| Literature DB >> 15849183 |
Fleur E Tynan1, Natalie A Borg, John J Miles, Travis Beddoe, Diah El-Hassen, Sharon L Silins, Wendy J M van Zuylen, Anthony W Purcell, Lars Kjer-Nielsen, James McCluskey, Scott R Burrows, Jamie Rossjohn.
Abstract
Although HLA class I alleles can bind epitopes up to 14 amino acids in length, little is known about the immunogenicity or the responding T-cell repertoire against such determinants. Here, we describe an HLA-B*3508-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocyte response to a 13-mer viral epitope (LPEPLPQGQLTAY). The rigid, centrally bulged epitope generated a biased T-cell response. Only the N-terminal face of the peptide bulge was critical for recognition by the dominant clonotype SB27. The SB27 public T-cell receptor (TcR) associated slowly onto the complex between the bulged peptide and the major histocompatibility complex, suggesting significant remodeling upon engagement. The broad antigen-binding cleft of HLA-B*3508 represents a critical feature for engagement of the public TcR, as the narrower binding cleft of HLA-B*3501(LPEPLPQGQLTAY), which differs from HLA-B*3508 by a single amino acid polymorphism (Arg156 --> Leu), interacted poorly with the dominant TcR. Biased TcR usage in this cytotoxic T lymphocyte response appears to reflect a dominant role of the prominent peptide x major histocompatibility complex class I surface.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15849183 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M503060200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157