首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The mechanism of assembly/dissociation of a recombinant water-soluble class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) H-2Kb molecule was studied by a real-time fluorescence resonance energy transfer method. Like the H-2Kd ternary complex [Gakamsky et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 14841-14848], the interactions among the heavy chain, beta2-microglobulin (beta2m), and antigenic peptides were found to be controlled by an allosteric mechanism. Association of the heavy chain with beta2m increased peptide binding rate constants by more than 2 orders of magnitude and enhanced affinity of the heavy-chain molecule for peptides. Interaction of peptides with the heavy-chain binding site, in turn, increased markedly the affinity of the heavy chain for beta2m. Binding of peptide variants of the ovalbumin sequence (257-264) to the heavy chain/beta2m heterodimer was found to be a biphasic reaction. The fast phase was a second-order process with nearly the same rate constants as those of binding of peptides derived from the influenza virus nucleoprotein 147-155 to the H-2Kd heavy chain/beta2m heterodimer [(3.0 +/- 1.0) x 10(-6) M-1 s-1 at 37 degrees C]. The slow phase was a result of both the ternary complex assembly from the "free" heavy chain, beta2m, and peptide as well as an intramolecular conformational transition within the heavy chain/beta2m heterodimer to a peptide binding conformation. Biexponential kinetics of peptide or beta2m dissociation from the ternary complex were observed. They suggest that it can exist in two conformations. The rate constants of beta2m dissociation from the H-2Kb ternary complex were, in the limits of experimental accuracy, independent of the structure of the bound peptide, though their affinities differed by an order of magnitude. Dissociation of peptides from the Kb heavy chain was always faster than from the ternary complexes, yet the heavy chain/peptide complexes were considerably more stable compared with their Kd/nucleoprotein peptide counterparts.  相似文献   

2.
Stable, recombinant, water-soluble complexes of HLA-A2 and HLA-B27 were reconstituted from 125I-labeled beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m), a synthetic peptide, and HLA H chain fragments expressed as inclusion bodies in the Escherichia coli cytoplasm. Using this system, we were able to show: 1) the t1/2 of beta 2m dissociation from HLA complexes at 37 degrees C varied from approximately 40 h to less than 1 h, depending on the peptide employed for reconstitution. Peptide length and composition were found to be critical factors in determining the beta 2m dissociation rate. Endogenous peptides form complexes that are about as stable as those formed with typical antigenic peptides. 2) Peptide exchange reactions, in which an exogenous peptide replaces the peptide that is already bound by the class I molecule, proceed readily for complexes that have rapid beta 2m dissociation rates. Thus, difficulties in demonstrating peptide binding to complexes that contain endogenous peptides can be attributed to the stability of the endogenous peptide/class I molecule complex. 3) The peptide exchange reaction does not require concomitant beta 2m dissociation. 4) Distal parts of the class I molecule, which are not directly involved in peptide binding or beta 2m binding, have a major impact on the stability of class I molecules. Thus, these studies show that the dissociation rate of beta 2m is an excellent measure of how tightly a given peptide binds to class I MHC molecules, that the ability to bind peptide is tightly coupled to the binding of beta 2m and vice versa, and that regions of the molecule distal from the binding site influence the stability of peptide binding.  相似文献   

3.
The class I major histocompatibility (MHC) molecule is a heterotrimer composed of a heavy chain, the small subunit beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m), and a peptide. Fluorescence anisotropy has been used to assay the interaction of a labeled peptide with a recombinant, soluble form of the class I MHC HLA-A2. Consistent with earlier work, peptide binding is shown to be a two-step process limited by a conformational rearrangement in the heavy chain/beta(2)m heterodimer. However, we identify two pathways for peptide dissociation from the heterotrimer: (1) initial peptide dissociation leaving a heavy chain/beta(2)m heterodimer and (2) initial dissociation of beta(2)m, followed by peptide dissociation from the heavy chain. Eyring analyses of rate constants measured as a function of temperature permit for the first time a complete thermodynamic characterization of peptide binding. We find that in this case peptide binding is mostly entropically driven, likely reflecting the hydrophobic character of the peptide binding groove and the peptide anchor residues. Thermodynamic and kinetic analyses of peptide-MHC interactions as performed here may be of practical use in the engineering of peptides with desired binding properties and will aid in the interpretation of the effects of MHC and peptide substitutions on peptide binding and T cell reactivity. Finally, our data suggest a role for beta(2)m in dampening conformational dynamics in the heavy chain. Remaining conformational variability in the heavy chain once beta(2)m has bound may be a mechanism to promote promiscuity in peptide binding.  相似文献   

