F pocket flexibility influences the tapasin dependence of two differentially disease-associated MHC Class I proteins

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Abstract

The human MHC class I protein HLA-B*27:05 is statistically associated with ankylosing spondylitis, unlike HLA-B*27:09, which differs in a single amino acid in the F pocket of the peptide-binding groove. To understand how this unique amino acid difference leads to a different behavior of the proteins in the cell, we have investigated the conformational stability of both proteins using a combination of in silico and experimental approaches. Here, we show that the binding site of B*27:05 is conformationally disordered in the absence of peptide due to a charge repulsion at the bottom of the F pocket. In agreement with this, B*27:05 requires the chaperone protein tapasin to a greater extent than the conformationally stable B*27:09 in order to remain structured and to bind peptide. Taken together, our data demonstrate a method to predict tapasin dependence and physiological behavior from the sequence and crystal structure of a particular class I allotype.

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Abualrous, E. T., Fritzsche, S., Hein, Z., Al-Balushi, M. S., Reinink, P., Boyle, L. H., … Springer, S. (2015). F pocket flexibility influences the tapasin dependence of two differentially disease-associated MHC Class I proteins. European Journal of Immunology, 45(4), 1248–1257. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201445307

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