Structural basis for the restoration of TCR recognition of an MHC allelic variant by peptide secondary anchor substitution |
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Authors: | Miley Michael J Messaoudi Ilhem Metzner Beatrix M Wu Yudong Nikolich-Zugich Janko Fremont Daved H |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA. |
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Abstract: | Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I variants H-2K(b) and H-2K(bm8) differ primarily in the B pocket of the peptide-binding groove, which serves to sequester the P2 secondary anchor residue. This polymorphism determines resistance to lethal herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) infection by modulating T cell responses to the immunodominant glycoprotein B(498-505) epitope, HSV8. We studied the molecular basis of these effects and confirmed that T cell receptors raised against K(b)-HSV8 cannot recognize H-2K(bm8)-HSV8. However, substitution of Ser(P2) to Glu(P2) (peptide H2E) reversed T cell receptor (TCR) recognition; H-2K(bm8)-H2E was recognized whereas H-2K(b)-H2E was not. Insight into the structural basis of this discrimination was obtained by determining the crystal structures of all four MHC class I molecules in complex with bound peptide (pMHCs). Surprisingly, we find no concerted pMHC surface differences that can explain the differential TCR recognition. However, a correlation is apparent between the recognition data and the underlying peptide-binding groove chemistry of the B pocket, revealing that secondary anchor residues can profoundly affect TCR engagement through mechanisms distinct from the alteration of the resting state conformation of the pMHC surface. |
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Keywords: | major histocompatibility complex crystallography antigen presentation herpes simplex virus 1 T cells |
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