Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a ubiquitous human pathogen that infects 40 to 90% of adult human populations. HCMV infections are often asymptomatic in healthy individuals but can cause severe organ and life-threatening disease in immunocompromised patients. The antiviral antibody response to HCMV infection is complex and is known to include virus-neutralizing antibody production against surface glycoproteins encoded by HCMV. We have investigated the human antibody response to a complex of HCMV surface glycoproteins composed of glycoprotein M (gM)/gN, the gene products of the UL100 and UL73 open reading frames. Mouse monoclonal antibodies generated against gM/gN have previously been shown to neutralize HCMV infection of human fibroblasts in vitro. To determine whether human antibodies reactive with the gM/gN complex possess virus-neutralizing properties, we isolated human antibodies reactive with gM/gN from pooled human HCMV hyperimmune globulin by affinity purification using recombinant gM/gN. The affinity-purified human anti-gM/gN antibodies reacted specifically by immunofluorescence with HCMV-infected human fibroblasts and with cells transiently expressing gM/gN, but not with cells transfected with plasmids encoding other immunogenic HCMV proteins. The anti-gM/gN antibodies also reacted specifically only with gM/gN in immunoblot assays using lysates of transfected cells expressing specific HCMV proteins. Last, human anti-gM/gN antibodies efficiently neutralized infectious HCMV in vitro with a capacity comparable to that of human anti-gB antibodies. These data indicated that gM/gN can elicit a virus-neutralizing antibody response in humans infected with HCMV and therefore should be considered a potential candidate for inclusion in prophylactic CMV vaccines.

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