4.
Major histocompatibility (MHC) class I tetramers are used in the quantitative analysis of epitope peptide-specific CD8+ T-cells. An MHC class I tetramer was composed of 4 MHC class I complexes and a fluorescently labeled streptavidin (SA) molecule. Each MHC class I complex consists of an MHC heavy chain, a beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m) molecule and a synthetic epitope peptide. In most previous studies, an MHC class I complex was formed in the refolding buffer with an expressed MHC heavy chain molecule and beta(2)m, respectively. This procedure inevitably resulted in the disadvantages of forming unwanted multimers and self-refolding products, and the purification of each kind of monomer was time-consuming. In the present study, the genes of a human/murine chimeric MHC heavy chain (HLA-A2 alpha1, HLA-A2 alpha2 and MHC-H2D alpha3) and beta(2)m were tandem-cloned into plasmid pET17b and expressed as a fusion protein. The recombinant fusion protein was refolded with each of the three HLA-A2 restricted peptides (HBc18-27 FLPSDFFPSI, HBx52-60 HLSLRGLPV, and HBx92-100 VLHKRTLGL) and thus three chimeric MHC class I complexes were obtained. Biotinylation was performed, and its level of efficiency was observed via a band-shift assay in non-reducing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Such chimeric MHC class I tetramers showed a sensitive binding activity in monitoring HLA/A2 restrictive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in immunized HLA/A*0201 transgenic mice.  相似文献   

5.
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I molecule expression was investigated by DNA-mediated gene transfer. Cell surface expression was increased up to 75% by transfection of HLA-A2 or HLA-B8 heavy chain genes but not genes encoding light chains (beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m)), transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP), or tapasin. Interferon (IFN) treatment further increased expression of transfected heavy chains, suggesting that IFN inducible molecules support heavy chain expression. IFN induces beta(2)m, TAP, and tapasin mRNAs. Transfected heavy chain expression increased upon cotransfection with genes encoding TAP1 and TAP2 but not individual TAP subunits, beta(2)m, or tapasin. Tetracycline inducible heavy chain gene expression was also increased by IFN treatment or TAP cotransfection, suggesting that IFN-induced TAP supports heavy chain maturation. Expression of a mutant that does not interact strongly with TAP, HLA-A2-T134K, was also increased by IFN. Inhibition of TAP-dependent peptide transport by ICP47 reduced heavy chain expression. Expression of HLA-A2, but not HLA-B8, was restored in ICP47 cells by HLA-A2-binding (IP-30) signal peptides. However, these peptides did not further increase transfected HLA-A2 expression, suggesting that peptide availability does not limit heavy chain expression in the absence of ICP47. These results suggest that cytokine-induced TAP supports maturation of HLA class I molecules through combined chaperone and peptide supply functions.  相似文献   

6.
Once MHC class I heavy chain binds beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m) within the endoplasmic reticulum, an assembly complex comprising the class I heterodimer, TAP, TAPasin, calreticulin, and possibly Erp57 is formed before the binding of high affinity peptide. TAP-dependent delivery of high affinity peptide to in vitro translated K(b)beta(2)m complexes within microsomes (TAP(+)/TAPasin(+)) was studied to determine at which point peptide binding becomes resistant to thermal denaturation. It was determined that the thermal stability of K(b)-beta(2)m-peptide complexes depends on the timing of peptide binding to K(b)beta(2)m relative to TAP binding high affinity peptide. Premature exposure of the TAP complex to high affinity peptide before its association with class I heavy chain results in K(b)beta(2)m-peptide-TAP complexes that lose peptide upon exposure to elevated temperature after solubilization away from microsome-associated proteins. These findings suggest that the order in which class I heavy chain associates with endoplasmic reticulum-resident chaperones and peptide determines the stability of K(b)beta(2)m-peptide complexes.  相似文献   

