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1.
2.
The human class I alleles HLA-A11 and HLA-A3 have a well-documented history of serological cross-reactivity. This cross-reactivity suggests that they are closely related, a suggestion which is supported by the fact that the HLA-A11 and HLA-A3 genes are distinguished from all other A-locus genes by a restriction fragment length polymorphism observed in Bam HI digests. To examine the extent of sequence homology between HLA-A11 and HLA-A3, we have cloned the HLA-A11 gene and sequenced the coding regions (exons). The results reveal that HLA-A11 and HLA-A3 display the highest degree of homology reported for any pair of serologically defined class I alleles. Only nine base differences resulting in six amino acid differences were observed in exons 2–8. One of the amino acid substitutions is in the 1 domain and the other five are in the 2 domain. Comparison of this sequence with that of other human class I molecules implicates Gln62 as a critical residue involved in HLA-A11 – HLA-A3 serological cross-reactivity. In addition, the amino acid sequence allowed us to successfully predict cross-reactive recognition of HLA-A11 by cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for a rare subtype of HLA-A3, HLA-A3.2. This result provides further support for the importance of the 2 domain residues 152 and 156 in forming determinants on class I molecules that are recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes.Abbreviations used in this paper CTL cytotoxic T lymphocyte - PBL peripheral blood lymphocyte - PHA phytohemagglutinin  相似文献   

3.
The E3-19K protein from human adenoviruses (Ads) retains class I MHC molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum. As a consequence, the cell surface expression of class I molecules is suppressed, allowing Ads to evade immune surveillance. Using native gel electrophoresis, gel filtration chromatography, and surface plasmon resonance, we show that a soluble form of the Ad type 2 (Ad2) E3-19K protein associates with HLA-A and -B molecules; equilibrium dissociation constants were in the nanomolar range and approximately 2.5-fold higher affinity for HLA-A (-A*0201, -A*0301, -A*1101, -A*3301, and -Aw*6801) relative to HLA-B (-B*0702 and -B*0801) molecules. Among the alleles of the HLA-A locus examined, HLA-A*3101 associated approximately 15-fold less avidly with soluble E3-19K. Soluble E3-19K interacted only very weakly with HLA-Cw*0304, and no interaction with HLA-Cw*0401 could be detected under identical conditions. Site-directed mutagenesis and flow cytometry demonstrated that MHC residue 56 plays a critical role in the association and endoplasmic reticulum retention of HLA-A molecules by E3-19K. This delineates the spatial environment around residue 56 as a putative E3-19K interaction surface on class I molecules. Overall, our data imply that a link may exist between host genetic factors and the susceptibility of individuals to Ad infections.  相似文献   

4.
We previously reported peptide vaccine candidates for HLA-A3 supertype (-A3, -A11, -A31, -A33)-positive cancer patients. In the present study, we examined whether those peptides can also induce cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity restricted to HLA-A2, HLA-A24, and HLA-A26 alleles. Fourteen peptides were screened for their binding activity to HLA-A*0201, -A*0206, -A*0207, -A*2402, and -A*2601 molecules and then tested for their ability to induce CTL activity in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from prostate cancer patients. Among these peptides, one from the prostate acid phosphatase protein exhibited binding activity to HLA-A*0201, -A*0206, and -A*2402 molecules. In addition, PBMCs stimulated with this peptide showed that HLA-A2 or HLA-A24 restricted CTL activity. Their cytotoxicity toward cancer cells was ascribed to peptide-specific and CD8+ T cells. These results suggest that this peptide could be widely applicable as a peptide vaccine for HLA-A3 supertype-, HLA-A2-, and -A24-positive cancer patients.  相似文献   

5.
As part of the ongoing study of natural HIV-1 resistance in the women of the Nairobi Sex Workers' study, we have examined a resistance-associated HLA class I allele at the molecular level. Typing by polymerase chain reaction using sequence-specific primers determined that this molecule is closely related to HLA-A*0214, one of a family of HLA-A2 supertype alleles which correlate with HIV-1 resistance in this population. Direct nucleotide sequencing shows that this molecule differs from A*0214, having a silent nucleotide substitution. We therefore propose to designate it HLA-A*02142. We have determined the peptide-binding motif of HLA-A*0214/02142 by peptide elution and bulk Edman degradative sequencing. The resulting motif, X-[Q,V]-X-X-X-K-X-X-[V,L], includes lysine as an anchor at position 6. The data complement available information on the peptide-binding characteristics of this molecule, and will be of use in identifying antigenic peptides from HIV-1 and other pathogens.  相似文献   

