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1.
Peptide presentation by MHC class II is of critical importance to the function of CD4+ T cells. HLA-DM resides in the endosomal pathway and edits the peptide repertoire of newly synthesized MHC class II molecules before they are exported to the cell surface. HLA-DM ensures MHC class II molecules bind high affinity peptides by targeting unstable MHC class II:peptide complexes for peptide exchange. Research over the past decade has implicated the peptide N-terminus in modulating the ability of HLA-DM to target a given MHC class II:peptide combination. In particular, attention has been focused on both the hydrogen bonds between MHC class II and peptide, and the occupancy of the P1 anchor pocket. We sought to solve the crystal structure of a HLA-DR1 molecule containing a truncated hemagglutinin peptide missing three N-terminal residues compared to the full-length sequence (residues 306–318) to determine the nature of the MHC class II:peptide species that binds HLA-DM. Here we present structural evidence that HLA-DR1 that is loaded with a peptide truncated to the P1 anchor residue such that it cannot make select hydrogen bonds with the peptide N-terminus, adopts the same conformation as molecules loaded with full-length peptide. HLA-DR1:peptide combinations that were unable to engage up to four key hydrogen bonds were also unable to bind HLA-DM, while those truncated to the P2 residue bound well. These results indicate that the conformational changes in MHC class II molecules that are recognized by HLA-DM occur after disengagement of the P1 anchor residue.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) are crucial for the stability of the peptide-major histocompatibility complex (MHC) complex. In particular, the H-bonds formed between the peptide ligand and the MHC class II binding site appear to have a great influence on the half-life of the complex. Here we show that functional groups with the capacity to disrupt hydrogen bonds (e.g. -OH) can efficiently catalyze ligand exchange reactions on HLA-DR molecules. In conjunction with simple carrier molecules (such as propyl or benzyl residues), they trigger the release of low affinity ligands, which permits the rapid binding of peptides with higher affinity. Similar to HLA-DM, these compounds are able to influence the MHC class II ligand repertoire. In contrast to HLA-DM, however, these simple small molecules are still active at neutral pH. Under physiological conditions, they increase the number of "peptide-receptive" MHC class II molecules and facilitate exogenous peptide loading of dendritic cells. The drastic acceleration of the ligand exchange on these antigen presenting cells suggests that, in general, availability of H-bond donors in the extracellular milieu controls the rate of MHC class II ligand exchange reactions on the cell surface. These molecules may therefore be extremely useful for the loading of antigens onto dendritic cells for therapeutic purposes.  相似文献   

3.
MHC class II molecules associate with peptides through pocket interactions and the formation of hydrogen bonds. The current paradigm suggests that the interaction of side chains of the peptide with pockets in the class II molecule is responsible for the formation of stable class II-peptide complexes. However, recent evidence has shown that the formation of hydrogen bonds between genetically conserved residues of the class II molecule and the main chain of the peptide contributes profoundly to peptide stability. In this study, we have used I-A(k), a class II molecule known to form strong pocket interactions with bound peptides, to probe the general importance of hydrogen bond integrity in peptide acquisition. Our studies have revealed that abolishing hydrogen bonds contributed by positions 81 or 82 in the beta-chain of I-A(k) results in class II molecules that are internally degraded when trafficked through proteolytic endosomal compartments. The presence of high-affinity peptides derived from either endogenous or exogenous sources protects the hydrogen bond-deficient variant from intracellular degradation. Together, these data indicate that disruption of the potential to form a complete hydrogen bond network between MHC class II molecules and bound peptides greatly diminishes the ability of class II molecules to bind peptides. The subsequent failure to stably acquire peptides leads to protease sensitivity of empty class II molecules, and thus to proteolytic degradation before export to the surface of APCs.  相似文献   

4.
The complexity of the interaction between major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) proteins and peptide ligands has been revealed through structural studies and crystallographic characterization. Peptides bind through side-chain "anchor" interactions with MHC II pockets and an extensive array of genetically conserved hydrogen bonds to the peptide backbone. Here we quantitatively investigate the kinetic hierarchy of these interactions. We present results detailing the impact of single side-chain mutations of peptide anchor residues on dissociation rates, utilizing two I-A(d)-restricted peptides, one of which has a known crystal structure, and 24 natural and non-natural amino acid mutant variants of these peptides. We find that the N-terminal P1, P4 and P6 anchor-pocket interactions can make significant contributions to binding stability. We also investigate the interactions of these peptides with four I-A(d) MHC II proteins, each mutated to disrupt conserved hydrogen bonds to the peptide backbone. These complexes exhibit kinetic behavior suggesting that binding energy is disproportionately invested near the peptide N terminus for backbone hydrogen bonds. We then evaluate the effects of simultaneously modifying both anchor and hydrogen bonding interactions. A quantitative analysis of 71 double mutant cycles reveals that there is little apparent cooperativity between anchor residue interactions and hydrogen bonds, even when they are directly adjacent (<5A).  相似文献   

