1. Antibodies to human papillomavirus type-16 in human sera as revealed by the use of prokaryotically expressed viral gene products
- Author
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M. Monazahian, Reiner Thomssen, K. Sievert, A. Teichmann, A. Mittelstädt-Deterding, and Heinrich G. Köchel
- Subjects
Adult ,Antigenicity ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Genetic Vectors ,Restriction Mapping ,Biology ,Antibodies, Viral ,Virus ,Serology ,Uterine Cervical Diseases ,Viral Proteins ,Capsid ,Antigen ,Antibody Specificity ,Genital Human Papillomavirus Infection ,Virology ,Escherichia coli ,Humans ,Serologic Tests ,Antigens, Viral ,Papillomaviridae ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Fusion protein ,Tumor Virus Infections ,Immunology ,Humoral immunity ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody - Abstract
Open reading frames of human papillomaviruses were expressed in Escherichia coli as β-galactosidase fusion proteins. These bacterially derived papillomaviral gene products were used to examine sera from 67 women (63 healthy subjects, 4 patients with genital carcinoma) for antibodies to papillomavirus type-16 antigens (El, E2, E4, E5, E6, E7, L1, L2) and the L2 proteins of HPV-6b and HPV-18 by Western-blot analysis. The serologic data were compared with cytological findings classified according to Papanicolaou and with nucleic acid hybridization data from cervical smears of the same individuals. Twenty-three of the normal individuals showed antibodies exclusively directed against L2 gene products; whereas in the sera from the four genital cancer patients, antibodies to the early gene products E4 and/or E7 could be detected. In one case these antibodies were found to be combined with antibodies to L2 of HPV-16 and −18 and in another case with those to El and E2 of HPV-16. In none of the sera examined could antibodies to L1, E5 or E6 be identified. Three of the antibody positive normal women were found to be also positive for HPV-16/18 DNA, while all of the 40 seronegative women were HPV-16/18 DNA negative. These data indicate that serology may be a valuable means to study the epidemiology of genital human papillomavirus infection.
- Published
- 1991