| Literature DB >> 15210799 |
Andrew I Webb1, Natalie A Borg, Michelle A Dunstone, Lars Kjer-Nielsen, Travis Beddoe, James McCluskey, Francis R Carbone, Stephen P Bottomley, Marie-Isabel Aguilar, Anthony W Purcell, Jamie Rossjohn.
Abstract
Polymorphism within the MHC not only affects peptide specificity but also has a critical influence on the T cell repertoire; for example, the CD8 T cell response toward an immunodominant HSV glycoprotein B peptide is more diverse and of higher avidity in H-2(bm8) compared with H-2(b) mice. We have examined the basis for the selection of these distinct antiviral T cell repertoires by comparing the high-resolution structures of K(b) and K(bm8), in complex with cognate peptide Ag. Although K(b) and K(bm8) differ by four residues within the Ag-binding cleft, the most striking difference in the two structures was the disparate conformation adopted by the shared residue, Arg(62). The altered dynamics of Arg(62), coupled with a small rigid-body movement in the alpha(1) helix encompassing this residue, correlated with biased Valpha usage in the B6 mice. Moreover, an analysis of all known TCR/MHC complexes reveals that Arg(62) invariably interacts with the TCR CDR1alpha loop. Accordingly, Arg(62) appears to function as a conformational switch that may govern T cell selection and protective immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15210799 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.173.1.402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422