7.
Subunit interactions of class I histocompatibility antigens   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
K C Parker  J L Strominger 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5543-5550
The kinetics of dissociation of iodinated beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) from the papain-solubilized class I histocompatibility antigen HLA-B7 have been investigated. In the presence of unlabeled beta 2m, most of the HLA dissociates according to a single rate constant, whereas in the absence of unlabeled beta 2m, the system approaches an equilibrium dependent upon the initial HLA concentration. When iodinated beta 2m is incubated with unlabeled HLA-B7, the rate of incorporation of beta 2m into the complex is much less dependent on the concentration than is expected for a simple association/dissociation system; instead, the system behaves as if the "activity" (in a thermodynamic sense) of the HLA heavy-chain intermediate cannot surpass a critical concentration. The dissociation rate for each class I specificity is a function of temperature, ionic strength, pH, and the status of the heavy chain (papain solubilized vs. detergent solubilized). High temperature, high ionic strength, and extremes of pH promote dissociation. The intact molecule dissociates about 10 times more slowly than the papain-solubilized molecule. In contrast, the rate of dissociation of all papain-solubilized class I antigens tested falls within the range of about a factor of 2. The presence of the carbohydrate has no effect on the rate of dissociation. The possibility that HLA class I antigen dissociation may occur in vivo within acidic internal vesicles is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Chemical cross-linking and gel permeation chromatography were used to examine early events in the biogenesis of class I histocompatibility molecules. We show that newly synthesized class I heavy chains associate rapidly and quantitatively with an 88-kD protein in three murine tumor cell lines. This protein (p88) does not appear to possess Asn-linked glycans and it is not the abundant ER protein, GRP94. The class I-p88 complex exists transiently (t1/2 = 20-45 min depending on the specific class I heavy chain) and several lines of evidence suggest that p88 dissociates from the complex while still in the ER. Dissociation is not triggered upon binding of beta 2-microglobulin to the heavy chain (t1/2 = 2-5 min). However, the rate of dissociation does correlate with the characteristic rate of ER to Golgi transport for the particular class I molecule studied. Consequently, dissociation of p88 may be rate limiting for ER to Golgi transport. Class I molecules bind antigenic peptides, apparently in the ER, for subsequent presentation to cytotoxic T lymphocytes at the cell surface. p88 could promote peptide binding or it may retain class I molecules in the ER during formation of the ternary complex of heavy chain, beta 2-microglobulin, and peptide.  相似文献   

9.
Thirteen monoclonal antibodies that react with monomorphic determinants on the HLA-A,B,C-beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) molecule were characterized. Analysis of antibody activity included inhibition by papain-solubilized HLA antigens and free beta 2m, antibody binding to mouse-human somatic cell hybrids containing human chromosome 6 or 15, and antibody cross-reactivity with lymphocytes from nonhuman species. Two criteria for monomorphism were established: 1) equal inhibition or absorption of antibody activity by all papain-solubilized HLA antigens or cell lines of different HLA specificities tested; and 2) nonpolymorphic cross-reactivity within another species or subspecies. On the basis of soluble antigen inhibition and binding to somatic cell hybrids, 3 classes of antibodies were detected: anti-beta 2m, anti-heavy chain, and anti-complex (against a combinatorial determinant formed by heavy chain and beta 2m). Antibody cross-reaction patterns in nonhuman species were suggestive that these monomorphic antibodies detect a limited number of determinants, minimally one on each chain and 2 combinatorial determinants. Examination of the known primary sequences for HLA-A2, HLA-B7, H-2Kb, and mouse, rabbit and human beta 2m provides a molecular explanation for this limited mouse anti-HLA monomorphic antibody activity.  相似文献   

10.
Measuring the interaction of class I human leukocyte antigens (HLA) and their peptide epitopes acts as a guide for the development of vaccines, diagnostics, and immune-based therapies. Here, we report the development of a sensitive biochemical assay that relies upon fluorescence polarization to indicate peptide interactions with recombinant soluble HLA proteins. It is a cell- and radioisotope-free assay that has the advantage of allowing the direct, real-time measurement of the ratio between free and bound peptide ligand in solution without separation steps. Peptide/HLA assay parameters were established using several HLA A*0201-specific fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled peptides. Optimal loading of synthetic peptides into fully assembled soluble HLA-A*0201 complexes was enabled by thermal destabilization at 53 degrees C for 15 min, demonstrating that efficient peptide exchange does not require the removal of endogenous peptides from the reaction environment. An optimal ratio of three beta-2 microglobulin molecules per single HLA heavy chain was determined to maximize peptide binding. Kinetic binding studies indicate that soluble HLA-A*0201/peptide interactions are characterized by a range of moderate k(on) values (1 x 10(4) to 8.7 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)) and slow k(off) values (1.9 x 10(-4) to 4.3 x 10(-4) s(-1)), consistent with parameters for native HLA molecules. Testing of the A*0201-specific peptides with 48 additional class I molecules demonstrates that the unique peptide binding behavior of individual HLA molecules is maintained in the assay. This assay therefore represents a versatile tool for characterizing the binding of peptide epitopes during the development of class I HLA-based vaccines and immune therapies.  相似文献   

