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Department of Microbiology and Cancer Immunobiology Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75235
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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- and ß-chains of I-A or HLA-DQ,
which may be exacerbated when the transmembrane regions are truncated
in attempts to express soluble molecules. To overcome these
difficulties for I-Ad, approaches in which the
antigenic peptide is covalently tethered (4) or the
ß association
is stabilized by either leucine zippers (5) or by a synthetic peptide
linker (6) have been employed.
The current study describes the production of two I-A molecules
associated with murine autoimmune diseases. I-Au presents
the immunodominant N-terminal 11 mer (or nonapeptide) of myelin basic
protein (MBP)3 to T cells
during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in H-2u
mice (7) and I-Aq presents residues 260 to 270 of type II
collagen (CII) during collagen-induced arthritis in H-2q
mice (8). We have made use of a system that ensures effective pairing
of the
- and ß-chains of MHC class II molecules to express
functionally active MHC class II molecules with antigenic peptides
covalently linked to the ß-chains. Biochemical and functional
characterization of these peptide:I-A complexes have been conducted and
indicate that these proteins have possible applications in the therapy
of autoimmune disease models and in high resolution structural
studies.
| Materials and Methods |
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The murine 1934.4 T cell hybridoma (9) is specific for the
N-terminal 11-mer (or nonamer) of MBP bound to I-Au
and was a generous gift from Dr. D. Wraith (University of Bristol,
Bristol, U.K.). An I-Au MBP1-11-restricted T cell line
expressing the 1934.4 TCR (our manuscript in preparation) was made by
transfecting TCR genes into a TCR-negative cell line 58
-ß- (Ref.
10; kindly provided by Dr. S. Hedrick with permission from Dr. B.
Malissen, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
Marseille-Luminy, France) using
and ß shuttle vectors (11). The
and ß shuttle vectors were kindly provided by Dr. M. Davis
(Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA). TCR expression
was analyzed by indirect immunofluorescence using the anti-Vß8
mAb F23.1 (12), a generous gift from Drs. J. Kappler and P. Marrack
(University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO). The murine
qCII85.33 and qCII92.33 T cell hybridomas recognize bovine CII 260-270
presented in the context of I-Aq (13) and were kindly
provided by Dr. E. Rosloniec (University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN).
These cells were maintained in RPMI complete medium (RPMI 1640 from
Cellgro, Mediatech, Herndon, VA) supplemented with 10%
heat-inactivated FCS, penicillin/streptomycin (100 U/ml), 2 mM
glutamine, and 5.5 x 10-5 M ß-mercaptoethanol).
CTLL-2 (14), an IL-2-dependent mouse T cell line, was kindly provided
by Dr. E. Vitetta (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, TX).
Antibodies
The anti-polyhistidine mAb (IgG2a) HIS-1 was obtained from
Sigma (St. Louis, MO). The following mouse B cell hybridomas were
purchased from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Rockville,
MD): CRL-1729, which secretes 9E10, an anti-myc Ab (15) (IgG1);
TIB-93, which secretes 10.2.16, an anti-I-Ak Ab
(16) (IgG2b) cross-reactive with I-Au; HB-183, which
secretes Y-3P, an anti-I-A Ab (17) (IgG2a) specific for
conformational epitopes of the
-chain of I-Au and
I-Aq; and HB-32, which secretes 14-4-4S, an
anti-I-Ek Ab (IgG2a).
Construction of baculovirus vectors for the expression of I-Au and I-Aq
Generation of I-Au with covalently linked
antigenic peptides.
cDNA clones encoding I-Au were generous gifts of Dr.
D. Wraith. Truncated versions (at codon 217 for
-chain and 222 for
ß-chain) of MHC class II I-Au
and ß genes were
generated by PCR. A strategy similar to that described by Kozono et al.
