A group of infection-enhancing and focus size-reducing monoclonal antibodies recognized an ‘a and c’ strands epitope in the pr domain of Dengue Virus prM

Partial cleavage of a dengue virus envelope protein, prM, by furin results in a mixture of extracellular particles with variable levels of maturation and infectivity. Partially mature particles can infect leukocytes via interaction between the prM-anti-prM antibody complex with Fcγ receptors. Known...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Keelapang P.
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/81955
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Institution: Mahidol University
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Summary:Partial cleavage of a dengue virus envelope protein, prM, by furin results in a mixture of extracellular particles with variable levels of maturation and infectivity. Partially mature particles can infect leukocytes via interaction between the prM-anti-prM antibody complex with Fcγ receptors. Known prM epitopes involved in antibody-mediated infection are localized to the pr domain. In this study, a group of murine anti-prM monoclonal antibodies with strong infection-enhancing activity was found to reduce the focus size of subsets of multiple dengue serotypes that they could enhance. By employing sets of overlapping peptides, four antibodies recognizing 2-mercaptoethanol-insensitive epitopes were mapped to a common tetrapeptide located distantly in the b-c loop and furin binding site. Substitution mutations of each, or both, of the tetrapeptides in virus-like particles, however, failed to reduce binding. Further mapping experiments were performed using immature virus-like particles with abolished furin binding site to minimize the differential influence of various pr substitutions on pr-M cleavage. Reduction of antibody binding was detected when single alanine substitutions were introduced into the ‘a’ strand and ‘c' strand of pr domain. These findings suggest that the pr ‘a and c' strands region is the major binding site of these unusual focus size-reducing anti-prM antibodies.