An HLA‐B35‐restricted epitope modified at an anchor residue results in an antagonist peptide

T Dong, D Boyd, W Rosenberg, N Alp… - European journal of …, 1996 - Wiley Online Library
T Dong, D Boyd, W Rosenberg, N Alp, M Takiguchi, A McMichael, S Rowland‐Jones
European journal of immunology, 1996Wiley Online Library
Peptides associated with HLA‐B35 commonly have a proline or occasionally a serine
residue in the P2 anchor position of the peptide, with a tyrosine at the C terminus. Based on
this motif, we identified an octamer epitope from influenza A matrix protein which is
presented by HLA‐B35. The requirements for MHC binding and T cell receptor contact have
been analyzed using analogs of this peptide with substitutions at positions 1, 2, 4, 7 and 8.
The natural epitope contains a serine residue at P2 of the peptide. Substitution of this …
Abstract
Peptides associated with HLA‐B35 commonly have a proline or occasionally a serine residue in the P2 anchor position of the peptide, with a tyrosine at the C terminus. Based on this motif, we identified an octamer epitope from influenza A matrix protein which is presented by HLA‐B35. The requirements for MHC binding and T cell receptor contact have been analyzed using analogs of this peptide with substitutions at positions 1, 2, 4, 7 and 8. The natural epitope contains a serine residue at P2 of the peptide. Substitution of this residue with proline (the favored amino acid in this position in B35‐associated peptides) considerably enhances binding to HLA‐B35 in the T2‐B35 cell line, but the peptide is not recognized by the majority of CTL clones and can antagonize recognition of the index peptide. This suggests that a conservative substitution at the P2 anchor position results in a conformational change in the peptide‐MHC surface exposed to the T cell receptor.
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