6.
Liu F  Wang S  Ye Y  Zhang H  Zhang Y  Chen W 《Immunogenetics》2006,58(5-6):339-346
A novel HLA-A allele, HLA-A*0279, was identified using PCR-SSP and PCR-SBT methods. It is inheritable. HLA-A*0279 differs from HLA-A*020601 by a single nucleotide at position 497 in exon 3, leading to an amino acid change from Threonine to Isoleucine at the alpha2 helix of HLA molecule. To investigate whether the altered amino acid residue could affect its peptide-binding repertoire, we compared the predicted crystal structure of HLA-A*020601 and HLA-A*0279 by Swiss-PdbViewer software analysis. We found that the crystal structure of the two molecules is very similar except for a difference in the number of hydrogen bonds they can possibly form, which in turn could affect their structural stability. To test whether HLA-A*0279 has the ability to cross-present A*0201 - restricted peptides to T cells, the full lenght cDNA of HLA-A*0201, -A* 020601 and -A*0279 were respectively transfected into COS-7 cells, which were then used as targets in IFN-gamma release Elispot assay. A*2079 was found to be able to present A*0201- restricted peptides to and induce the response of CTL, thus it can be classified as member of the HLA-A2 functional supertype family. This finding would benefit the design of peptide vaccines to be applied in broader populations.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper have been submitted to the Genbank nucleotide sequence database and have been assigned the accession numbers AY856830 and HWS10002813.The name HLA-A*0279 was officially assigned by the World Health Organization Nomenclature Committee in January 2005.  相似文献   

7.
Intracellular transport of class I MHC complexes is dependent on assembly of class I heavy chains with 2-microglobulin (2m) and peptides. This suggests that amino acid residues of individual class I molecules which are important for their stability and transport are likely to include those which contribute to binding of a majority of the cleft-associated peptides. To identify such critical residues, substitutions at polymorphic positions within the peptide binding cleft were introduced into a mutant HLA-A*0201 molecule bearing an additional gly>lys substitution at position 242 (242K). The 242K mutation weakens association of the HLA-A*201 heavy chain with 2m and was used to enhance potential effects of substitutions in the peptide binding groove on class I stability. Critical in choosing which binding cleft positions to mutate was the observation that HLA-A*6801 was less sensitive to the effects of 242K mutation than HLA-A*0201 and A*6901. This suggested that one or more of the six residues in the 2 domain differing between HLA-A*6901 and A*6801 were likely to affect class I complex stability. Positions 95, 97, 107, 114, 116, and 156 in either 242K or wild-type HLA-A*0201 molecules were therefore each converted to those residues found in HLA-A*6801. One of the second-site substitutions, arg>met at position 97, increased stability and restored surface expression of the 242K molecule. Five other substitutions either had no additional effect or further impaired 242K stability. Substitution of his>arg at position 114 blocked surface expression of both 242K and wild-type HLA-A*0201 molecules. These results demonstrate that polymorphic residues in the binding cleft influence the stability of class I complexes, and suggest that position 97 plays a critical role in stabilizing class I molecules for transport.  相似文献   