5.
Background: Class II molecules of the major histocompatibility complex become loaded with antigenic peptides after dissociation of invariant chainderived peptides (CLIP) from the peptide-binding groove. The human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DM is a prerequisite for this process, which takes place in specialised intracellular compartments. HLA-DM catalyses the peptide-exchange process, simultaneously functioning as a peptide ‘editor’, favouring the presentation of stably binding peptides. Recently, HLA-DO, an unconventional class II molecule, has been found associated with HLA-DM in B cells, yet its function has remained elusive.Results: The function of the HLA-DO complex was investigated by expression of both chains of the HLA-DO heterodimer (either alone or fused to green fluorescent protein) in human Mel JuSo cells. Expression of HLA-DO resulted in greatly enhanced surface expression of CLIP via HLA-DR3, the conversion of class II complexes to the SDS-unstable phenotype and reduced antigen presentation to T-cell clones. Analysis of peptides eluted from HLA-DR3 demonstrated that CLIP was the major peptide bound to class II in the HLA-DO transfectants. Peptide exchange assays in vitro revealed that HLA-DO functions directly at the level of class II peptide loading by inhibiting the catalytic action of HLA-DM.Conclusions: HLA-DO is a negative modulator of HLA-DM. By stably associating with HLA-DM, the catalytic action of HLA-DM on class II peptide loading is inhibited. HLA-DO thus affects the peptide repertoire that is eventually presented to the immune system by MHC class II molecules.  相似文献   

6.
Cutting edge: editing of recycling class II:peptide complexes by HLA-DM.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
HLA-DM catalyzes the exchange and selection of ligands for MHC class II molecules within mature endosomal/lysosomal compartments. Here, evidence is provided that DM edits peptides in early endosomes, thus influencing presentation via recycling class II molecules. Maximal class II-restricted presentation of an albumin-derived peptide, dependent on endocytosis and recycling class II molecules, was observed in cells lacking HLA-DM. DM editing of this epitope was observed in early endocytic compartments as shown using inhibitors of early to late endosomal transport. Editing was tempered by coexpression of HLA-DO, suggesting that DM:DO ratio may be important in guiding epitope editing in early endosomal compartments. Thus, HLA-DM appears to interact with, and edit epitopes displayed by, recycling class II molecules.  相似文献   

7.
Antigenic peptide loading of classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules requires the exchange of the endogenous invariant chain fragment CLIP (class II associated Ii peptide) for peptides derived from antigenic proteins. This process is facilitated by the non-classical MHC class II molecule HLA-DM (DM) which catalyzes the removal of CLIP. Up to now it has been unclear whether DM releases self-peptides other than CLIP and thereby modifies the peptide repertoire presented to T cells. Here we report that DM can release a variety of peptides from HLA-DR molecules. DR molecules isolated from lymphoblastoid cell lines were found to carry a sizeable fraction of self-peptides that are sensitive to the action of DM. The structural basis for this DM sensitivity was elucidated by high-performance size exclusion chromatography and a novel mass spectrometry binding assay. The results demonstrate that the overall kinetic stability of a peptide bound to DR determines its sensitivity to removal by DM. We show that DM removes preferentially those peptides that contain at least one suboptimal side chain at one of their anchor positions or those that are shorter than 11 residues. These findings provide a rationale for the previously described ligand motifs and the minimal length requirements of naturally processed DR-associated self-peptides. Thus, in endosomal compartments, where peptide loading takes place, DM can function as a versatile peptide editor that selects for high-stability MHC class II-peptide complexes by kinetic proofreading before these complexes are presented to T cells.  相似文献   

