Nucleocapsid specific T and B cell responses in humans after rabies vaccination

The importance of the immune response directed to the internal component of the rabies virus, the nucleocapsid (NC), was evaluated in humans after rabies vaccination. T cell activation was measured with a bulk proliferative assay and relative frequencies of circulating NC-specific PBL were calculate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virus research 1992-06, Vol.24 (1), p.77-89
Hauptverfasser: Herzog, Monika, Lafage, Mireille, Montaño-Hirose, Juan Antonio, Fritzell, Chantal, Scott-Algara, Daniel, Lafon, Monique
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The importance of the immune response directed to the internal component of the rabies virus, the nucleocapsid (NC), was evaluated in humans after rabies vaccination. T cell activation was measured with a bulk proliferative assay and relative frequencies of circulating NC-specific PBL were calculated with the limiting dilution technique. Vaccinees were classified into two groups: NC responders and NC non-responders. In NC responders, the frequency of NC-specific circulating lymphocytes was up to 6 times higher than the frequency of virus-specific lymphocytes. In non-responders, NC-specific lymphocytes were up to 25 times less common than virus-specific ones. The NC capacity to induce a secondary antibody response was tested in vitro. After a stimulation with complete virus, lymphocytes originating from donors vaccinated with tissue culture vaccine produced a secondary antibody-response composed mainly of glycoprotein-specific neutralizing antibodies, whereas lymphocytes from suckling mouse brain vaccinees produced essentially NC-specific antibodies. This result confirmed the serological status of suckling mouse brain vaccinees, who usually developed high titres of NC-specific antibodies. After an in vitro NC stimulation, lymphocytes collected from NC responders produced not only NC-specific antibodies, provided they have NC-specific B cells at the time of blood sampling, but most surprisingly, they also produce glycoprotein-specific neutralizing antibodies. This finding indicates that NC free of glycoprotein is capable, in some individuals, of boosting an heterologous glycoprotein response.
ISSN:0168-1702
1872-7492
DOI:10.1016/0168-1702(92)90032-5