Lipopeptide particles as the immunologically active component of CTL inducing vaccines

1999 
Abstract Using a bipalmitoylated lipopeptide consisting of an ovalbumin helper T-cell epitope covalently linked to an influenza virus cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope, we addressed possible factors that may be critical for CTL induction. Antigen processing of lipopeptide appears to be required for T-cell induction since there was virtually no in vitro binding of lipopeptide to purified MHC molecules. A major portion of lipopeptide immunogenicity was due to its particulate nature inasmuch as CTL induction in mice correlated with insoluble lipopeptide constructs, whereas more soluble analogs were significantly less immunogenic. Immunohistological analysis of tissue from immunized animals revealed that lipopeptide migration from the s.c. injection site to the spleen could be detected as early as 1 h after immunization and cell-associated lipopeptide was observed on macrophages and dendritic cells, implicating both cell populations in the processing and presentation of lipopeptide particles to CTLs.
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