8.
In all vertebrate animals, CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are controlled by major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules. These are highly polymorphic peptide receptors selecting and presenting endogenously derived epitopes to circulating CTLs. The polymorphism of the MHC effectively individualizes the immune response of each member of the species. We have recently developed efficient methods to generate recombinant human MHC-I (also known as human leukocyte antigen class I, HLA-I) molecules, accompanying peptide-binding assays and predictors, and HLA tetramers for specific CTL staining and manipulation. This has enabled a complete mapping of all HLA-I specificities (“the Human MHC Project”). Here, we demonstrate that these approaches can be applied to other species. We systematically transferred domains of the frequently expressed swine MHC-I molecule, SLA-1*0401, onto a HLA-I molecule (HLA-A*11:01), thereby generating recombinant human/swine chimeric MHC-I molecules as well as the intact SLA-1*0401 molecule. Biochemical peptide-binding assays and positional scanning combinatorial peptide libraries were used to analyze the peptide-binding motifs of these molecules. A pan-specific predictor of peptide–MHC-I binding, NetMHCpan, which was originally developed to cover the binding specificities of all known HLA-I molecules, was successfully used to predict the specificities of the SLA-1*0401 molecule as well as the porcine/human chimeric MHC-I molecules. These data indicate that it is possible to extend the biochemical and bioinformatics tools of the Human MHC Project to other vertebrate species.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Host immunogenetic factors such as HLA class I polymorphism are important to HIV-1 infection risk and AIDS progression. Previous studies using high-resolution HLA class I profile data of Chinese populations appeared insufficient to provide information for HIV-1 vaccine development and clinical trial design. Here we reported HLA class I association with HIV-1 susceptibility in a Chinese Han and a Chinese Uyghur cohort.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Our cohort included 327 Han and 161 Uyghur ethnic individuals. Each cohort included HIV-1 seropositive and HIV-1 seronegative subjects. Four-digit HLA class I typing was performed by sequencing-based typing and high-resolution PCR-sequence specific primer. We compared the HLA class I allele and inferred haplotype frequencies between HIV-1 seropositive and seronegative groups. A neighbor-joining tree between our cohorts and other populations was constructed based on allele frequencies of HLA-A and HLA-B loci. We identified 58 HLA-A, 75 HLA-B, and 32 HLA-Cw distinct alleles from our cohort and no novel alleles. The frequency of HLA-B*5201 and A*0301 was significantly higher in the Han HIV-1 negative group. The frequency of HLA-B*5101 was significantly higher in the Uyghur HIV-1 negative group. We observed statistically significant increases in expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm predicted haplotype frequencies of HLA-A*0201-B*5101 in the Uyghur HIV-1 negative group, and of Cw*0304-B*4001 in the Han HIV-1 negative group. The B62s supertype frequency was found to be significantly higher in the Han HIV-1 negative group than in the Han HIV-1 positive group.

Conclusions

At the four-digit level, several HLA class I alleles and haplotypes were associated with lower HIV-1 susceptibility. Homogeneity of HLA class I and Bw4/Bw6 heterozygosity were not associated with HIV-1 susceptibility in our cohort. These observations contribute to the Chinese HLA database and could prove useful in the development of HIV-1 vaccine candidates.  相似文献   

10.
The cell surface molecules CD4 and CD8 greatly enhance the sensitivity of T-cell antigen recognition, acting as "co-receptors" by binding to the same major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules as the T-cell receptor (TCR). Here we use surface plasmon resonance to study the binding of CD8alphaalpha to class I MHC molecules. CD8alphaalpha bound the classical MHC molecules HLA-A*0201, -A*1101, -B*3501, and -C*0702 with dissociation constants (K(d)) of 90-220 microm, a range of affinities distinctly lower than that of TCR/peptide-MHC interaction. We suggest such affinities apply to most CD8alphaalpha/classical class I MHC interactions and may be optimal for T-cell recognition. In contrast, CD8alphaalpha bound both HLA-A*6801 and B*4801 with a significantly lower affinity (>/=1 mm), consistent with the finding that interactions with these alleles are unable to mediate cell-cell adhesion. Interestingly, CD8alphaalpha bound normally to the nonclassical MHC molecule HLA-G (K(d) approximately 150 microm), but only weakly to the natural killer cell receptor ligand HLA-E (K(d) >/= 1 mm). Site-directed mutagenesis experiments revealed that variation in CD8alphaalpha binding affinity can be explained by amino acid differences within the alpha3 domain. Taken together with crystallographic studies, these results indicate that subtle conformational changes in the solvent exposed alpha3 domain loop (residues 223-229) can account for the differential ability of both classical and nonclassical class I MHC molecules to bind CD8.  相似文献   

11.
Prediction of promiscuous peptides that bind HLA class I molecules   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Promiscuous T-cell epitopes make ideal targets for vaccine development. We report here a computational system, MULTIPRED, for the prediction of peptide binding to the HLA-A2 supertype. It combines a novel representation of peptide/MHC interactions with a hidden Markov model as the prediction algorithm. MULTIPREDis both sensitive and specific, and demonstrates high accuracy of peptide-binding predictions for HLA-A*0201, *0204, and *0205 alleles, good accuracy for *0206 allele, and marginal accuracy for *0203 allele. MULTIPREDreplaces earlier requirements for individual prediction models for each HLA allelic variant and simplifies computational aspects of peptide-binding prediction. Preliminary testing indicates that MULTIPRED can predict peptide binding to HLA-A2 supertype molecules with high accuracy, including those allelic variants for which no experimental binding data are currently available.  相似文献   

