R. Schirmbeck et al., Truncated or chimeric endogenous protein antigens gain immunogenicity for B cells by stress protein-facilitated expression, EUR J IMMUN, 29(5), 1999, pp. 1740-1749
Truncated Variants of the SV40 large T antigen (T-Ag) with an intact N term
inus are as efficiently expressed in eukaryotic transfectants as wild-type
(wt) T-Ag. Coprecipitation of N-terminal T-Ag fragments with the constituti
vely expressed, cytosolic stress protein hsp73 suggests that this chaperone
stabilized expression of the truncated T-Ag fragments. In contrast to T-Ag
, the 163-residue N-terminal preS domain of the hepatitis B surface antigen
(HBsAg) is difficult to express. When the preS domain is C-terminally fuse
d to a hsp73-binding cytoplasmic T-Ag (cT-Ag) fragment its stable expressio
n as. a chimeric cT-preS protein is obtained. DNA-based vaccination with pl
asmid DNA encoding either wt or hsp-associated mutant T-Ag elicited potent
MHC class I-restricted, T-Ag-specific T cell responses. In contrast, DNA Va
ccination with hsp73-binding (mutant or chimeric) T-Ag variants, but not wi
th wt T-Ag elicited T-Ag-specific antibody responses. Furthermore, vaccinat
ion with cT-preS-encoding plasmid DNA induced antibodies binding to the pre
S domain of the large HBsAg. Hence, hsp73-bound endogenous antigens efficie
ntly stimulate antibody responses. These findings may be relevant for tumor
immunology and autoimmunity.