acylated) is determined by post-CD14 interactions. To better define the molecular basis of the differences in agonist potency of endotoxins differing in fatty acid acylation, we compared endotoxins (lipooligosaccharides (LOS)) from hexa-acylated wild-type (wt), penta-acylated mutant msbB meningococcal strains as well as tetra-acylated LOS generated by treatment of wt LOS with the deacylating enzyme, acyloxyacylhydrolase. To facilitate assay of endotoxin:protein and endotoxin:cell interactions, the endotoxins were purified after metabolic labeling with [3H]- or [14C]acetate. All LOS species tested formed monomeric complexes with MD-2 in an LPS-binding protein- and CD14-dependent manner with similar efficiency. However, msbB LOS:MD-2 and acyloxyacylhydrolase-treated LOS:MD-2 were at least 10-fold less potent in inducing TLR4-dependent cell activation than wt LOS:MD-2 and partially antagonized the action of wt LOS:MD-2. These findings suggest that underacylated endotoxins produce decreased TLR4-dependent cell activation by altering the interaction of the endotoxin:MD-2 complex with TLR4 in a way that reduces receptor activation. Differences in potency among these endotoxin species is determined not by different aggregate properties, but by different properties of monomeric endotoxin:MD-2 complexes.  相似文献   

15.
The interactions of Neisseria meningitidis with cells of the meninges are critical to progression of the acute, compartmentalized intracranial inflammatory response that is characteristic of meningococcal meningitis. An important virulence mechanism of the bacteria is the ability to shed outer membrane (OM) blebs containing lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which has been assumed to be the major pro-inflammatory molecule produced during meningitis. Comparison of cytokine induction by human meningeal cells following infection with wild-type meningococci, LPS-deficient meningococci or after treatment with OM isolated from both organisms, demonstrated the involvement of non-LPS bacterial components in cell activation. Significantly, recognition of LPS-replete OM did not depend on host cell expression of Toll-like receptor (TLR)4, the accessory protein MD-2 or CD14, or the recruitment of LPS-accessory surface proteins heat shock protein (HSP)70, HSP90alpha, chemokine receptor CXCR4 and growth differentiation factor (GDF)5. In addition, recognition of LPS-deficient OM was not associated with the expression of TLR2 or any of these other molecules. These data suggest that during meningococcal meningitis innate recognition of both LPS and non-LPS modulins is dependent on the expression of as yet uncharacterized pattern recognition receptors on cells of the meninges. Moreover, the biological consequences of cellular activation by non-LPS modulins suggest that clinical intervention strategies based solely on abrogating the effects of LPS are likely to be only partially effective.  相似文献   

16.
To facilitate studies of the molecular determinants of host-meningococcal lipooligosaccharide (endotoxin) interactions at patho-physiologically relevant endotoxin concentrations (i.e. < or =10 ng/ml), we have generated acetate auxotrophs NMBACE1 from encapsulated Neisseria meningitidis (serogroup B, strain NMB) and NMBACE2 from an isogenic bacterial mutant lacking the polysialic acid capsule. Growth of the auxotrophs in medium containing [(14)C]acetate yielded (14)C-lipooligosaccharides containing approximately 600 cpm/ng. Gel sieving resolved 14C-lipooligosaccharide-containing aggregates with an estimated molecular mass of > or =20 x 10(6) Da (peak A) and approximately 1 x 10(6) Da (peak B) from both strains. Lipooligosaccharides in peaks A and B had the same fatty acid composition and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profile. 14C-Labeled capsule copurified with (14)C-lipooligosaccharides in peak B from NMBACE1, whereas the other aggregates contained only 14C-lipooligosaccharide. For all aggregates, lipopolysaccharide-binding protein and soluble CD14-induced delivery of lipooligosaccharides to endothelial cells and cell activation correlated with disaggregation of lipooligosaccharides. These processes were inhibited by the presence of capsule but unaffected by the size of the aggregates. In contrast, endotoxin activation of cells containing membrane CD14 was unaffected by capsule but diminished when endotoxin was presented in larger aggregates. These findings demonstrate that the physical presentation of lipooligosaccharide, including possible interactions with capsule, affect the ability of meningococcal endotoxin to interact with and activate specific host targets.  相似文献   

