| Literature DB >> 34581761 |
Andrea T Nguyen1,2, Christopher Szeto1,2, Stephanie Gras1,2.
Abstract
Human leukocyte antigens (HLA) are cell-surface proteins that present peptides to T cells. These peptides are bound within the peptide binding cleft of HLA, and together as a complex, are recognised by T cells using their specialised T cell receptors. Within the cleft, the peptide residue side chains bind into distinct pockets. These pockets ultimately determine the specificity of peptide binding. As HLAs are the most polymorphic molecules in humans, amino acid variants in each binding pocket influences the peptide repertoire that can be presented on the cell surface. Here, we review each of the 6 HLA binding pockets of HLA class I (HLA-I) molecules. The binding specificity of pockets B and F are strong determinants of peptide binding and have been used to classify HLA into supertypes, a useful tool to predict peptide binding to a given HLA. Over the years, peptide binding prediction has also become more reliable by using binding affinity and mass spectrometry data. Crystal structures of peptide-bound HLA molecules provide a means to interrogate the interactions between binding pockets and peptide residue side chains. We find that most of the bound peptides from these structures conform to binding motifs determined from prediction software and examine outliers to learn how these HLAs are stabilised from a structural perspective.Entities:
Keywords: HLA; HLA classification; epitope presentation; peptide; peptide binding motif
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34581761 PMCID: PMC8589423 DOI: 10.1042/BST20210410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1.HLA pockets representation.
(A) Surface representation of a HLA molecule (white) with the pockets within the cleft shown in different colours. Pocket A (orange), B (red), C (cyan), D (green), E (purple), F (brown) and the peptide shown as a cartoon in white. (B) Peptide represented as a black cartoon with primary anchor residues P2 and PΩ shown as stick against the α1-helix of the HLA shown as a white cartoon. (C) The A pocket of the HLA represented by an orange surface with the residues making up the pocket shown as orange sticks and the surrounding residues represented by a white cartoon. The P1 residue of the peptide is represented by black spheres nested into the A pocket. (D) The B pocket of the HLA represented by a red surface with the residues making up the pocket shown as red sticks and the surrounding residues represented by a white cartoon. The primary anchor P2 residue of the peptide is represented by black spheres. (E) The C pocket of the HLA represented by a cyan surface and residues as sticks, while the D pocket is represented by a green surface with the residues making up the D pocket shown as green sticks. The P3 and P5 of the peptide is represented by black spheres. (F) The F pocket of the HLA represented by a brown surface with the residues making up the pocket shown as brown sticks and the surrounding residues represented by a white cartoon. The PΩ of the peptide is represented by black spheres.
Residues forming the HLA class I molecule pockets
| Residues | Role of the pocket | |
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| 5, 7, 59, 63, 66, 159, 163, 167, 171 | Wall of the N-terminal part of the binding cleft, bind P1 residue |
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| 7, 9, 24, 34, 45, 63, 66, 67, 70, 99 | Bind primary anchor residue P2 |
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| 9, 70, 73, 74, 97 | Bind secondary anchor residue at P3 and P5/P6 when presents, face pocket D |
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| 99, 114, 155, 156, 159, 160 | Bind secondary anchor residue at P3 and P5/P6 when presents, face pocket C |
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| 97, 114, 147, 152, 156 | Overlap with C/D pockets and contact secondary anchor residue at P5/P6 when presents and the C-terminal part of the peptide |
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| 77, 80, 81, 84, 95, 123, 143, 146, 147 | Bind primary anchor residue PΩ, wall of the C-terminal part of the binding cleft |
Figure 2.HLA polymorphism impacts on peptide presentation and binding.
(A) The α1-helix of HLA-B*08:01 shown as a white cartoon with the residues interacting with the QIK peptide (salmon cartoon) shown as stick. The P5 of the QIK peptide is shown as stick, forming salt bridges (red dashed lines) with the Asp9 and Asp74 of the HLA molecule. (B) Overlay of HLA-B*42:01 (green cartoon) and HLA-B*81:01(yellow cartoon) each presenting the TL9 peptide, in a distinct conformation, shown as cartoon (green and yellow, respectively) with P5, P6 and P7 of the peptide shown as stick. (C) Overlay of HLA-B*18:01(orange cartoon), HLA-B*37:01 (pink cartoon) and HLA-B*44:05 (purple cartoon) presenting the FED peptide shown as cartoon (orange, pink and purple, respectively) with P4 and P5 of each peptide shown as stick. (D) Distribution of preferred peptide residues located into the B and F pockets of HLA-A*02:01 using Seq2logo2.0 [69]. (E) HLA-A*02:01 (white cartoon) with select residues shown as stick presenting the RQA peptide (green cartoon) with P1 shown as stick and P4 represented as an orange stick. The P4-S phosphorylated is represented as stick forming hydrogen bonds (black dashed lines) with the R65 from the HLA and the P1-R from the peptide. (F) HLA-B*57:01 (white cartoon) presenting the RVA peptide (orange cartoon) with the PΩ shown as stick, in the presence of Abacavir in the F pocket of the HLA (yellow stick).
HLA class I supertype classification
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Alleles in red indicate an HLA allele that has changed supertype classification.
‘Consensus PCA' shows only alleles that are unique for ‘Consensus PCA' relative to ‘Hierarchical clustering' from [31].
‘Protein-based' shows only alleles that are unique for ‘Protein Based' allele classification relative to ‘Peptide Distance' from [30].
Peptide-HLA structures with unfavoured primary anchor residues
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Peptides shown in red have both pockets B and F with unfavoured primary anchor residues.