12.
MOTIVATION: Various computational methods have been proposed to tackle the problem of predicting the peptide binding ability for a specific MHC molecule. These methods are based on known binding peptide sequences. However, current available peptide databases do not have very abundant amounts of examples and are highly redundant. Existing studies show that MHC molecules can be classified into supertypes in terms of peptide-binding specificities. Therefore, we first give a method for reducing the redundancy in a given dataset based on information entropy, then present a novel approach for prediction by learning a predictive model from a dataset of binders for not only the molecule of interest but also for other MHC molecules. RESULTS: We experimented on the HLA-A family with the binding nonamers of A1 supertype (HLA-A*0101, A*2601, A*2902, A*3002), A2 supertype (A*0201, A*0202, A*0203, A*0206, A*6802), A3 supertype (A*0301, A*1101, A*3101, A*3301, A*6801) and A24 supertype (A*2301 and A*2402), whose data were collected from six publicly available peptide databases and two private sources. The results show that our approach significantly improves the prediction accuracy of peptides that bind a specific HLA molecule when we combine binding data of HLA molecules in the same supertype. Our approach can thus be used to help find new binders for MHC molecules.  相似文献   

13.
Liu H  Stafford WF  Bouvier M 《Journal of virology》2005,79(21):13317-13325
E3-19K is a type I membrane glycoprotein expressed by adenoviruses (Ads) to modulate host antiviral immune responses. We have developed an expression system for the endoplasmic reticulum lumenal domain (residues 1 to 100) of Ad type 2 E3-19K tagged with a C-terminal His6 sequence in baculovirus-infected insect cells. In this system, recombinant E3-19K is secreted into the culture medium. A characterization of soluble E3-19K by analytical ultracentrifugation and circular dichroism showed that the protein is monomeric and adopts a stable and correctly folded tertiary structure. Using a gel mobility shift assay and analytical ultracentrifugation, we showed that soluble E3-19K associates with soluble peptide-filled and peptide-deficient HLA-A*1101 molecules. This is the first example of a viral immunomodulatory protein that interacts with conformationally distinct forms of class I major histocompatibility complex molecules. The E3-19K/HLA-A*1101 complexes formed in a 1:1 stoichiometry with equilibrium dissociation constants (Kd) of 50 +/- 10 nM for peptide-filled molecules and of about 10 microM for peptide-deficient molecules. A temperature-dependent proteolysis study revealed that the association of E3-19K with peptide-deficient HLA-A*1101 molecules stabilizes the binding groove. Importantly, our studies showed that peptide-deficient HLA-A*1101 molecules sequestered by E3-19K are capable of binding antigenic peptides and maturing into peptide-filled molecules. This firmly establishes that E3-19K does not block binding of antigenic peptides. Together, our results suggest that Ads have evolved to exploit the late and early stages of the class I antigen presentation pathway.  相似文献   

14.
We have sequenced the Pan troglodytes class I (Patr) molecules from three common chimpanzees and expressed them as single molecules in a class I-deficient cell line. These lines were utilized to obtain purified class I molecules to define the peptide binding motifs associated with five different Patr molecules. Based on these experiments, as well as analysis of the predicted structure of the B and F polymorphic MHC pockets, we classified five Patr molecules (Patr-A*0101, Patr-B*0901, Patr-B*0701, Patr-A*0602, and Patr-B*1301) within previously defined supertype specificities associated with HLA class I molecules (HLA-A3, -B7, -A1, and -A24 supertypes). The overlap in the binding repertoire between specific HLA and Patr class I molecules was in the range of 33 to 92%, depending on the particular Patr molecule as assessed by the binding of HIV-, hepatitis B virus-, and hepatitis C virus-derived epitopes. Finally, live cell binding assays of nine chimpanzee-derived B cell lines demonstrated that HLA supertype peptides bound to Patr class I molecules with frequencies in the 20-50% range.  相似文献   