17.
Epidemiological studies indicate influenza virus infection increases susceptibility to bacterial respiratory pathogens and to meningococcal disease. Because density of colonisation is an important factor in the development of bacterial disease, the objectives of the study were to use flow cytometry methods for assessment of bacterial binding and detection of cell surface antigens to determine: (1) if HEp-2 cells infected with human influenza A virus bind greater numbers of bacteria than uninfected cells; (2) if influenza infection alters expression of cell surface antigens which act as receptors for bacterial binding; (3) if neuraminidase affects binding of bacteria to HEp-2 cells. There was significantly increased binding of all isolates tested regardless of surface antigen characteristics. There were no significant differences between virus-infected and -uninfected Hep-2 cells in binding of monoclonal antibodies to Lewisb, Lewisx or H type 2. There were significant increases in binding of monoclonal antibodies to CD14 (P < 0.05) and CD18 (P < 0.01). Treatment of cells with monoclonal antibodies significantly reduced binding of Neisseria meningitidis strain C:2b:P1.2, CD14 (P < 0.001) and CD18 (P < 0.001). No reduction in binding of a strain of Streptococcus pneumoniae (12F) was observed in these experiments. Neuraminidase treatment of HEp-2 cells increased binding of monoclonal antibodies to CD14 (P < 0.01) and CD18 (P < 0.01). In three experiments, the increase in binding of meningococcal strain C:2b:P1.2 to neuraminidase-treated cells was not significant, but binding of Staphylococcus aureus strain NCTC 10655 was significant (P < 0.05).  相似文献   

18.
The immune response to polysaccharide Ag develops late in ontogeny and the underlying mechanisms of the infant unresponsiveness are poorly understood. The development of vaccines that will prove efficacious in infants has been hindered by the lack of animal systems suitable for studying immunity to human pathogens. We have examined the BALB/c murine response to the capsular polysaccharide of Neisseria meningitidis group C (MCPS), a homopolymer of alpha(2----9) sialic acid, as a model system for the development of immunity to bacterial polysaccharides in man. We have observed the appearance of natural antibody of both IgM and IgG classes which increases with age, and the transfer of maternal IgG to the offspring. Both the naturally occurring and postimmunization serum responses are restricted to the IgM and IgG3 isotypes, and include antibody titers to both MCPS as well as a natural O-acetyl-negative variant (OAc-). The preimmune anti-OAc- antibodies, in contrast to anti-MCPS, were restricted to the IgM class, whereas after immunization with MCPS both IgM and low titers of IgG3 antibodies to OAc- were produced. These studies demonstrate that the BALB/c mouse strain shows a markedly similar immune profile to that observed in man.  相似文献   

19.
Xie H  Gu XX 《Cellular microbiology》2008,10(7):1453-1467
To elucidate the role of Moraxella catarrhalis lipooligosaccharide (LOS) in otitis media with effusion (OME), the effects of LOS on adhesion antigens of human monocytes were investigated. M. catarrhalis LOS selectively enhanced intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1 or CD54) expression on human monocytes by significantly increasing both the surface expression intensity and the percentage of ICAM-1+ cells. ICAM-1 upregulation on human monocytes by the LOS required surface CD14, TLR4, NF-κB p65 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activity. Our study also revealed that the LOS-induced surface ICAM-1 expression was partially mediated through a TNF-α dependent autocrine mechanism and could be further augmented by lipopolysaccharide-binding protein in serum. In addition, M. catarrhalis LOS also stimulated human monocytes to produce pro-inflammatory cytokines in both TLR4- and CD14-dependent pathways. Our results also indicated that enhanced surface ICAM-1 expression on monocytes may hinder their adherence to the lung epithelial monolayer. Furthermore, the LOS-activated human monocytes secreted a significantly high level of IL-8, and could stimulate adjacent naïve monocytes to produce TNF-α which was partially mediated via membrane ICAM-1 and IL-8/IL-8RA. These results suggest that M. catarrhalis LOS could induce excessive middle ear inflammation through a cellular cross-talk mechanism during OME.  相似文献   

20.
Neisseria meningitidis is a major cause of meningitis and sepsis. Despite nearly 25 years of work, there is no promising vaccine candidate for prevention of disease caused by meningococcal B strains. This review summarizes newer approaches for eliciting protective meningococcal B immune responses, including the use of molecular mimetics of group B polysaccharide and conserved membrane proteins as immunogens. The capsular polysaccharide of this organism is conserved and serum antibody to this capsule confers protection against disease. However, the immunogenicity of meningococcal B polysaccharide-based vaccines is poor. Further, a portion of the antibody elicited has autoantibody activity. Recently, our laboratory produced a panel of murine monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) that react specifically with capsular polysaccharide epitopes on meningococcal B that are distinct from host polysialic acid. These Mabs elicit complement-mediated bactericidal activity and confer passive protection in animal models. The anti-capsular Mabs were used to identify molecular mimetics from phage display peptide libraries. The resulting peptides were antigenic mimetics as defined by binding to the Mabs used to select them but, to date, are poor immunogenic mimetics in failing to elicit anti-capsular antibodies.  相似文献   

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