8.
Major histocompatability class II proteins are transmembrane alphabeta-heterodimers that present peptides to T-cells. MHC II may bind exogenous peptides directly at the cell surface. Alternatively, peptides derived from processing of endosomal protein may bind to MHC II in endosomal compartments. There, HLA-DM catalyzes the formation of peptide/MHC complexes, which are then transported to the cell surface. Here we report evidence that the peptide Ii CLIP 81-104 binds to DR*0404 in two alternate registries, whose dissociation rates, while kinetically indistinguishable at pH 5.3 and 37 degrees C, are kinetically resolved in the presence of HLA-DM. In one registry isomer, CLIP Met 91 is placed in the N-terminal P1 pocket of DR*0404, and peptide dissociation is readily catalyzed by HLA-DM. In a second proposed registry, likely with CLIP Leu 97 in the P1 pocket, the complex is substantially less sensitive to HLA-DM catalysis. Without HLA-DM, or at pH 7, the fraction of each isomer formed in solution is relatively insensitive to the duration of incubation with peptide. However, with HLA-DM, the fraction of the DM-insensitive isomer is dramatically influenced by peptide incubation time. The mechanism of isomer formation appears to be determined by the HLA-DM-modified relative association to the two registries, followed by HLA-DM-catalyzed dissociation of each isomer and rebinding, leading to a final isomer composition determined by these kinetic constants. Intramolecular isomer interconversion does not appear to be involved. The behavior of these complexes may provide a model for peptide editing by DM in endosomes.  相似文献   

9.
The crystal structures of class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules complexed with antigenic peptides revealed a network of hydrogen bonds between the charged amino- and carboxyl-termini of the peptides and conserved MHC residues at both ends of the peptide binding site. These interactions were shown to contribute substantially to the stability of class I MHC/peptide complexes by thermal denaturation studies using synthetic peptides in which either the amino- or carboxyl-terminal group is substituted by a methyl group. Here we report crystal structures of HLA-A*0201 complexed with these terminally modified synthetic peptides showing that they adopt the same bound conformation as antigenic peptides. A number of variations in peptide conformation were observed for the terminally modified peptides, including in one case, a large conformational difference in four central peptide residues that is apparently caused by the lattice contact. This is reminiscent of the way binding a T-cell receptor changed the conformation of central residues of an MHC-bound peptide. The structures determined identify which conserved hydrogen bonds are eliminated in terminally substituted peptides and suggest an increased energetic importance of the interactions at the peptide termini for MHC-peptide stability. Proteins 33:97–106, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
HLA-DM (DM) plays a critical role in Ag presentation to CD4 T cells by catalyzing the exchange of peptides bound to MHC class II molecules. Large lateral surfaces involved in the DM:HLA-DR (DR) interaction have been defined, but the mechanism of catalysis is not understood. In this study, we describe four small molecules that accelerate DM-catalyzed peptide exchange. Mechanistic studies demonstrate that these small molecules substantially enhance the catalytic efficiency of DM, indicating that they make the transition state of the DM:DR/peptide complex energetically more favorable. These compounds fall into two functional classes: two compounds are active only in the presence of DM, and binding data for one show a direct interaction with DM. The remaining two compounds have partial activity in the absence of DM, suggesting that they may act at the interface between DM and DR/peptide. A hydrophobic ridge in the DMbeta1 domain was implicated in the catalysis of peptide exchange because the activity of three of these enhancers was substantially reduced by point mutations in this area.  相似文献   

11.
Antigenic peptide binding to MHC class II molecules in the endocytic pathway occurs via a multifactorial process that requires the support of a specialized lysosomal chaperone called HLA-DM. DM shows both in primary amino acid sequence and quaternary structure a high homology to both MHC class I and class II molecules. Like the peptide presenting class II molecules, DM is expressed in all professional antigen presenting cells. DM catalyzes the dissociation of peptides that do not bind stably to the class II peptide-binding groove, thereby leading to the preferential presentation of stably binding antigenic peptides. The recently discovered HLA-DO molecule is mainly expressed in B cells and associates with DM, thereby markedly affecting DM function. Like DM, the genes encoding the HLA-DO heterodimer lie within the MHC class II region and exhibit strong homology to classical class II molecules. This review evaluates the unique effects of DO on DM-mediated antigen presentation by MHC class II molecules and discusses the possible physiological relevance for the B cell-specific expression of DO and its function.  相似文献   

