Literature DB >> 10823832

Thermodynamic stability of HLA-B*2705. Peptide complexes. Effect of peptide and major histocompatibility complex protein mutations.

S Dédier1, S Reinelt, T Reitinger, G Folkers, D Rognan.   

Abstract

Designing synthetic vaccines from class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-binding antigenic peptides requires not only knowledge of the binding affinity of the designed peptide but also predicting the stability of the formed MHC-peptide complex. In order to better investigate structure-stability relationships, we have determined by circular dichroism spectroscopy the thermal stability of a class I MHC protein, HLA-B*2705, in complex with a set of 39 singly substituted peptide analogues. The influence of two anchoring side chains (P3 and P9) was studied by peptide mutation and appropriate site-directed mutagenesis of the HLA-B*2705 binding groove. The side chain at P9 is clearly the one that contributes the most to the thermal stability of the MHC-peptide complexes, as destabilization up to 25 degrees C are obtained after P9 mutation. Interestingly, structure-stability relationships do not fully mirror structure-binding relationships. As important as the C-terminal side chain are the terminal ammonium and carboxylate groups. Removal of a single H-bond between HLA-B27 and the terminal peptide moieties results in thermal destabilization up to 10 degrees C. Depending on the bound peptide and the location of the deleted H-bond, the decrease in the thermal stability of the corresponding complex is quantitatively different. The present study suggests that any peptidic amino acid at positions 3 and 9 promotes refolding of the B27-peptide complex. Once the complex is formed, the C-terminal side chain seems to play an important role for maintaining a stable complex.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10823832     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M002777200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  4 in total

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3.  A comprehensive analysis of teleost MHC class I sequences.

Authors:  Unni Grimholt; Kentaro Tsukamoto; Teruo Azuma; Jong Leong; Ben F Koop; Johannes M Dijkstra
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4.  Natural MHC class I polymorphism controls the pathway of peptide dissociation from HLA-B27 complexes.

Authors:  Kathrin Winkler; Anja Winter; Christine Rueckert; Barbara Uchanska-Ziegler; Ulrike Alexiev
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2007-06-15       Impact factor: 4.033

  4 in total

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