Abstract

Sixteen overlapping fragments of the dengue-2 virus envelope (E) protein, expressed as trpE-E fusion products in Escherichia coli, were used to map the epitopes defined by a panel of 20 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) by immunoblotting. Using this technique, the amino acid sequence of six antigenic domains on the E protein was characterized. Nonneutralizing MAbs were found to define either linear-specific, subcomplex-specific (amino acids 22–58), and complex-specific (amino acids 304–332) epitopes or a subcomplex conformational-dependent epitope requiring the presence of two closely linked amino acid sequences from the E protein, 60–97 and 298–397. Neutralizing MAbs, however, defined either group-reactive epitopes present on two overlapping domains (amino acids 60–135; amino acids 60–205) or type-, subcomplex-, complex-, subgroup-, and group-specific determinants (amino acids 298–397). These neutralizing epitopes were all found to be dependent upon disulfide bridges. Our results suggest that the maintenance of a topographical arrangement of discontinuous antigenic domains in the flavivirus E-protein is necessary to induce neutralizing and protective antibodies.

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