(4) was used. A KpnI restriction site was inserted between
codons 3 and 4 of the ß-chain gene using site-directed mutagenesis. A
flexible linker including a thrombin cleavage site (GGGGSLVPRGSGG) was
inserted using a synthetic DNA duplex that deleted the 3'
KpnI site while retaining the 5' KpnI site. This
site was used to insert the codons encoding the antigenic peptide, the
[4Y] derivative of the rat MBP1-11 (ASQYRPSQRHG). For MBP1-11, a
glycine was inserted before the MBP sequence as this extension mimics
the role of the acetyl group in removing the charged N terminus of the
peptide, which is necessary for T cell recognition (D. Wraith, personal
communication). The
and ß genes were tailored with
BamHI and BglII sites and ligated into the
corresponding sites of the baculovirus expression vector pAcUW51
(PharMingen, San Diego, CA), which contains polyhedrin and p10
promoters upstream of the two cloning sites for dual expression of the
and ß polypeptides.
Insertion of the leucine zipper motifs at the 3' ends of the
and ß genes.
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u and ßu chain genes (acidic zipper
to the
-chain and the basic zipper to the ß-chain-peptide) using
splicing by overlap extension (19). The PCR product encoding the
-chain-acidic zipper was restricted with BglII and cloned
into the corresponding cloning sites of pAcUW51. The PCR product
encoding the ßu chain-basic zipper was restricted with
BstEII and the fragment containing the carboxyl-terminal 140
codons of the truncated ßu chain fused with the basic
zipper was inserted into the pAcUW51ßu-peptide construct
containing the N terminal 73 codons of the ß-chain, linked peptide,
and the myc-tag (15) followed by a stop codon. The peptide (bovine
CII260-270-IAGFKGEQGPK)-linked form of I-Aq-zipper was
constructed using a similar strategy to that for the I-Au
constructs, but the
q-zipper and
ßq-peptide-zipper were cloned into the BglII
and BamHI sites of the pBlueBac4.5 vector (Invitrogen,
Carlsbad, CA). All the expression constructs were sequenced and
determined to be free of mutations. Production and purification of soluble I-Au and I-Aq molecules
pAcUW51
u/ßu-peptide,
pAcUW51
u/ßu-peptide-zipper,
pBlueBac
q-zipper, and
pBlueBacßq-peptide-zipper were each cotransfected into
Sf9 insect cells with wild-type baculoviral DNA (linear AcMNPV DNA or
Bac-N-Blue DNA, Invitrogen). Sf9 cells were grown in TNM-FH medium (JRH
Biosciences, Lenexa, KS or Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD)
supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated FCS. Recombinant viruses were
identified and plaque purified by visual screening (occ-
plaques) (20) or by the X-galactosidase overlay method (21). The
expression of the recombinant proteins was checked in immunoblots using
the anti-myc (9E10) and anti-polyhistidine mAbs. After three
rounds of plaque purification, 200-ml viral stocks were prepared in Sf9
cells. The stocks were used for the production of MHC class II
molecules by infecting High Five cells (Invitrogen) at a multiplicity
of infection of 10 at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml
in Excell-405 insect cell serum-free medium (JRH Biosciences). High
Five cells were used in preference to Sf9 cells because preliminary
studies indicated that the expression levels were higher in these cells
(not shown). Infected cells were grown at room temperature in Spinner
flasks (100500 ml) for 4 days, the culture supernatant collected, and
the MHC class II molecules affinity purified using Y-3P Ab covalently
coupled to protein A- or G-Sepharose beads (Pharmacia, Uppsala,
Sweden). Before Ab-affinity purification, the supernatants were
precleared using protein A- or G-Sepharose beads. Proteins were eluted
from Ab affinity columns using 100 mM Na2CO3,
500 mM NaCl, pH 11.5, immediately neutralized to pH 7.0, and dialyzed
against PBS. After purification, I-Au and I-Aq
molecules were analyzed using 15% SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions
with and without heating to 95 to 100°C. Proteins were detected by
Coomassie blue staining or by immunoblotting using
anti-polyhistidine, 9E10 or 10.2.16 Abs. Proteins were also
analyzed by size exclusion chromatography using a Superdex-200 column
(Pharmacia) and the Biologic Workstation (Bio-Rad, Hercules,
CA).
