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1.
In the present study, we have explored ways of inducing a CTL response to a previously defined H-2Kd MHC class I restricted epitope in the circumsporozoite (CS) protein of Plasmodium berghei, and studied in detail the fine specificity of the response. We found that the s.c. injection of a variety of synthetic peptides emulsified in Freund's adjuvant efficiently induced a specific CTL response in (BALB/c x C57BL/6)F1 (H-2d x H-2b) mice. In contrast, BALB/c mice responded only marginally, consistent with the possible requirement for a concomitant Th response that would be provided by the C57BL/6 strain. Similar to our previous observations in analyzing CTL clones from sporozoite-immunized mice, the CTL response induced by peptide immunization was in part cross-reactive with an epitope from the Plasmodium yoelii species. The minimal P. berghei CS epitope, the octapeptide PbCS 253-260, was studied in detail by the analysis of a series of variant CS peptides containing single Ala substitutions. The relative antigenic activity for each variant peptide was calculated for 28 different CTL clones. Overall, the response to this P. berghei CTL epitope appeared to be extremely diverse in terms of fine specificity. This was evident among the CTL derived from sporozoite-immunized mice, as well as among those from peptide-immunized animals. The heterogeneity found at the functional level correlates with the highly diverse TCR repertoire that we have found for the same series of CTL clones in a study that is reported separately. The relative competitor activity for each Ala-substituted peptide was also determined in a quantitative functional competition assay. For the residues (Tyr253 and Ile260) within the 8-mer CS peptide, substitution with Ala reduced competitor activity by at least 40-fold, and for two others the reduction was 5- to 10-fold. When the relative antigenic activity for each CTL/peptide combination was normalized to the relative competitor activity of the peptide, a striking pattern emerged. The two residues that most affected competitor activity showed no additional effect on recognition beyond that observed for competition. In marked contrast, Ala substitutions at the other five positions tested varied widely, depending on the CTL/peptide combination. This pattern not only supports a model whereby the Tyr253 and Ile260 residues anchor the peptide to the Kd molecule, but also implies that they are virtually inaccessible to the TCR.  相似文献   

2.
To identify epitopes recognized by alloreactive CTL we have examined H-2Kb-specific CTL for their recognition of synthetic peptides with sequences derived from the native Kb class I molecule. Consecutive nested peptides spanning the immunogenic alpha 1 and alpha 2 domains of Kb were tested for their capacity to inhibit CTL clones in their recognition of cells expressing the native Kb molecule. Inhibition by these peptides was found to be an extremely rare event. One peptide (Kb.111-122) did inhibit recognition by one particular CTL clone, clone 13. Upon further investigation it was observed that clone 13 also recognized peptide Kb.111-122 when presented in the context of the syngeneic MHC molecule, Kd. Considering that residues 111 to 122 are located at the base of the antigen groove, and clone 13 is able to recognize Kb.111-122 when presented by syngeneic target cells, we suggest that inhibition of this CTL clone may be due to MHC restricted, self-presentation of peptide rather than to direct binding of free peptide to the TCR. Taken together, these results suggest inhibition of allospecific CTL by MHC peptides is a rare event at least for Kb recognition. Furthermore, they demonstrate the need for caution when interpreting inhibition by peptide as evidence for recognition by the TCR of the corresponding region on the native molecule.  相似文献   

3.
Class I molecules of the MHC bind foreign and endogenous peptides allowing recognition by the TCR on CTL. The recognition and killing of cells infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) depends on the recognition of LCMV peptides bound to class I MHC. Mutations in class I MHC molecules have enabled the delineation of regions in the class I molecule important for binding peptides and for interaction with the TCR. We have constructed a library of class I mutants using saturation mutagenesis and report a phenotypic change resulting from a single amino acid substitution that results in the heteroclitic (increased) killing of LCMV-infected cells. This amino acid change, asparagine to serine at position 30, is in a conserved region of the class I molecule contacting the alpha 3 domain. This mutation does not result in increased expression of the class I molecule on the cell surface, does not affect the binding of CD8, and does not affect allogeneic recognition. Cold target experiments show that this heteroclitic killing is due to increased recognition by CTL. These data point toward a critical function for this region of the class I molecule in the binding of peptides or their presentation to CTL.  相似文献   