15.
Long-term nonprogression during acute HIV infection has been strongly associated with HLA-B*5701 or HLA-B*5703. In this study, we present the high resolution crystal structures of HLA-B*5703 complexes with three HIV-1 epitopes: ISPRTLNAW (ISP), KAFSPEVIPMF (KAF-11), and KAFSPEVI (KAF-8). These reveal peptide anchoring at position 2 and their C termini. The different peptide lengths and primary sequences are accommodated by variation in the specific contacts made to the HLA-B*5703, flexibility in water structure, and conformational adjustment of side chains within the peptide-binding groove. The peptides adopt markedly different conformations, and trap variable numbers of water molecules, near a cluster of tyrosine side chains located in the central region of the peptide-binding groove. The KAF-11 epitope completely encompasses the shorter KAF-8 epitope but the peptides are presented in different conformations; the KAF-11 peptide arches out of the peptide-binding groove, exposing a significant main chain surface area. Bioinformatic analysis of the MHC side chains observed to contribute to the peptide anchor specificity, and other specific peptide contacts, reveals HLA alleles associated with long-term nonprogression and a number of related HLA alleles that may share overlapping peptide repertoires with HLA-B*5703 and thus may display a similar capacity for efficient immune control of HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

16.
The HLA-A2 antigen expressed by donor OZB can be distinguished from the main HLA-A2.1 subtype by isoelectric focusing - it is one charge unit more acidic — and by some alloreactive T-cell clones but not by cytolytic T lymphocyte lines. The structure of variant OZB has been examined by comparative peptide mapping with A2.1 and radiochemical sequence analysis. The two molecules were found to differ in a single tryptic peptide from the 0 region, spanning residues 220–243. The amino acid sequence of this peptide from variant OZB revealed that there was only one amino acid change of Glu instead of Ala at position 236, a hitherto invariant residue in class I HLA antigens. All previously characterized HLA or H-2 natural variants have structural changes restricted to the 1 and/or 2 domains. Thus, variant OZB is unique in that (1) it has one amino acid change in 3 and (2) it has no changes in l and 2. The only detected substitution of this variant may be accounted for by a single base change at the DNA level, suggesting that it might have resulted from a point mutation in the A2.1 gene. The structural features of variant OZB open a novel way to examine the influence of polymorphism in 3 on cytolytic T-cell recognition of naturally occurring class I antigens.Abbreviations CTL cytolytic T lymphocytes - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - IEF isoelectric focusing - MHC major histocompatibility complex  相似文献   

17.
Influenza-specific cytotoxic T cells restricted by HLA-A3 and allogeneic CTL specific for HLA-A3 recognize differences between serologically indistinguishable HLA-A3 antigens. Previous biochemical studies have indicated that such differential recognition can be explained by alterations in the primary structure of class I heavy chains. Characterization of these sequence differences may therefore identify portions of the class I molecule that form determinants recognized by CTL. In this study, we describe the cloning and sequencing of an HLA-A3 subtype from donor E1 (E1-A3). Cloning of the gene encoding E1-A3 was simplified by determining that a 15.5-kb BamHI fragment contains the complete gene and is characteristic of HLA-A3 and only one other class I gene (HLA-A11). Comparison of the E1-A3 sequence to that of a previously sequenced HLA-A3 gene for exons encoding extracellular class I domains revealed three nucleotide differences. All of these differences were located within a discrete region of exon 3 (encoding the alpha 2 domain) and result in a change of two amino acids, at positions 152 (Glu----Val) and 156 (Leu----Gln). This finding suggests that these amino acids are crucial for the information of a determinant recognized by CTL. Furthermore, the altered nucleotide sequence of E1-A3 is identical to the sequence of the HLA-Aw24 gene for codons 128 to 161. These observations of multiple clustered changes in the E1-A3 subtype (relative to the prototype sequence) and identity of the altered sequence with the sequence of another class I gene support the concept that gene conversion is a primary mechanism for the generation of class I polymorphism.  相似文献   

