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The Journal of Immunology, 2001, 166: 4005-4011.
Copyright © 2001 by The American Association of Immunologists

Two MHC Surface Amino Acid Differences Distinguish Foreign Peptide Recognition from Autoantigen Specificity1

Devraj Basu, Stephen Horvath, Leigh O’Mara, David Donermeyer and Paul M. Allen2

Department of Pathology and Center for Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110

KRN T cells can recognize two self MHC alleles with differing biological consequences. They respond to the foreign peptide RN(42–56) bound to I-Ak or alternatively initiate autoimmune arthritis by interacting with a self Ag, GPI(282–294), on I-Ag7. Five surface amino acid differences between the two MHC molecules collectively alter which peptide side chains are recognized by the KRN TCR. In this study, it is shown that mutation of only two of these residues, {alpha}65 and {beta}78, in I-Ak to their I-Ag7 counterparts is sufficient to allow recognition of the TCR contacts from GPI(282–294). To provide a detailed mechanism for the specificity change, the distinct contributions of each of these two mutations to the global effect on peptide specificity were analyzed. The {alpha}65 mutation is shown to broaden the spectrum of amino acids permissible at P8 of the peptide. In contrast, the {beta}78 mutation alone blocks KRN TCR interaction with I-Ak and requires the simultaneous presence of the {alpha}65 mutation to preserve recognition. In the presence of the {alpha}65 mutation, the {beta}78 residue broadens peptide recognition at P3 and prevents recognition of the P8 L in RN(42–56), thus producing the observed specificity shift. These results localize the functionally relevant differences between the surfaces of two self-restricted MHC molecules to two residues that have counterbalanced positive and negative contributions to interaction with a single TCR. They highlight how subtle structural distinctions attributable to single amino acids can stand at the interface between foreign Ag responsiveness and pathogenic autoreactivity.




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B. T. Wipke and P. M. Allen
Essential Role of Neutrophils in the Initiation and Progression of a Murine Model of Rheumatoid Arthritis
J. Immunol., August 1, 2001; 167(3): 1601 - 1608.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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