4.
To explore the structural basis for AIDS virus recognition by CD8+ lymphocytes, we sought to determine whether there is a diverse or restricted usage of T-cell receptors (TCR) by simian immunodeficiency virus of macaques (SIVmac) Gag-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) in the rhesus monkey. Six Gag-specific CTL clones were independently generated from an SIVmac-infected rhesus monkey. All six CTL clones recognized a single SIVmac Gag peptide in association with a single major histocompatibility complex class I gene product, Mamu-A*01. TCR alpha-chain sequences from these six CTL clones employed four different V alpha families and five different J alpha gene segments. In contrast, five of the six CTL clones expressed V beta genes that were members of the same family, a human V beta 23 homolog. Furthermore, only one J beta gene was expressed by four of the six CTL clones. These results indicate that TCR of SIVmac Gag-specific CTL from a rhesus monkey can exhibit a restricted usage of V beta gene families and J beta genes.  相似文献   

5.
The Ag receptors on CD8+ CTL recognize foreign antigenic peptides associated with cell surface MHC class I molecules. Peptides derived from self proteins are also normally presented by MHC class I molecules. Here we report that an H-2Kd-restricted murine CD8+ CTL clone directed to an influenza hemagglutinin epitope can recognize a peptide derived from the murine mitochondrial aconitase enzyme in association with H-2Kd molecules. Surprisingly, this self peptide is not normally displayed on the cell surface associated with the restricting MHC class I molecule. Several lines of evidence suggest that this self peptide, although requiring association with the Kd molecule for CTL recognition, is not associated with this or other MHC class I allele under physiologic conditions in intact cells. Rather, it is sequestered in the cytoplasm associated with a carrier protein and is released only upon cell disruption. These results suggest a means of restricting the entry of self peptide into the class I pathway. In addition, this finding raises the possibility that self peptides sequestered within the cell can, after release from damaged cells, interact with MHC class I molecules on bystander cells and trigger autoimmune injury by virus-specific CTLs during viral infection.  相似文献   

6.
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) recognize virus peptide fragments complexed with class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules on the surface of virus-infected cells. Recognition is mediated by a membrane-bound T-cell receptor (TCR) composed of alpha and beta chains. Studies of the CTL response to lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) in H-2b mice have revealed that three distinct viral epitopes are recognized by CTL of the H-2b haplotype and that all of the three epitopes are restricted by the Db MHC molecule. The immunodominant Db-restricted CTL epitope, located at LCMV glycoprotein amino acids 278 to 286, was earlier noted to be recognized by TCRs that consistently contained V alpha 4 segments but had heterogeneous V beta segments. Here we show that CTL clones recognizing the other two H-2Db-restricted epitopes, LCMV glycoprotein amino acids 34 to 40 and nucleoprotein amino acids 397 to 407 (defined in this study), utilize TCR alpha chains which do not belong to the V alpha 4 subfamily. Hence, usage of V alpha and V beta in the TCRs recognizing peptide fragments from one virus restricted by a single MHC molecule is not sufficiently homogeneous to allow manipulation of the anti-viral CTL response at the level of TCRs. The diversity of anti-viral CTL likely provides the host with a wider option for attacking virus-infected cells and prevents the emergence of virus escape mutants that might arise if TCRs specific for the virus were homogeneous.  相似文献   

7.
Long-term syngeneic mouse cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones were obtained from DBA/2 (H2d) mice immunized with P815 (H2d) cells transfected with cloned human class I histocompatibility genes, HLA-CW3 or HLA-A24. Three distinct patterns of specificity were defined on P815 HLA transfectant target cells. One clone lysed HLA-CW3 but not -A24 transfectants, and a second lysed HLA-A24 but not -CW3 transfectant target cells. The third clone lysed P815 targets transfected with either HLA gene. None of the CTL clones lysed L cells (H2k) transfected with the same HLA genes or human targets that expressed these HLA specificities. Several lines of evidence indicated that recognition of HLA transfectants by these CTL clones was H2 restricted. First, lysis of P815 HLA transfectants could be inhibited by anti-H2Kd monoclonal antibody. In addition, the anti-P815-HLA CTL clones could lyse a (human X mouse) hybrid target that expressed both HLA class I and H2Kd antigens, but not a clonal derivative that no longer expressed H2Kd. The most direct evidence for H2-restricted recognition of P815-HLA transfectants by the syngeneic CTL clones was obtained by double transfection of mouse L cells (H2k) with both HLA and H2 class I genes. L cells transfected with HLA and H2Kd genes were susceptible to lysis by the same CTL clones that lysed the corresponding P815-HLA transfectant targets. Thus under certain conditions, CTL recognition of xenogeneic class I histocompatibility gene products can be restricted by other class I gene products.  相似文献   

