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A point mutation leading to hepatitis C virus escape from neutralization by a monoclonal antibody to a conserved conformational epitope
Authors:Keck Zhen-Yong  Olson Oakley  Gal-Tanamy Meital  Xia Jinming  Patel Arvind H  Dreux Marlène  Cosset Francois-Loïc  Lemon Stanley M  Foung Steven K H
Affiliation:Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
Abstract:A challenge in hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine development is defining conserved protective epitopes. A cluster of these epitopes comprises an immunodominant domain on the E2 glycoprotein, designated domain B. CBH-2 is a neutralizing human monoclonal antibody to a domain B epitope that is highly conserved. Alanine scanning demonstrated that the epitope involves residues G523, G530, and D535 that are also contact residues for E2 binding to CD81, a coreceptor required for virus entry into cells. However, another residue, located at position 431 and thus at a considerable distance in the linear sequence of E2, also contributes to the CBH-2 epitope. A single amino acid substitution at this residue results in escape from CBH-2-mediated neutralization in a genotype 1a virus. These results highlight the challenges inherent in developing HCV vaccines and show that an effective vaccine must induce antibodies to both conserved and more invariant epitopes to minimize virus escape.
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