Title of article :
The Structure and Stability of the Monomorphic HLA-G Are Influenced by the Nature of the Bound Peptide
Author/Authors :
Nicholas G. Walpole، نويسنده , , Lars Kjer-Nielsen، نويسنده , , Lyudmila Kostenko، نويسنده , , James McCluskey and Jamie Rossjohn، نويسنده , , Andrew G. Brooks، نويسنده , , Jamie Rossjohn، نويسنده , , Craig S. Clements، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
The highly polymorphic major histocompatibility complex class Ia (MHC-Ia) molecules present a broad array of peptides to the clonotypically diverse αβ T-cell receptors. In contrast, MHC-Ib molecules exhibit limited polymorphism and bind a more restricted peptide repertoire, in keeping with their major role in innate immunity. Nevertheless, some MHC-Ib molecules do play a role in adaptive immunity. While human leukocyte antigen E (HLA-E), the MHC-Ib molecule, binds a very restricted repertoire of peptides, the peptide binding preferences of HLA-G, the class Ib molecule, are less stringent, although the basis by which HLA-G can bind various peptides is unclear. To investigate how HLA-G can accommodate different peptides, we compared the structure of HLA-G bound to three naturally abundant self-peptides (RIIPRHLQL, KGPPAALTL and KLPQAFYIL) and their thermal stabilities. The conformation of HLA-GKGPPAALTL was very similar to that of the HLA-GRIIPRHLQL structure. However, the structure of HLA-GKLPQAFYIL not only differed in the conformation of the bound peptide but also caused a small shift in the α2 helix of HLA-G. Furthermore, the relative stability of HLA-G was observed to be dependent on the nature of the bound peptide. These peptide-dependent effects on the substructure of the monomorphic HLA-G are likely to impact on its recognition by receptors of both innate and adaptive immune systems.
Keywords :
human leukocyte antigen G , structural immunology , HLA-G , Antigen presentation , adaptive immunity , innate immunity
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology