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A naturally selected dimorphism within the HLA-B44 supertype alters class I structure,peptide repertoire,and T cell recognition
Authors:Macdonald Whitney A  Purcell Anthony W  Mifsud Nicole A  Ely Lauren K  Williams David S  Chang Linus  Gorman Jeffrey J  Clements Craig S  Kjer-Nielsen Lars  Koelle David M  Burrows Scott R  Tait Brian D  Holdsworth Rhonda  Brooks Andrew G  Lovrecz George O  Lu Louis  Rossjohn Jamie  McCluskey James
Affiliation:Dept. of Microbiology and Immunology, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Abstract:HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 are naturally occurring MHC class I alleles that are both found at a high frequency in all human populations, and yet they only differ by one residue on the alpha2 helix (B*4402 Asp156-->B*4403 Leu156). CTLs discriminate between HLA-B*4402 and B*4403, and these allotypes stimulate strong mutual allogeneic responses reflecting their known barrier to hemopoeitic stem cell transplantation. Although HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 share >95% of their peptide repertoire, B*4403 presents more unique peptides than B*4402, consistent with the stronger T cell alloreactivity observed toward B*4403 compared with B*4402. Crystal structures of B*4402 and B*4403 show how the polymorphism at position 156 is completely buried and yet alters both the peptide and the heavy chain conformation, relaxing ligand selection by B*4403 compared with B*4402. Thus, the polymorphism between HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 modifies both peptide repertoire and T cell recognition, and is reflected in the paradoxically powerful alloreactivity that occurs across this "minimal" mismatch. The findings suggest that these closely related class I genes are maintained in diverse human populations through their differential impact on the selection of peptide ligands and the T cell repertoire.
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