8.
CD8+ murine CTL that are specific for an unusual nonpeptide Ag, the heme moiety of hemoglobin, have been derived by in vitro stimulation of spleen cells with hemin. Such CTL demonstrate a requirement for the expression of class I Ag on target cells, yet appear to be unrestricted to the extent that both syngeneic and allogeneic targets precoated with hemin are sensitive to lysis. A series of CTL clones with specificity for hemin was derived from C57BL/6 mice. They exhibited the same type of promiscuous recognition that was observed in CTL populations from a number of different strains. The possibility that hemin acts as a nonspecific mediator of lysis by CTL was ruled out by the fact that a variety of CTL populations and clones specific for different Ag did not exhibit hemin-specific lysis. Some explanations offered to explain these results include 1) the possibility that hemin is recognized by binding to a site on the MHC other than the Ag-binding groove, and 2) the possibility that TCR recognition of a rigid molecule, such as hemin, may be less sensitive to polymorphic variation in the MHC than is recognition of a conventional peptide Ag whose conformation may differ significantly when bound to MHC molecules whose sequences differ within the Ag-binding groove.  相似文献   

9.
T cell receptor (TCR) recognition of peptide takes place in the context of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule, which accounts for approximately two-thirds of the peptide/MHC buried surface. Using the class I MHC HLA-A2 and a large panel of mutants, we have previously shown that surface mutations that disrupt TCR recognition vary with the identity of the peptide. The single exception is Lys66 on the HLA-A2 alpha1 helix, which when mutated to alanine disrupts recognition for 93% of over 250 different T cell clones or lines, independent of which peptide is bound. Thus, Lys66 could serve as a peptide-independent TCR binding determinant. Here, we have examined the role of Lys66 in TCR recognition of HLA-A2 in detail. The structure of a peptide/HLA-A2 molecule with the K66A mutation indicates that although the mutation induces no major structural changes, it results in the exposure of a negatively charged glutamate (Glu63) underneath Lys66. Concurrent replacement of Glu63 with glutamine restores TCR binding and function for T cells specific for five different peptides presented by HLA-A2. Thus, the positive charge on Lys66 does not serve to guide all TCRs onto the HLA-A2 molecule in a manner required for productive signaling. Furthermore, electrostatic calculations indicate that Lys66 does not contribute to the stability of two TCR-peptide/HLA-A2 complexes. Our findings are consistent with the notion that each TCR arrives at a unique solution of how to bind a peptide/MHC, most strongly influenced by the chemical and structural features of the bound peptide. This would not rule out an intrinsic affinity of TCRs for MHC molecules achieved through multiple weak interactions, but for HLA-A2 the collective mutational data place limits on the role of any single MHC amino acid side-chain in driving TCR binding in a peptide-independent fashion.  相似文献   

