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The Journal of Immunology, 2006, 177: 2123-2130.
Copyright © 2006 by The American Association of Immunologists

The Role of Structurally Conserved Class I MHC in Tumor Rejection: Contribution of the Q8 Locus1

Eugene Y. Chiang and Iwona Stroynowski2

Center for Immunology, Department of Microbiology and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390

The mouse multimember family of Qa-2 oligomorphic class I MHC genes is continuously undergoing duplications and deletions that alter the number of the two "prototype" Qa-2 sequences, Q8 and Q9. The frequent recombination events within the Q region lead to strain-specific modulation of the cumulative Qa-2 expression levels. Q9 protects C57BL/6 hosts from multiple disparate tumors and functions as a major CTL restriction element for shared tumor-associated Ags. We have now analyzed functional and structural properties of Q8, a class I MHC that differs significantly from Q9 in the peptide-binding, CTL-interacting {alpha}1 and {alpha}2 regions. Unexpectedly, we find that the extracellular domains of Q8 and Q9 act similarly during primary and secondary rejection of tumors, are recognized by cross-reactive antitumor CTL, have overlapping peptide-binding motifs, and are both assembled via the transporter associated with the Ag processing pathway. These findings suggest that shared Ag-presenting functions of the "odd" and "even" Qa-2 loci may contribute to the selective pressures shaping the haplotype-dependent quantitative variation of Qa-2 protein expression.




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P. A. Swanson II, C. D. Pack, A. Hadley, C.-R. Wang, I. Stroynowski, P. E. Jensen, and A. E. Lukacher
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