Enhanced catalytic action of HLA-DM on the exchange of peptides lacking backbone hydrogen bonds between their N-terminal region and the MHC class II alpha-chain
Stratikos, Efstratios ; Wiley, Don C. ; Stern, Lawrence J.
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Keywords
Catalysis
Conserved Sequence
HLA-D Antigens
HLA-DR1 Antigen
Hemagglutinin Glycoproteins, Influenza Virus
Histocompatibility Antigens Class II
Humans
Hydrogen Bonding
Intracellular Fluid
Kinetics
Molecular Sequence Data
Peptide Fragments
Protein Conformation
RNA Editing
Life Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
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Abstract
The class II MHC homolog HLA-DM catalyzes exchange of peptides bound to class II MHC proteins, and is an important component of the Ag presentation machinery. The mechanism of HLA-DM-mediated catalysis is largely obscure. HLA-DM catalyzes exchange of peptides of varying sequence, suggesting that a peptide sequence-independent component of the MHC-peptide interaction could be involved in the catalytic process. Twelve conserved hydrogen bonds between the peptide backbone and the MHC are a prominent sequence-independent feature of the MHC-peptide interaction. To evaluate the relative importance of these hydrogen bonds toward HLA-DM action, we prepared peptide variants that lacked the ability to form one or more of the hydrogen bonds as a result of backbone amide N-methylation or truncation, and tested their ability to be exchanged by HLA-DM. We found that disruption of hydrogen bonds involving HLA-DR1 residues alpha51-53, a short extended segment at the N terminus of the alpha subunit helical region, led to heightened HLA-DM catalytic efficacy. We propose that those bonds are disrupted in the MHC conformation recognized by HLA-DM to allow structural transitions in that area during DM-assisted peptide release. These results suggest that peptides or compounds that bind MHC but cannot form these interactions would be preferentially edited out by HLA-DM.
Source
J Immunol. 2004 Jan 15;172(2):1109-17.