11.
HLA antigens of both the A and B loci were shown to be associated with the high density lipoprotein fraction of serum prepared by ultracentrifugal flotation. HLA-A9 antigens were purified 100-fold with essentially complete recovery by a simple procedure of high density lipoprotein preparation involving precipitation with polyanions and ultracentrifugal flotation. The purified lipid-associated antigen was immunogenic since it elicited the formation of cytotoxic xenoantibodies in rabbits. Serum HLA-A9 antigens were found by immunoprecipitation and gel electrophoresis to consist of a 45,000 m.w. heavy chain associated with beta2-microglobulin. The size of the HLA-lipid complex (less than 190,000 m.w.) and of the HLA-deoxycholate complex (less than 102,000 m.w.) suggests that HLA antigens are shed into plasma as a complex of a single HLA molecule and a single beta2-microglobulin chain, associated with boundary lipid.  相似文献   

12.
Analysis of antigen dissociation provides insight into peptide presentation modes of folded human leukocyte antigen (HLA) molecules, which consist of a heavy chain, beta2-microglobulin (beta2m), and an antigenic peptide. Here we have monitored peptide-HLA interactions and peptide dissociation kinetics of two HLA-B27 subtypes by fluorescence depolarization techniques. A single natural amino-acid substitution distinguishes the HLA-B*2705 subtype that is associated with the autoimmune disease ankylosing spondylitis from the non-disease-associated HLA-B*2709 subtype. Peptides with C-terminal Arg or Lys represent 27% of the natural B*2705 ligands. Our results show that dissociation of a model peptide with a C-terminal Lys (GRFAAAIAK) follows a two-step mechanism. Final peptide release occurs in the second step for both HLA-B27 subtypes. However, thermodynamics and kinetics of peptide-HLA interactions reveal different molecular mechanisms underlying the first step, as indicated by different activation energies of 95+/-8 kJ/mol (HLA-B*2705) and 150+/-10 kJ/mol (HLA-B*2709). In HLA-B*2709, partial peptide dissociation probably precedes fast final peptide release, while in HLA-B*2705 an allosteric mechanism based on long-range interactions between beta2m and the peptide binding groove controls the first step. The resulting peptide presentation mode lasts for days at physiological temperature, and determines the peptide-HLA-B*2705 conformation, which is recognized by cellular ligands such as T-cell receptors.  相似文献   

13.
Spectral changes and a sixfold increase in the emission intensity were observed in the fluorescence of a single xanthene probe (Texas red) attached to beta2m-microglobulin (beta2m) upon assembly of beta2m into a ternary complex with mouse H-2Kd heavy chain and influenza nuclear protein peptide. Dissociation of the labeled beta2m from the ternary complex restored the probe's fluorescence and absorption spectra and reduced the emission intensity. Thus changes in xanthene probe fluorescence upon association/dissociation of the labeled beta2m molecule with/from the ternary complex provide a simple and convenient method for studying the assembly/dissociation mechanism of the class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) encoded molecule. The photophysical changes in the probe can be accounted for by the oligomerization of free labeled beta2m molecules. The fluorescence at 610 nm is due to beta2m dimers, where the probes are significantly separated spatially so that their emission and excitation properties are close to those of xanthene monomers. Fluorescence around 630 nm is due to beta2m oligomers where xanthene probes interact. Minima in the steady-state excitation (550 nm) and emission (630 nm) anisotropy spectra correlate with the maxima of the high-order oligomer excitation and emission spectra, showing that their fluorescence is more depolarized. These photophysical features are explained by splitting of the first singlet excited state of interacting xanthene probes that can be modeled by exciton theory.  相似文献   