12.
In the endocytic pathway of antigen-presenting cells, HLA-DM catalyzes the exchange between class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP) and antigenic peptides onto major histocompatibility complex class II molecules. At low pH of lysosomal compartments, both HLA-DM and HLA-DR undergo conformational changes, and it was recently postulated that two partially exposed tryptophans on HLA-DM might be involved in the interaction between the two molecules. To define contact regions on HLA-DM, we have conducted site-directed mutagenesis on those two hydrophobic residues. The HLA-DM alphaW62A,betaW120A (DM(W62A/W120A)) double mutant was expressed in HLA-DR(+) HeLa cells expressing invariant chain, and the activity of this DM molecule was assessed. Flow cytometry analysis of cell surface DR-CLIP complexes revealed that DM(W62A/W120A) removes CLIP as efficiently as its wild-type counterpart. DM(W62A/W120A) was found in the endocytic pathway by immunofluorescence, and DM-DR complexes were immunoprecipitated from these cells at pH 5. Finally, mutations alphaW62A and betaW120A on HLA-DM did not affect the association with HLA-DO. The complex egresses the endoplasmic reticulum and accumulates in endocytic vesicles. Moreover, DO and DM(W62A/)W120A were co-immunoprecipitated at pH 7. We conclude that the alpha62 and beta120 tryptophan residues are not required for the activity of DM, nor are they directly implicated in the interaction with DR or DO.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of peptides to MHC class II molecules is mediated in part by a conserved array of intermolecular hydrogen bonds. We have evaluated the consequences of disrupting the hydrogen bond between beta-His-81 of the class II molecule and bound peptide. These studies revealed that peptide dissociation rates were accelerated by factors ranging to 200-fold. The sensitivity of a peptide to loss of the hydrogen bond is inversely correlated with the inherent kinetic stability of the peptide-MHC complex. The same relationship has been observed between inherent kinetic stability and the susceptibility to DM. Given that the rate enhancement observed for MHC class II I-Ad protein mutated at position 81 in the beta-chain is comparable with DM-catalyzed rates for other class II molecules, we suggest that DM could function by stabilizing a peptide-MHC intermediate in which one or more hydrogen bonds between the peptide and MHC, such as that contributed by the beta-His-81 hydrogen bond, are disrupted.  相似文献   

14.
In this article, we present a new technique for the rapid and precise docking of peptides to MHC class I and class II receptors. Our docking procedure consists of three steps: (1) peptide residues near the ends of the binding groove are docked by using an efficient pseudo-Brownian rigid body docking procedure followed by (2) loop closure of the intervening backbone structure by satisfaction of spatial constraints, and subsequently, (3) the refinement of the entire backbone and ligand interacting side chains and receptor side chains experiencing atomic clash at the MHC receptor-peptide interface. The method was tested by remodeling of 40 nonredundant complexes of at least 3.00 A resolution for which three-dimensional structural information is available and independently for docking peptides derived from 15 nonredundant complexes into a single template structure. In the first test, 33 out of 40 MHC class I and class II peptides and in the second test, 11 out of 15 MHC-peptide complexes were modeled with a Calpha RMSD < 1.00 A.  相似文献   

15.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II binding requirements for solvent-exposed peptide residues were systematically studied using amino acid and peptoid substitutions. In a peptoid residue, the side chain is present on the backbone nitrogen atom as opposed to the alpha-carbon atom in an amino acid residue. To investigate the effect of this side chain shifting on MHC binding, three amino acids in the central part of the peptide sticking out of the binding groove were replaced by corresponding peptoid residues. Two peptoid-peptide hybrids showed large affinity decreases in the MHC-peptide binding assay. To investigate this affinity loss, the individual contributions to MHC binding affinity of the side chain (position), the putative hydrogen bond, and the flexibility were dissected. We conclude that the side chain position as well as the backbone nitrogen atom hydrogen bonding features of solvent-exposed residues in the peptide can be important for MHC binding affinity.  相似文献   

16.
HLA-DM catalyzes peptide loading and exchange reactions by MHC class II molecules. Soluble recombinant DM, lacking transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains, was observed to have 200- to 400-fold less activity compared with the full-length protein in assays measuring DM-catalyzed peptide dissociation from purified HLA-DR1 in detergent solutions. Additional studies with truncated soluble DR1 demonstrated that transmembrane domains in DR1 molecules are also required for optimal activity. The potential requirement for specific interaction between the transmembrane domains of DM and DR was ruled out in experiments with chimeric DR1 molecules containing transmembrane domains from either DM or the unrelated protein CD80. These results suggested that the major role of the transmembrane domains is to facilitate colocalization of DM and DR in detergent micelles. The latter conclusion was further supported by the observation that HLA-DM-catalyzed peptide binding to certain murine class II proteins is increased by reducing the volume of detergent micelles. The importance of membrane colocalization was directly demonstrated in experiments in which DM and DR were reconstituted separately or together into membrane bilayers in unilamellar liposomes. Our findings demonstrate the importance of membrane anchoring in DM activity and underscore the potential importance of membrane localization in regulating peptide exchange by class II molecules.  相似文献   

