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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America logoLink to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
. 1989 Nov;86(21):8192–8196. doi: 10.1073/pnas.86.21.8192

Localization of virus-specific and group-specific epitopes of plant potyviruses by systematic immunochemical analysis of overlapping peptide fragments.

D D Shukla 1, G Tribbick 1, T J Mason 1, D R Hewish 1, H M Geysen 1, C W Ward 1
PMCID: PMC298246  PMID: 2479020

Abstract

Virus-specific or group-specific antibody probes to potyviruses can be produced by targeting the immune response to the virus-specific, N-terminal region of the capsid protein (29-95 amino acids depending on the virus) or to the conserved core region (216 amino acids) of the capsid protein, respectively. Immunochemical analysis of overlapping, synthetic octapeptides covering the capsid protein of the Johnsongrass strain of Johnsongrass mosaic virus (JGMV-JG) has delineated the peptide sequences recognized by five polyclonal rabbit antisera and two mouse monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). The antibodies characterized were (i) three virus-specific rabbit polyclonal antisera and one virus-specific mouse mAb (1/25) raised against native virus particles, (ii) one polyclonal antiserum raised against trypsin-derived core particles of JGMV-JG, (iii) one group-specific polyclonal antiserum raised against the denatured, truncated coat protein from trypsin-derived core particles of JGMV-JG, and (iv) one group-specific mouse mAb (1/16) raised against native virus particles. The two epitopes seen by mAb 1/25 occurred at residues 18-27 and 43-52 and overlapped with the two major epitopes seen by the virus-specific polyclonal antiserum. The group-specific epitope seen in JGMV-JG by mAb 1/16 was also recognized strongly in potato virus Y, the type member of the potyvirus group. The multiple epitopes seen by the cross-reactive polyclonal antisera were distributed across the entire core region of the coat protein and their relative antibody binding responses varied between JGMV-JG, potato virus Y, and six other distinct potyviruses.

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Selected References

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