18.
We report on molecular dynamics simulations of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide complexes. Class I MHC molecules play an important role in cellular immunity by presenting antigenic peptides to cytotoxic T cells. Pockets in the peptide-binding groove of MHC molecules accommodate anchor side chains of the bound peptide. Amino acid substitutions in MHC affect differences in the peptide-anchor motifs. HLA-A*0217, human MHC class I molecule, differs from HLA-A*0201 only by three amino acid residues substitutions (positions 95, 97, and 99) at the floor of the peptide-binding groove. A*0217 showed a strong preference for Pro at position 3 (p3) and accepted Phe at p9 of its peptide ligands, but these preferences have not been found in other HLA-A2 ligands. To reveal the structural mechanism of these observations, the A*0217-peptide complexes were simulated by 1000 ps molecular dynamics at 300 K with explicit solvent molecules and compared with those of the A*0201-peptide complexes. We examined the distances between the anchor side chain of the bound peptide and the pocket, and the rms fluctuations of the bound peptides and the HLA molecules. On the basis of the results from our simulations, we propose that Pro at p3 serves as an optimum residue to lock the dominant anchor residue (p9) tightly into pocket F and to hold the peptide in the binding groove, rather than a secondary anchor residue fitting optimally the complementary pocket. We also found that Phe at p9 is used to occupy the space created by replacements of three amino acid residues at the floor within the groove. These findings would provide a novel understanding in the peptide-binding motifs of class I MHC molecules.  相似文献   

19.

Objectives

Disease progression varies among HIV-1-infected individuals. The present study aimed to explore possible viral and host factors affecting disease progression in HIV-1-infected children.

Methods

Since 2000, 102 HIV-1 vertically-infected children have been followed-up in Kenya. Here we studied 29 children (15 male/14 female) who started antiretroviral treatment at <5 years of age (rapid progressors; RP), and 32 (17 male/15 female) who started at >10 years of age (slow progressors; SP). Sequence variations in the HIV-1 gag and nef genes and the HLA class I-related epitopes were compared between the two groups.

Results

Based on nef sequences, HIV-1 subtypes A1/D were detected in 62.5%/12.5% of RP and 66.7%/20% of SP, with no significant difference in subtype distribution between groups (p = 0.8). In the ten Nef functional domains, only the PxxP3 region showed significantly greater variation in RP (33.3%) than SP (7.7%, p = 0.048). Gag sequences did not significantly differ between groups. The reportedly protective HLA-A alleles, A*74:01, A*32:01 and A*26, were more commonly observed in SP (50.0%) than RP (11.1%, p = 0.010), whereas the reportedly disease-susceptible HLA-B*45:01 was more common in RP (33.3%) than SP (7.4%, p = 0.045). Compared to RP, SP showed a significantly higher median number of predicted HLA-B-related 12-mer epitopes in Nef (3 vs. 2, p = 0.037), HLA-B-related 11-mer epitopes in Gag (2 vs. 1, p = 0.029), and HLA-A-related 9-mer epitopes in Gag (4 vs. 1, p = 0.051). SP also had fewer HLA-C-related epitopes in Nef (median 4 vs. 5, p = 0.046) and HLA-C-related 11-mer epitopes in Gag (median 1 vs. 1.5, p = 0.044) than RP.

Conclusions

Compared to rapid progressors, slow progressors had more protective HLA-A alleles and more HLA-B-related epitopes in both the Nef and Gag proteins. These results suggest that the host factor HLA plays a stronger role in disease progression than the Nef and Gag sequence variations in HIV-1-infected Kenyan children.  相似文献   

20.
Lack of a universal vaccine against all serotypes of influenza A viruses and recent progress on T cell-related vaccines against influenza A virus illuminate the important role of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in anti-influenza virus immunity. However, the diverse HLA alleles among humans complicate virus-specific cellular immunity research, and elucidation of cross-HLA allele T cell responses to influenza virus specificity requires further detailed work. An ideal CTL epitope-based vaccine would cover a broad spectrum of epitope antigens presented by most, if not all, of the HLAs. Here, we evaluated the 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus-specific T cell responses among the HLA-A24+ population using a rationally designed peptide pool during the 2009 pandemic. Unexpectedly, cross-HLA allele T cell responses against the influenza A virus peptides were detected among both HLA-A11+ and HLA-A24+ donors. Furthermore, we found cross-responses in the entire HLA-A3 supertype population (including HLA-A11, -A31, -A33, and -A30). The cross-allele antigenic peptides within the peptide pool were identified and characterized, and the crystal structures of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide complexes were determined. The subsequent HLA-A24-defined cross-allele peptides recognized by the HLA-A11+ population were shown to mildly bind to the HLA-A*1101 molecule. Together with the structural models, these results partially explain the cross-allele responses. Our findings elucidate the promiscuity of the cross-allele T cell responses against influenza A viruses and are beneficial for the development of a T cell epitope-based vaccine applied in a broader population.  相似文献   

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