| Literature DB >> 22403068 |
Herman N Eisen1, Xun Helen Hou, Chase Shen, Kaidi Wang, Varsha Keelara Tanguturi, Crysela Smith, Katerina Kozyrytska, Lakshmi Nambiar, Carol A McKinley, Jianzhu Chen, Richard J Cohen.
Abstract
Algorithms derived from measurements of short-peptide (8-10 mers) binding to class I MHC proteins suggest that the binding groove of a class I MHC protein, such as K(b), can bind well over 1 million different peptides with significant affinity (<500 nM), a level of ligand-binding promiscuity approaching the level of heat shock protein binding of unfolded proteins. MHC proteins can, nevertheless, discriminate between similar peptides and bind many of them with high (nanomolar) affinity. Some insights into this high-promiscuity/high-affinity behavior and its impact on immunodominant peptides in T-cell responses to some infections and vaccination are suggested by results obtained here from testing a model developed to predict the number of cell surface peptide-MHC complexes that form on cells exposed to extracellular (exogenous) peptides.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22403068 PMCID: PMC3311345 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1201586109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205