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      Specificity of serum neutralizing antibodies induced by transient immune suppression of inapparent carrier ponies infected with a neutralization-resistant equine infectious anemia virus envelope strain.

      The Journal of General Virology
      Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Animals, Outbred Strains, Antibodies, Viral, blood, Carrier State, veterinary, Equine Infectious Anemia, virology, Glycoproteins, genetics, immunology, Horses, Immunocompromised Host, Infectious Anemia Virus, Equine, Molecular Sequence Data, Neutralization Tests, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Sequence Alignment, Viral Envelope Proteins

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          Abstract

          It has been previously reported that transient corticosteroid immune suppression of ponies experimentally infected with a highly neutralization resistant envelope variant of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), designated EIAV(DeltaPND), resulted in the appearance of type-specific serum antibodies to the infecting EIAV(DeltaPND) virus. The current study was designed to determine if this induction of serum neutralizing antibodies was associated with changes in the specificity of envelope determinants targeted by serum antibodies or caused by changes in the nature of the antibodies targeted to previously defined surface envelope gp90 V3 and V4 neutralization determinants. To address this question, the envelope determinants of neutralization by post-immune suppression serum were mapped. The results demonstrated that the neutralization sensitivity to post-immune suppression serum antibodies mapped specifically to the surface envelope gp90 V3 and V4 domains, individually or in combination. Thus, these data indicate that the development of serum neutralizing antibodies to the resistant EIAV(DeltaPND) was due to an enhancement of host antibody responses caused by transient immune suppression and the associated increase in virus replication.

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