Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001814
Title: Anchor side chains of short peptide fragments trigger ligand-exchange of Class II MHC molecules
Authors: Gupta S.
Höpner, S.
Rupp B.
Günther S.
Dickhaut K.
Agarwal N.
Cardoso M.C.
Kühne R.
Wiesmüller K.-H.
Jung G.
Falk K.
Rötzschke O.
Keywords: amino acid
arginine
dipeptide derivative
major histocompatibility antigen class 2
peptide fragment
tyrosine
HLA antigen class 2
ligand
peptide fragment
allele
animal cell
animal experiment
antigen presentation
antigen presenting cell
antigen specificity
article
binding site
catalysis
CD4+ T lymphocyte
cell surface
complex formation
controlled study
correlation analysis
human
human cell
hydrogen bond
immune response
ligand binding
molecular dynamics
mouse
nonhuman
peptide analysis
protein binding
protein function
regulatory mechanism
sensitivity analysis
sensor
stereospecificity
chemistry
kinetics
structure activity relation
Histocompatibility Antigens Class II
Kinetics
Ligands
Peptide Fragments
Structure-Activity Relationship
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Citation: Gupta S., Höpner, S., Rupp B., Günther S., Dickhaut K., Agarwal N., Cardoso M.C., Kühne R., Wiesmüller K.-H., Jung G., Falk K., Rötzschke O. (2008). Anchor side chains of short peptide fragments trigger ligand-exchange of Class II MHC molecules. PLoS ONE 3 (3) : e1814. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001814
Abstract: Class II MHC molecules display peptides on the cell surface for the surveillance by CD4+ T cells. To ensure that these ligands accurately reflect the content of the intracellular MHC loading compartment, a complex processing pathway has evolved that delivers only stable peptide/ MHC complexes to the surface. As additional safeguard, MHC molecules quickly acquire a 'non-receptive' state once they have lost their ligand. Here we show now that amino acid side chains of short peptides can bypass these safety mechanisms by triggering the reversible ligand-exchange. The catalytic activity of dipeptides such as Tyr-Arg was stereo-specific and could be enhanced by modifications addressing the conserved H-bond network near the P1 pocket of the MHC molecule. It affected both antigen-loading and ligand-release and strictly correlated with reported anchor preferences of P1, the specific target site for the catalytic side chain of the dipeptide. The effect was evident also in CD4+ T cell assays, where the allele-selective influence of the dipeptides translated into increased sensitivities of the antigen-specific immune response. Molecular dynamic calculations support the hypothesis that occupation of P1 prevents the 'closure' of the empty peptide binding site into the non-receptive state. During antigen-processing and -presentation P1 may therefore function as important "sensor" for peptide-load. While it regulates maturation and trafficking of the complex, on the cell surface, short protein fragments present in blood or lymph could utilize this mechanism to alter the ligand composition on antigen presenting cells in a catalytic way. © 2008 Gupta et al.
Source Title: PLoS ONE
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/165608
ISSN: 19326203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001814
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