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Title: Acute resolving woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) infection is associated with a strong cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response to a single WHV core peptide. Author: Frank I, Budde C, Fiedler M, Dahmen U, Viazov S, Lu M, Dittmer U, Roggendorf M. Journal: J Virol; 2007 Jul; 81(13):7156-63. PubMed ID: 17459928. Abstract: Woodchucks infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) are an excellent model for studying acute, self-limited and chronic hepadnaviral infections. Defects in the immunological response leading to chronicity are still unknown. Specific T-helper cell responses to WHV core and surface antigens (WHcAg and WHsAg, respectively) are associated with acute resolving infection; however, they are undetectable in chronic infection. Up to now, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses could not be determined in the woodchuck. In the present study, we detected virus-specific CTL responses by a CD107a degranulation assay. The splenocytes of woodchucks in the postacute phase of WHV infection (18 months postinfection) were isolated and stimulated with overlapping peptides covering the whole WHcAg. After 6 days, the cells were restimulated and stained for CD3 and CD107a. One peptide (c96-110) turned out to be accountable for T-cell expansion and CD107a staining. Later, we applied the optimized degranulation assay to study the kinetics of the T-cell response in acute WHV infection. We found a vigorous T-cell response against peptide c96-110 with peripheral blood cells beginning at the peak of viral load (week 5) and lasting up to 15 weeks postinfection. In contrast, there was no T-cell response against peptide c96-110 detectable in chronically WHV-infected animals. Thus, with this newly established flow cytometric degranulation assay, we detected for the first time virus-specific CTLs and determined one immunodominant epitope of WHcAg in the woodchuck.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]