10.
T-cell receptor (TCR) internalization occurs via TCR recognition of the peptide/MHC molecule complex on antigen presenting cell (APC). In this study, the requirements for inducing the internalization of TCR molecules on Ld major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I-restricted T-cells were investigated with 2C cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) clones with defined peptides as the antigen. To evaluate the function of the transmembrane region of TCR alphabeta chains in TCR internalization, we generated T-cell transfectants expressing the wild type and glycosylphosphatidyl inositol (GPI)-linked form of 2C TCR. Among all peptides forming proper ligands to 2C TCR, only the Qp2Ca peptide induced TCR internalization, which was known to have the highest affinity to both Ld MHC class I molecules and TCR in association with Ld molecules. Such TCR internalization was not observed in cells expressing the GPI-linked form of 2C TCR. Furthermore, the expression of CD8 coreceptor and Thy-1 accessory molecules were both not required for Qp2Ca-induced TCR internalization, and these molecules did not accompany TCR internalization. Altogether, these results suggest that TCR internalization on CTL is not a prerequisite for CTL function.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We have investigated the functional polymorphism of HLA class II antigens using CD4+ CTL clones. Seven CD4+ CTL clones were isolated from a healthy donor (HLA A2 A24; B8 B27; DRw17 DRw52a) by repeated stimulation with irradiated autologous EBV-transformed B cell lines (EBV-B). According to the HLA restriction specificity we divided CD4+ CTL clones into three subgroups: (i) DRw17-restricted CD4+ CTL clones; (ii) DRw52a-restricted CD4+ CTL clones; and (iii) the CD4+ CTL clones, of which the restriction specificity could not be assigned to products of a single HLA locus. Interestingly, DRw17-restricted CD4+ CTL clones distinguished between DRw17 and DRw18. Similarly, DRw52a-restricted CD4+ CTL clones distinguished between DRw52a, w52b, and w52c. There are four amino acids which differ between DRw17 and DRw18, whereas five differ between DRw52a and the other two alleles (DRw52b and DRw52c). The recent elucidation of the crystal structure of a human class I MHC molecule has identified the probable peptide binding site to be a cleft on the outer surface of the molecule, between two alpha-helices. On the basis of the theoretical model for HLA class II molecules, amino acid positions 26 and 28 (DRw17 vs DRw18) and amino acid positions 26, 28, and 74 (DRw52a vs the other two alleles) lie within the "cleft." We propose that amino acid positions 26 and 28 are very important sites with regard to the recognition of antigen-MHC complex by the TCR.  相似文献   

13.
Five distinct cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) recognition sites were identified in the simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen by using H-2b cells that express the truncated T antigen or antigens carrying internal deletions of various sizes. Four of the CTL recognition determinants, designated sites I, II, III, and V, are H-2Db restricted, while site IV is H-2Kb restricted. The boundaries of CTL recognition sites I, II, and III, clustered in the amino-terminal half of the T antigen, were further defined by use of overlapping synthetic peptides containing amino acid sequences previously determined to be required for recognition by T-antigen site-specific CTL clones by using SV40 deletion mutants. CTL clone Y-1, which recognizes epitope I and whose reactivity is affected by deletion of residues 193 to 211 of the T antigen, responded positively to B6/PY cells preincubated with a synthetic peptide corresponding to T-antigen amino acids 205 to 219. CTL clones Y-2 and Y-3 lysed B6/PY cells preincubated with large-T peptide LT220-233. To distinguish further between epitopes II and III, Y-2 and Y-3 CTL clones were reacted with SV40-transformed cells bearing mutations in the major histocompatibility complex class I antigen. Y-2 CTL clones lysed SV40-transformed H-2Dbm13 cells (bm13SV) which carry several amino acid substitutions in the putative antigen-binding site in the alpha 2 domain of the H-2Db antigen but not bm14SV cells, which contain a single amino acid substitution in the alpha 1 domain. Y-3 CTL clones lysed both mutant transformants. Y-1 and Y-5 CTL clones failed to lyse bm13SV and bm14SV cells; however, these cells could present synthetic peptide LT205-219 to CTL clone Y-1 and peptide SV26(489-503) to CTL clone Y-5, suggesting that the endogenously processed T antigen yields fragments of sizes or sequences different from those of synthetic peptides LT205-219 and SV26(489-503).  相似文献   

