[HTML][HTML] Crossreactive T cells spotlight the germline rules for αβ T cell-receptor interactions with MHC molecules

S Dai, ES Huseby, K Rubtsova, J Scott-Browne… - Immunity, 2008 - cell.com
S Dai, ES Huseby, K Rubtsova, J Scott-Browne, F Crawford, WA Macdonald, P Marrack…
Immunity, 2008cell.com
To test whether highly crossreactive αβ T cell receptors (TCRs) produced during limited
negative selection best illustrate evolutionarily conserved interactions between TCR and
major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, we solved the structures of three TCRs
bound to the same MHC II peptide (IA b-3K). The TCRs had similar affinities for IA b-3K but
varied from noncrossreactive to extremely crossreactive with other peptides and MHCs.
Crossreactivity correlated with a shrinking, increasingly hydrophobic TCR-ligand interface …
Summary
To test whether highly crossreactive αβ T cell receptors (TCRs) produced during limited negative selection best illustrate evolutionarily conserved interactions between TCR and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, we solved the structures of three TCRs bound to the same MHC II peptide (IAb-3K). The TCRs had similar affinities for IAb-3K but varied from noncrossreactive to extremely crossreactive with other peptides and MHCs. Crossreactivity correlated with a shrinking, increasingly hydrophobic TCR-ligand interface, involving fewer TCR amino acids. A few CDR1 and CDR2 amino acids dominated the most crossreactive TCR interface with MHC, including Vβ8 48Y and 54E and Vα4 29Y, arranged to impose the familiar diagonal orientation of TCR on MHC. These interactions contribute to MHC binding by other TCRs using related V regions, but not usually so dominantly. These data show that crossreactive TCRs can spotlight the evolutionarily conserved features of TCR-MHC interactions and that these interactions impose the diagonal docking of TCRs on MHC.
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