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  • Title: Minimal T-cell-stimulatory sequences and spectrum of HLA restriction of immunodominant CD4+ T-cell epitopes within hepatitis C virus NS3 and NS4 proteins.
    Author: Gerlach JT, Ulsenheimer A, Grüner NH, Jung MC, Schraut W, Schirren CA, Heeg M, Scholz S, Witter K, Zahn R, Vogler A, Zachoval R, Pape GR, Diepolder HM.
    Journal: J Virol; 2005 Oct; 79(19):12425-33. PubMed ID: 16160170.
    Abstract:
    The hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD4+ T-cell response against nonstructural proteins is strongly associated with successful viral clearance during acute hepatitis C. To further develop these observations into peptide-based vaccines and clinical immunomonitoring tools like HLA class II tetramers, a detailed characterization of immunodominant CD4+ T-cell epitopes is required. We studied peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 20 patients with acute hepatitis C using 83 overlapping 20-mer peptides covering the NS3 helicase and NS4. Eight peptides were recognized by > or = 40% of patients, and specific CD4+ T-cell clones were obtained for seven of these and three additional, subdominant epitopes. Mapping of minimal stimulatory sequences defined epitopes of 8 to 13 amino acids in length, but optimal T-cell stimulation was observed with 10- to 15-mers. While some epitopes were presented by different HLA molecules, others were presented by only a single HLA class II molecule, which has implications for patient selection in clinical trials of peptide-based immunotherapies. In conclusion, using two different approaches we identified and characterized a set of CD4+ T-cell epitopes in the HCV NS3-NS4 region which are immunodominant in patients achieving transient or persistent viral control. This information allows the construction of a valuable panel of HCV-specific HLA class II tetramers for further study of CD4+ T-cell responses in chronic hepatitis C. The finding of immunodominant epitopes with very constrained HLA restriction has implications for patient selection in clinical trials of peptide-based immunotherapies.
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