Establishment and application of human papillomavirus type 16 pseudovirions neutralization assay.
- Author:
Wu-Xun LU
1
;
Tong CHENG
;
Shao-Wei LI
;
Hui-Rong PAN
;
Wen-Tong SHEN
;
Yi-Xin CHEN
;
Tao ZHANG
;
Zhou ZHENG
;
Jun ZHANG
;
Ning-Shao XIA
Author Information
1. National Institute of Diagnostics and Vaccine Development in Infectious Diseases, School of Life Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Animals;
Antibodies, Monoclonal;
immunology;
Biomimetics;
Cell Line;
Epitopes;
immunology;
Human papillomavirus 16;
immunology;
physiology;
Lipids;
genetics;
Neutralization Tests;
Transfection;
Viral Vaccines;
immunology;
Virion;
immunology
- From:
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology
2006;22(6):990-995
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are causally associated with cervical cancer and genital warts. Lack of permissive and productive cell cultures for HPV has hindered the study of HPV and evaluation of virus-neutralizing antibodies. So generation of infectious virions in vitro is highly desirable. In this report, we got high titer infectious HPV16 pseudovirions by calcium phosphate co-transfection of codon optimized HPV16 capsid genes L1 and L2 and reporter plasmids into 293FT cell line. Electron micrograph indicated that the pseudovirions were morphologically similar with the intact HPV16 virions. To evaluate the feasibility of using the pseudovirions to identify neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), pseudovirions were incubated with 2-fold gradient dilution of the well identified mAbs V5, E70, U4 and D9 and then used to infect 293FT cells preplated in 96-well tissue culture plate. The infection of pseudovirions could be inhibited by neutralizing mAbs V5, E70 and U4 that recognize surface conformational epitopes on L1 VLP, but not by mAb D9 that is reactive to a linear epitope buried in VLP, which indicated that the pseudovirions could be used to evaluate the neutralization efficiency of mono- and polyclonal antibodies. The pseudovirions were then employed to identify neutralizing mAbs from 18 mAbs generated previously in our lab, 8 of which were conformational and 10 were linear. PD1 and 3D10, both of which recognized conformational epitopes on L1 VLP, had obviously strong neutralizing efficiency, with the neutralizing titer reached 81,920 and 20,480 respectively, while none of the linear mAbs were neutralizing, which reflected that rare linear mAbs have neutralization activity. The mechanism of PD1 and 3D10 block the infection of HPV16 pseudovirions need to be further studied. The technologies about generation of HPV16 pseudovirions and screening neutralizing mAb in our report are economical and efficient, can be easily used in large scale. They pave the way for rapid and precise evaluation of the protection efficiency of our prophylactic HPV vaccine being developed now.