14.
The magnitude of response elicited by CTL-inducing vaccines correlates with the density of MHC class I (MHC-I)-peptide complexes formed on the APC membrane. The MHC-I L chain, beta2-microglobulin (beta2m), governs complex stability. We reasoned that genetically converting beta2m into an integral membrane protein should exert a marked stabilizing effect on the resulting MHC-I molecules and enhance vaccine efficacy. In the present study, we show that expression of membranal human beta2m (hbeta2m) in mouse RMA-S cells elevates MHC-I thermal stability. RMA-S transfectants bind an exogenous peptide at concentrations 10(4)- to 10(6)-fold lower than parental RMA-S, as detected by complex-specific Abs and by T cell activation. Moreover, saturation of the transfectants' MHC-I by exogenous peptide occurs within 1 min, as compared with approximately 1 h required for parental cells. At saturation, however, level of peptide bound by modified cells is only 3- to 5-fold higher. Expression of native hbeta2m only results in marginal effect on the binding profile. Soluble beta2m has no effect on the accelerated kinetics, but the kinetics of transfectants parallel that of parental cells in the presence of Abs to hbeta2m. Ab inhibition and coimmunoprecipitation analyses suggest that both prolonged persistence of peptide-receptive H chain/beta2m heterodimers and fast heterodimer formation via lateral diffusion may contribute to stabilization. In vivo, peptide-loaded transfectants are considerably superior to parental cells in suppressing tumor growth. Our findings support the role of an allosteric mechanism in determining ternary MHC-I complex stability and propose membranal beta2m as a novel scaffold for CTL induction.  相似文献   

15.
HLA-A3-, HLA-B7-, and HLA-CW3-transfected L cells, maintained in medium supplemented with murine serum so as to ensure that the human heavy chains were associated with murine beta 2-microglobulin, were subjected to a systematic serologic analysis for an evaluation of the structural consequences of such an heterologous association. The hybrid molecules exhibited alterations of their serologic reactivities that suggest the occurrence of structural modifications of both light and heavy chains. Thus, reactivity of HLA-A3-, HLA-B7-, and HLA-Cw3-transfected L cells with a monoclonal antibody (B1.1G6) directed at a human beta 2-microglobulin specific antigenic determinant was observed; this implies structural modifications of murine beta 2-microglobulin after its association with HLA class I heavy chains. Conversely, a profound reduction of the reactivity of the same transfectants with a monoclonal antibody (W6/32) directed at a monomorphic heavy chain related epitope was observed. The W6/32 reactivity was restored after replacement of the murine by the human light chain, indicating that the conformation adopted by the HLA class I heavy chain depends on the origin of the beta 2-microglobulin associated. Therefore it appears that the complex interactions that develop between the extracellular domains (including the one formed by the light chain) markedly influence the overall structure and the antigenic properties of HLA class I molecules.  相似文献   

16.
Class I MHC molecules are ternary complexes composed of an allotype specific heavy chain, a noncovalently associated protein beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m), and a peptide. The complexes are assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum by a complex series of chaperones and peptide-loading mechanisms. In the absence of beta(2)m or peptide, very little class I heavy chain is transported to the surface of the cell. Complexes that do not contain all three parts of the protein are not made productively in vivo and not at all in vitro. The ability of the complex to withstand thermal denaturation in vitro has been shown to be related to the binding affinity of the peptide. Paradoxically, some low-affinity peptide complexes denature at or below human basal body temperatures in vitro but are effective biological agents in vivo. Here we show that these complexes are stabilized against thermal denaturation by physiological cosolvents and maximally stabilized by 150 mM NaCl. While the degree of stabilization by 150 mM NaCl is greatest for low-affinity peptide/MHC complexes, the mechanism of stabilization is independent of peptide sequence. This effect is hypothesized to occur by multiple mechanisms including increasing the affinity of beta(2)m for the complex and charge screening.  相似文献   