17.
HLA-DM (DM) is a heterodimeric MHC molecule that catalyzes the peptide loading of classical MHC class II molecules in the endosomal/lysosomal compartments of APCs. Although the function of DM is well-established, little is known about how DMalpha and beta-chains fold, oxidize, and form a complex in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this study, we show that glycosylation promotes, but is not essential for, DMalphabeta ER exit. However, glycosylation of DMalpha N15 is required for oxidation of the alpha-chain. The DMalpha and beta-chains direct each others fate: single DMalpha chains cannot fully oxidize without DMbeta, while DMbeta forms disulfide-linked homodimers without DMalpha. Correct oxidation and subsequent ER egress depend on the unique DMbeta C25 and C35 residues. This suggests that the C25-C35 disulfide bond in the peptide-binding domain overcomes the need for stabilizing peptides required by other MHC molecules.  相似文献   

18.
Antigen-presenting cells degrade endocytosed antigens, e.g. collagen type II, into peptides that are bound and presented to arthritogenic CD4(+) helper T cells by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules. Efficient loading of many MHC class II alleles with peptides requires the assistance of H2-M (HLA-DM in humans), a heterodimeric MHC class II-like molecule that facilitates CLIP removal from MHC class II molecules and aids to shape the peptide repertoire presented by MHC class II to CD4(+) T cells. In contrast to the HLA-DM region in humans, the beta-chain locus is duplicated in mice, with the H2-Mb1 beta-chain distal to H2-Mb2 and the H2-Ma alpha-chain gene. H2-M alleles appear to be associated with the development of autoimmune diseases. Recent data showed that Mbeta1 and Mbeta2 isoforms are differentially expressed in isolated macrophages and B cells, respectively. The tissue expression and functional role of these heterodimers in promoting CLIP removal and peptide selection have not been addressed. We utilized the human T2 cell line, which lacks part of chromosome 6 encompassing the MHC class II and DM genes, to construct transgenic cell lines expressing the MHC class II heterodimer I-A(q) alone or in the presence of H2-Malphabeta1 or H2-Malphabeta2 heterodimers. Both H2-M isoforms facilitate the exchange of CLIP for cognate peptides on I-A(q) molecules from arthritis-susceptible DBA/1 mice and induce a conformational change in I-A(q) molecules. Moreover, I-A(q) cell-surface expression is not absolutely dependent on H2-M molecules. These data suggest that I-A(q) exhibits a high affinity for CLIP since virtually all I-A(q) molecules on T2 cells were found to be associated with CLIP in the absence of both H2-M isoforms.  相似文献   

19.
Class II MHC glycoproteins bind short (7-25 amino acid) peptides in an extended type II polyproline-like conformation and present them for immune recognition. Because empty MHC is unstable, measurement of the rate of the second-order reaction between peptide and MHC is challenging. In this report, we use dissociation of a pre-bound peptide to generate the active, peptide-receptive form of the empty class II MHC molecule I-Ek. This allows us to measure directly the rate of reaction between active, empty I-Ek and a set of peptides that vary in structure. We find that all peptides studied, despite having highly variable dissociation rates, bind with similar association rate constants. Thus, the rate-limiting step in peptide binding is minimally sensitive to peptide side-chain structure. An interesting complication to this simple model is that a single peptide can sometimes bind to I-Ek in two kinetically distinguishable conformations, with the stable peptide-MHC complex isomer forming much more slowly than the less-stable one. This demonstrates that an additional free-energy barrier limits the formation of certain specific MHC-peptide complex conformations.  相似文献   

20.
Identification of MHC binding peptides is essential for understanding the molecular mechanism of immune response. However, most of the prediction methods use motifs/profiles derived from experimental peptide binding data for specific MHC alleles, thus limiting their applicability only to those alleles for which such data is available. In this work we have developed a structure-based method which does not require experimental peptide binding data for training. Our method models MHC-peptide complexes using crystal structures of 170 MHC-peptide complexes and evaluates the binding energies using two well known residue based statistical pair potentials, namely Betancourt-Thirumalai (BT) and Miyazawa-Jernigan (MJ) matrices. Extensive benchmarking of prediction accuracy on a data set of 1654 epitopes from class I and class II alleles available in the SYFPEITHI database indicate that BT pair-potential can predict more than 60% of the known binders in case of 14 MHC alleles with AUC values for ROC curves ranging from 0.6 to 0.9. Similar benchmarking on 29,522 class I and class II MHC binding peptides with known IC(50) values in the IEDB database showed AUC values higher than 0.6 for 10 class I alleles and 9 class II alleles in predictions involving classification of a peptide to be binder or non-binder. Comparison with recently available benchmarking studies indicated that, the prediction accuracy of our method for many of the class I and class II MHC alleles was comparable to the sequence based methods, even if it does not use any experimental data for training. It is also encouraging to note that the ranks of true binding peptides could further be improved, when high scoring peptides obtained from pair potential were re-ranked using all atom forcefield and MM/PBSA method.  相似文献   

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