14.
The peptide binding site of HLA-B27 and other class I Ag consists of a series of pockets that bind peptide side chains. Two of these pockets interact with the amino-terminal peptide residue (pocket A) and with the highly conserved second residue (pocket B). In this study, the role of pockets A and B in HLA-B27-specific T cell allorecognition has been analyzed. Four HLA-B27 mutants with single or double changes in pocket B (24T----A, 45E----M, 67C----V, and 24,67T,C----A,V) and three mutants with single changes in pocket A (163E----T, 167W----S, and 171Y----H) were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis and expressed in HMy2.C1R cells after DNA-mediated gene transfer. These transfectants were used as target cells in cytotoxicity assays with a series of HLA-B27-specific CTL. All the mutations analyzed affected allorecognition by a significant proportion of the CTL tested, but no single change abrogated recognition by all CTL. The global effects of each mutation on allorecognition were comparable to one another, except for the effect of the change at position 67, which was smaller. The behavior of individual CTL with the mutants was very diverse, ranging from CTL that did not recognize most of the mutants to CTL recognizing all of them. Thus, some alloreactive CTL can withstand drastic alterations in pockets A and B. Two CTL showed heteroclytic effects towards the V67 and M45 mutants. CTL behavior with the H171 mutant was closely parallel to that with the B*2703 subtype, having a single Y----H change at position 59. This parallelism correlates with the similar role of Tyr59 and Tyr171 in establishing hydrogen bonds with the amino termini of HLA-B27-bound peptides. The results demonstrate that altering the structure of pockets that interact with the amino-terminal first and second residues of HLA-B27-bound peptides significantly affects recognition by alloreactive CTL, and they strongly suggest widespread peptide involvement in HLA-B27 allorecognition.  相似文献   

15.
Alloreactive CTL responses generate a great variety of clonal specificities. Such diversity may be related to recognition of multiple peptides constitutively bound to any given MHC alloantigen. Among human alloreactive CTL, only a fraction of the clones lyse mouse P815 cells expressing class I HLA proteins. In this study the fine specificity of HLA-B27 allorecognition on human or mouse cells by five human HLA-B27-specific CTL clones was comparatively analyzed. This was done to examine what degree of variation in epitope structure is compatible with recognition of HLA Ag on mouse cells. Nine site-specific HLA-B27 mutants were expressed on both human and mouse cells, after DNA-mediated gene transfer, to construct two analogous series of target cells. The reaction patterns of four of the five CTL clones with these cell panels were compatible with conservation of their corresponding epitopes upon expression of HLA-B27 on mouse cells. The reaction pattern of the fifth clone was different with either cell panel, indicating that its epitope was structurally altered on mouse cells. It also suggested a selectively increased expression of the determinant on these cells. The results suggest that most of the epitopes recognized by allospecific CTL clones reacting across species are either independent of any bound peptide or involve identical peptides from both cell types. However, some of these clones recognize alloantigen-bound peptides that are somewhat different in structure depending on the cell type, and may be expressed at the mouse cell surface in greater amounts. Such peptides could arise from related proteins in both species, and be polymorphic as a result of phylogenetic divergence.  相似文献   

16.
In antigen-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses H-2 class I mutations usually result in a decreased recognition of the antigen in association with the mutant molecule by CTL from the strain of origin. However, the influence of class I mutations on the magnitude and specificity of CTL responses in the mutants has been studied in only a few instances, in which usually a partial or complete loss of responsiveness was found. We now report that class I mutants extensively use gained (novel) CTL restriction sites, generated by the mutations in the CTL response against the hapten trinitrophenyl (TNP), demonstrated both at the population level and in limiting dilution. TNP-specific CTL clones, restricted by mutant-specific determinants, were detected in all mutants. The percentages mutant-specific CTL clones in limiting dilution experiments were 43, 40, 35, and 13 in the Kb mutants bm1, bm8, bm3 and bm5, respectively, and 35 in the Db mutant bm 14. It is concluded that H-2 class I mutations led to changes in the TNP-specific CTL repertoire resulting in gain of CTLs uniquely restricted to the mutant molecule.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structures of two human TCRs specific for a HTLV-I Tax peptide bound to HLA-A2 were recently determined, for the first time allowing a functional comparison of TCRs for which the MHC/peptide/TCR structures are known. Extensive amino acid substitutions show that the native Tax residues are optimal at each peptide position. A prominent feature of the TCR contact surface is a deep pocket that accommodates a tyrosine at position 5 of the peptide. For one of these TCRs, this pocket is highly specific for aromatic residues. In the other TCR structure, this pocket is larger, allowing many different residues to be accommodated. The CTL clones also show major differences in the specificity for several other peptide residues, including side chains that are not directly contacted by the TCR. Despite the specificity of these clones, peptides that are distinct at five or six positions from Tax11-19 induce CTL activity, indicating that substantial changes of the peptide surface are tolerated. Human peptides with limited sequence homology to Tax11-19 represent partial TCR agonists for these CTL clones. The distinct functional properties of these CTL clones highlight structural features that determine TCR specificity and cross-reactivity for MHC-bound peptides.  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies have indicated that in transgenic mice expressing human class I MHC molecules, it is difficult to demonstrate a significant CTL response to a viral Ag in the context of the transgenic molecule. In this paper, a procedure is reported for the isolation of influenza-specific murine CTL restricted by the human class I molecule HLA-A2.1. The principal specificity of such CTL is for a fragment of the influenza M1 protein that has been previously shown to be immunodominant for human HLA-A2.1-restricted CTL. CTL of this specificity were also established through the use of peptide-pulsed rather than virus-infected stimulators. The dependence of murine CTL recognition upon peptide length and HLA-A2 structure was established to be similar to that previously reported for human CTL. However, the fine specificity of CTL maintained on virus-infected stimulators was somewhat different from that of CTL maintained with M1 peptide. This suggests that differences in surface density or peptide structure between peptide-pulsed and virus-infected stimulators may result in the outgrowth of T cells with different receptor structures. The immunodominance of the M1 peptide determinant in both mice and humans suggests that species-specific differences in TCR structure, Ag-processing systems, and self-tolerance are of less importance than limitations on the ability of antigenic peptides to bind to appropriate class I molecules. These results thus establish the utility of the transgenic system for the identification of human class I MHC-restricted T cell epitopes.  相似文献   