17.
The three-dimensional structure of the human histocompatibility antigen HLA-A2 was determined at 3.5 A resolution by a combination of isomorphous replacement and iterative real-space averaging of two crystal forms. The monoclinic crystal form has now been refined by least-squares methods to an R-factor of 0.169 for data from 6 to 2.6 A resolution. A superposition of the structurally similar domains found in the heterodimer, alpha 1 onto alpha 2 and alpha 3 onto beta 2m, as well as the latter pair onto the ancestrally related immunoglobulin constant domain, reveals that differences are mainly in the turn regions. Structural features of the alpha 1 and alpha 2 domains, such as conserved salt-bridges that contribute to stability, specific loops that form contacts with other domains, and the antigen-binding groove formed from two adjacent helical regions on top of an eight-stranded beta-sheet, are analyzed. The interfaces between the domains, especially those between beta 2m and the HLA heavy chain presumably involved in beta 2m exchange and heterodimer assembly, are described in detail. A detailed examination of the binding groove confirms that the solvent-accessible amino acid side-chains that are most polymorphic in mouse and human alleles fill up the central and widest portion of the binding groove, while conserved side-chains are clustered at the narrower ends of the groove. Six pockets or sub-sites in the antigen-binding groove, of diverse shape and composition, appear suited for binding side-chains from antigenic peptides. Three pockets contain predominantly non-polar atoms; but others, especially those at the extreme ends of the groove, have clusters of polar atoms in close proximity to the "extra" electron density in the binding site. A possible role for beta 2m in stabilizing permissible peptide complexes during folding and assembly is presented.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of TAP-MHC class I interactions on peptide binding to the class I heavy chain is assessed during TAP-dependent assembly using Kb-specific Abs that recognize conformational changes induced by assembly with beta2-microglobulin (beta2m) and by peptide binding. A significant portion (45%) of Kb molecules in TAP+, RMA-derived microsomes are associated with the TAP complex as measured by coimmunoisolation of Kb using anti-TAP1 Abs, while only 20% of the Kb heavy chain molecules are isolated as Kbbeta2m complexes with the alpha-Kb-specific Abs, Y-3 or K-10-56. The amount of Kb isolated with Y-3 and K-10-56 increases in proportion to transport and binding of peptide to the Kb molecules within the RMA microsomes. In contrast, less than 5% of the Kb within TAP2-RMA-S microsomes associated with the remaining TAP1 subunit. However, greater than 60% of Kb heavy chain is isolated as K-10-56- and Y-3-reactive Kbbeta2m complexes. We propose that a TAP-MHC class I interaction serves to stabilize the MHC class I:beta2m complex in an immature conformation (Y-3 and K-10-56 nonreactive) prior to high affinity peptide binding, preventing the export of class I molecules complexed with low affinity peptide ligands from the ER.  相似文献   

19.
Tetramer analysis is a novel technique in immunological research that has dramatically changed our knowledge of the immune response to pathogens, tumors and autoimmune disease. Through the formation of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide tetrameric complexes, it can provide accurate counts of antigen-specific T-cells and it allows their phenotypical and functional analysis. The tetramer is composed of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) heavy chain, beta-2 microglobulin (beta-2m), the nominal peptide, and streptavidin. The HLA heavy chain and the beta-2m are expressed in Escherichia coli. But up to now, all laboratories have been expressing these two proteins by using isopropyl beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside IPTG. IPTG is very expensive, and it is tedious and laborious to induce expression protein. So it is difficult to scale up to express the objective protein. To address this problem, extracellular fractions of HLA-A0201 and beta-2m (absent signal peptide) genes were cloned from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) by RT-PCR. DNA coding for a Gly-Ser linker and a BSP (15-amino acid substrate peptide for BirA-dependent biotinylation) was added to the COOH-terminus of the extracellular fraction of HLA-A0201 by PCR, using an HLA-A0201 as the template. Then the HLA-A0201-BSP and beta-2m genes were cloned into pBV220 vector and expressed, respectively. The expressed proteins were purified and detected by ELISA and Western blot analyses. High-efficient expressions of HLA-A0201-BSP and beta-2m proteins lay a good foundation for further expression and purification in prokaryotic system and constructing MHC class I-peptide tetramer complexes to study the function of CTLs.  相似文献   

20.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecule plays a crucial role in cytotoxic lymphocyte function. Functional class I MHC exists as a heterotrimer consisting of the MHC class I heavy chain, an antigenic peptide fragment, and beta2-microglobulin (beta2m). beta2m has been previously shown to play an important role in the folding of the MHC heavy chain without continued beta2m association with the MHC complex. Therefore, beta2m is both a structural component of the MHC complex and a chaperone-like molecule for MHC folding. In this study we provide data supporting a model in which the chaperone-like role of beta2m is dependent on initial binding to only one of the two beta2m interfaces with class 1 heavy chain. beta2-Microglobulin binding to an isolated alpha3 domain of the class I MHC heavy chain accurately models the biochemistry and thermodynamics of beta2m-driven refolding. Our results explain a 1000-fold discrepancy between beta2m binding and refolding of MHC1. The biochemical study of the individual domains of complex molecules is an important strategy for understanding their dynamic structure and multiple functions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号