Structural Features of Autoreactive TCR That Determine the Degree of Degeneracy in Peptide Recognition

  • Hausmann S
  • Martin M
  • Gauthier L
  • et al.
74Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Structural aspects of human TCRs that allow the activation of autoreactive T cells by diverse microbial peptides were examined using two human myelin basic protein (MBP)-specific T cell clones. The TCR sequences of these clones differed only in the N region of TCR-α and -β since the clones had the same Vα-Jα and Vβ-Jβ rearrangements. The two clones had a similar fine specificity for the MBP peptide, except for the P5 position of the peptide (lysine). In the crystal structure of the HLA-DR2/MBP peptide complex, P5 lysine is a prominent, solvent-exposed residue in the center of the DR2/MBP peptide surface. Five microbial peptides with conservative or nonconservative changes at the P5 position (lysine to arginine, serine, or proline) activated one of these clones. In contrast, the other clone was activated only by three of these peptides which had a conservative lysine to arginine change at P5. The degree of specificity/degeneracy in recognition of the P5 side chain was the key difference between these TCRs since the Escherichia coli/Haemophilus influenzae peptide stimulated both clones when the P5 position was substituted from serine to arginine. These results demonstrate that the complementarity-determining region 3 loops contribute to the degree of degeneracy in peptide recognition by human MBP-specific TCRs.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hausmann, S., Martin, M., Gauthier, L., & Wucherpfennig, K. W. (1999). Structural Features of Autoreactive TCR That Determine the Degree of Degeneracy in Peptide Recognition. The Journal of Immunology, 162(1), 338–344. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.1.338

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free