<div><p>Current knowledge about the dynamics of antigen presentation to T cells during viral infection is very poor despite being of fundamental importance to our understanding of anti-viral immunity. Here we use an advanced mass spectrometry method to simultaneously quantify the presentation of eight vaccinia virus peptide-MHC complexes (epitopes) on infected cells and the amounts of their source antigens at multiple times after infection. The results show a startling 1000-fold range in abundance as well as strikingly different kinetics across the epitopes monitored. The tight correlation between onset of protein expression and epitope display for most antigens provides the strongest support to date that antigen presentation is largely lin...
Despite the importance of vaccinia virus in basic and applied immunology, our knowledge of the human...
<div><p>The immune system rapidly responds to intracellular infections by detecting MHC class I rest...
The CD8+ T cell response is essential for defence of mammals against pathogens and tumours, but its ...
The magnitude of T cell responses to infection is a function of the naïve T cell repertoire combined...
CD8+ T cells are essential effectors in antiviral immunity, recognizing short virus-derived peptides...
Distinguishing T cell epitope distribution patterns is relevant for epitope-vaccine design. To that ...
The generation of antigen-specific reagents is a signifi-cant bottleneck in the study of complex pat...
Viral peptides are presented by HLA class I on infected cells to activate CD8(+) T cells. Several im...
Understanding the absolute quantities of MHC-bound epitopes (pMHC) presented on the surface of cells...
<p>DC2.4 cells were infected with VACV strain WR-NP-S-GFP (A) or WR (B) and presentation of MHC clas...
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) delivers the viral proteolytic products gen...
The degradation of HIV-derived proteins into epitopes displayed by MHC-I or MHC-II are the first eve...
Viruses that naturally infect cells expressing both MHC I and MHC II molecules render themselves pot...
Viruses that naturally infect cells expressing both MHC I and MHC II molecules render themselves pot...
Class II MHC proteins bind peptides and present them to CD4 (+) T cells as part of the immune system...
Despite the importance of vaccinia virus in basic and applied immunology, our knowledge of the human...
<div><p>The immune system rapidly responds to intracellular infections by detecting MHC class I rest...
The CD8+ T cell response is essential for defence of mammals against pathogens and tumours, but its ...
The magnitude of T cell responses to infection is a function of the naïve T cell repertoire combined...
CD8+ T cells are essential effectors in antiviral immunity, recognizing short virus-derived peptides...
Distinguishing T cell epitope distribution patterns is relevant for epitope-vaccine design. To that ...
The generation of antigen-specific reagents is a signifi-cant bottleneck in the study of complex pat...
Viral peptides are presented by HLA class I on infected cells to activate CD8(+) T cells. Several im...
Understanding the absolute quantities of MHC-bound epitopes (pMHC) presented on the surface of cells...
<p>DC2.4 cells were infected with VACV strain WR-NP-S-GFP (A) or WR (B) and presentation of MHC clas...
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) delivers the viral proteolytic products gen...
The degradation of HIV-derived proteins into epitopes displayed by MHC-I or MHC-II are the first eve...
Viruses that naturally infect cells expressing both MHC I and MHC II molecules render themselves pot...
Viruses that naturally infect cells expressing both MHC I and MHC II molecules render themselves pot...
Class II MHC proteins bind peptides and present them to CD4 (+) T cells as part of the immune system...
Despite the importance of vaccinia virus in basic and applied immunology, our knowledge of the human...
<div><p>The immune system rapidly responds to intracellular infections by detecting MHC class I rest...
The CD8+ T cell response is essential for defence of mammals against pathogens and tumours, but its ...