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Journal of General Virology (2000), 81, 119-127.
© 2000 Society for General Microbiology


Animal: RNA Viruses

Mapping of epitopes and structural analysis of antigenic sites in the nucleoprotein of rabies virus

Hideo Gotob,1, Nobuyuki Minamoto1, Hiroshi Ito1, Naoto Itob,1, Makoto Sugiyama1, Toshio Kinjo1 and Akihiko Kawai2

Department of Veterinary Public Health, Faculty of Agriculture, Gifu University, 1-1 Yanagido, Gifu 501-1193, Japan1
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku 606, Kyoto, Japan2

Author for correspondence: Nobuyuki Minamoto. Fax +81 58 293 2948. e-mail minamoto{at}cc.gifu-u.ac.jp

Linear epitopes on the rabies virus nucleoprotein (N) recognized by six MAbs raised against antigenic sites I (MAbs 6-4, 12-2 and 13-27) and IV (MAbs 6-9, 7-12 and 8-1) were investigated. Based on our previous studies on sites I and IV, 24 consecutively overlapping octapeptides and N- and C-terminal-deleted mutant N proteins were prepared. Results showed that all three site I epitopes studied and two site IV epitopes (for MAbs 8-1 and 6-9) mapped to aa 358–367, and that the other site IV epitope of MAb 7-12 mapped to aa 375–383. Tests using chimeric and truncated proteins showed that MAb 8-1 also requires the N-terminal sequence of the N protein to recognize its binding region more efficiently. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that all three site I-specific MAbs and one site IV-specific MAb (7-12) stained the N antigen that was diffusely distributed in the whole cytoplasm; the other two site IV-specific MAbs (6-9 and 8-1) detected only the N antigen in the cytoplasmic inclusion bodies (CIB). An antigenic site II-specific MAb (6-17) also detected CIB-associated N antigen alone. Furthermore, the level of diffuse N antigens decreased after treatment of infected cells with cycloheximide. These results suggest that epitopes at site I are expressed on the immature form of the N protein, but epitope structures of site IV MAbs 6-9 and 8-1 are created and/or exposed only after maturation of the N protein.







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