Antibodies to Respiratory Syncytial Virus Polypeptides and their Significance in Human Infection

Abstract
Summary The human antibody response to respiratory syncytial (RS) virus infection was investigated using radioimmunoprecipitation analysis (RIPA). A total of nine RS virus-specific proteins, VP200, VGP95, VP68, VGP48, VPN41, VP35, VP27, VP23 and VGP20 were identified by comparing 35S- or 3H-labelled extracts of infected and uninfected HEp-2 cells, and by radioimmunoprecipitation using a hyperimmune human serum. Three glycopeptides, VGP95, VGP48 and VGP20, were identified by incorporation of [3H]glucosamine, and two of these (VGP48 and VGP20) were assumed to be part of a single disulphide-bonded polypeptide since they were precipitated by a monoclonal antibody raised against a surface protein. Human serum antibodies to three major RS virus proteins, VGP95, VGP48/VGP20 and VPN41 were measured by RIPA using radioiodinated RS virus antigens. Sera from a group of mothers whose babies escaped RS virus infection during a local epidemic showed increased antibody levels to VPN41 when compared to sera from mothers whose babies had become infected with RS virus within the first 6 months of life. In infants who remained uninfected with RS virus during the first 12 months of life the maternal gift of antibody decayed to about 50% at 3 months with traces of antibodies detected in a few sera at 12 months. The antibody levels detected in the sera of infants less than 3 months old convalescent from primary RS virus infection did not exceed the mean levels present in the serum of uninfected babies. Infants between the ages of 6 and 12 months were able to mount an IgG response to VPN41 and VGP48 but, unlike adults and older children, a particularly striking finding was their failure to produce antibodies to VGP95.