19.
The TCR recognizes its peptide:MHC (pMHC) ligand by assuming a diagonal orientation relative to the MHC helices, but it is unclear whether and to what degree individual TCRs exhibit docking variations when contacting similar pMHC complexes. We analyzed monospecific and cross-reactive recognition by diverse TCRs of an immunodominant HVH-1 glycoprotein B epitope (HSV-8p) bound to two closely related MHC class I molecules, H-2K(b) and H-2K(bm8). Previous studies indicated that the pMHC portion likely to vary in conformation between the two complexes resided at the N-terminal part of the complex, adjacent to peptide residues 2-4 and the neighboring MHC side chains. We found that CTL clones sharing TCR beta-chains exhibited disparate recognition patterns, whereas those with drastically different TCRbeta-chains but sharing identical TCRalpha CDR3 loops displayed identical functional specificity. This suggested that the CDRalpha3 loop determines the TCR specificity in our model, the conclusion supported by modeling of the TCR over the actual HSV-8:K(b) crystal structure. Importantly, these results indicate a remarkable conservation in CDRalpha3 positioning, and, therefore, in docking of diverse TCRalphabeta heterodimers onto variant peptide:class I complexes, implying a high degree of determinism in thymic selection and T cell activation.  相似文献   

20.
Immunization of DBA/2 (H-2d) mice with syngeneic P815 tumor cell transfectants that express HLA class I genes elicits CTL that recognize HLA in the context of H-2Kd molecules. Anti-HLA-CW3 CTL cross-react to a variable extent on the related alleles A3 and A24. Using a panel of target cells expressing native or recombinant HLA genes, we could map the epitope recognized by a CTL clone specific for CW3 to the second external (alpha 2) domain of CW3. Moreover, the epitope recognized by this clone could be mimicked by incubating P815 (HLA negative) target cells with a synthetic peptide corresponding to the C-terminal 12 amino acids of the CW3 alpha 2 domain (residues 171 to 182). Other independent anti-CW3 CTL clones with different fine specificities recognized the same CW3 peptide. In contrast, CTL clones specific for HLA-A24 or HLA-A3 that did not lyse P815-CW3 transfectants did not recognize this peptide. The CW3 peptide could be recognized on other tumor cell targets that were also of H-2d origin, but not on those of H-2b or H-2k origin. The requirement for the expression of H-2Kd by the target cells was directly demonstrated using L cell Kd transfectants. Our results suggest that the CTL response of DBA/2 mice immunized with P815-CW3 transfectants is predominantly Kd restricted and focused on epitopes contained within the 12 C-terminal amino acids of the alpha 2 domain.  相似文献   

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