Mutagenesis of beryllium-specific TCRs suggests an unusual binding topology for antigen recognition

NA Bowerman, MT Falta, DG Mack… - The Journal of …, 2011 - journals.aai.org
NA Bowerman, MT Falta, DG Mack, JW Kappler, AP Fontenot
The Journal of Immunology, 2011journals.aai.org
Unconventional Ags, such as metals, stimulate T cells in a very specific manner. To
delineate the binding landscape for metal-specific T cell recognition, alanine screens were
performed on a set of Be-specific TCRs derived from the lung of a chronic beryllium disease
patient. These TCRs are HLA-DP2–restricted and express nearly identical TCR Vβ5. 1
chains coupled with different TCR α-chains. Site-specific mutagenesis of all amino acids
comprising the CDRs of the TCRA and TCRB genes showed a dominant role for Vβ5. 1 …
Abstract
Unconventional Ags, such as metals, stimulate T cells in a very specific manner. To delineate the binding landscape for metal-specific T cell recognition, alanine screens were performed on a set of Be-specific TCRs derived from the lung of a chronic beryllium disease patient. These TCRs are HLA-DP2–restricted and express nearly identical TCR Vβ5. 1 chains coupled with different TCR α-chains. Site-specific mutagenesis of all amino acids comprising the CDRs of the TCRA and TCRB genes showed a dominant role for Vβ5. 1 residues in Be recognition, with little contribution from the TCR α-chain. Solvent-exposed residues along the α-helices of the HLA-DP2 α-and β-chains were also mutated to alanine. Two β-chain residues, located near the proposed Be binding site of HLA-DP2, played a dominant role in T cell recognition with no contribution from the HLA-DP2 α-chain. These findings suggest that Be-specific T cells recognize Ag using an unconventional binding topology, with the majority of interactions contributed by TCR Vβ5. 1 residues and the HLA-DP2 β1-chain. Thus, unusual docking topologies are not exclusively used by autoreactive T cells, but also for the recognition of unconventional metal Ags, such as Be.
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