Circular dichroism (CD) analyses
CD analyses were performed as previously described (22) using an AVIV 62 DS spectropolarimeter (Aviv Associates, Lakewood, NJ), except that the recombinant proteins were in PBS pH 7.2. For thermal denaturation, the samples were progressively heated from 25 to 90°C with an equilibration time of 30 s at each temperature. Recording time was 15 s at each temperature and the CD signal was followed at 203 and 205 nm. Reversibility of the thermal unfolding was demonstrated by analyzing at 25°C the far-UV CD spectra of the peptide:I-A molecules after a 25 to 90°C heating/cooling cycle.
T cell assays
T cell stimulation assays were conducted in triplicate in flat-bottom 96-well plates (Costar, Cambridge, MA). Peptide:I-Au and I-Aq molecules were adsorbed on the plate for 2 h at 37°C at various concentrations (1500 ng per well). The wells were washed twice with PBS. T cells (105/well) were incubated with the peptide:MHC class II molecules for 24 h. IL-2 levels in the supernatants were determined by quantitating [3H]thymidine incorporation into IL-2-dependent CTLL-2 cells.
For the apoptosis assay, the T cells were washed with 1% BSA in PBS, resuspended in PBS-BSA containing 50 µg/ml propidium iodide, and analyzed by flow cytometry (FACScan; Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA) as described (23).
Similar experiments were conducted using soluble molecules. For this, after blocking the wells for 3 h at 37°C using 1 or 2% BSA in PBS or 10% FCS in RPMI, the T cells were added together with various concentrations of soluble peptide:I-A molecules and incubated at 37°C. After 24 h, IL-2 secretion and apoptosis induction were analyzed. To ascertain the specificity, T cell stimulation was also conducted in the presence of an anti-I-A mAb, Y-3P. An anti-I-E mAb, 14-4-4S, was used as a control.
TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) assay
The 1934.4 T hybridoma cells were incubated with 10 µg/ml of soluble peptide:I-Au complexes for 1 and 5 h and then washed with PBS and fixed with 0.5% paraformaldehyde. Following a 1-h incubation, cells were permeabilized with Triton X-100 (0.2% v/v) and then incubated with TUNEL reagent (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) for 1 h as recommended by the manufacturer. Cells were washed twice (0.1% Triton X-100/1% BSA/PBS) and then analyzed by flow cytometry as described above.
| Results |
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The peptide MBP1-11[4Y] in which the lysine at position 4 is
substituted by tyrosine is known to bind with much higher affinity to
I-Au (24, 25), and this position 4 substitution does
not appear to affect T cell recognition (26). In the current study this
higher affinity analogue was therefore linked to ßu and
coexpressed with
u (Fig. 1
A), in an analogous
way to that described by Kozono et al. (4). However, this resulted in
the production of
ußu heterodimers in low
yields that did not activate T cells (data not shown). The inactivity
of the protein appeared to be due to dissociation of
- and
ß-chains following purification. Similar results have been noted for
I-Ad (5). We therefore built constructs in which the
u and ßu (with linked MBP1-11[4Y]) were
tagged with leucine zippers in an attempt to stabilize
ußu association (Fig. 1
B). A similar approach was reported for the
stabilization of I-Ad heterodimers (5), but in that case
the ßd chain was not linked to peptide. This resulted in
I-Ad heterodimers that could subsequently be loaded with
antigenic peptide (5). However, the empty I-Ad molecules
showed limited stability (5), and for this reason in the current study
zipper-tagged molecules were expressed with covalently linked
peptides.
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ß heterodimers in the
correct conformation can be purified on Y-3P affinity columns. The
yield of MBP1-11[4Y]:I-Au was approximately 1 mg per
liter of culture (109 High Five cells). A similar strategy
was employed for CII260-270:I-Aq, and the yields were
comparable. SDS stability and CD analyses of the purified I-A molecules
MHC class II molecules are frequently SDS stable, in a form
designated compact dimers (27) in which
and ß polypeptides remain
associated in the presence of SDS at room temperature. This form occurs
following antigenic peptide binding, and is taken to represent a mature
form of the molecule (27). However, peptide binding is necessary but
not sufficient to induce compact dimer formation, and the structural
requirements for a peptide to generate the SDS stable form of a class
II molecule are as yet poorly defined (28, 29, 30). We were therefore
interested to determine whether the recombinant purified peptide:I-A
complexes formed this SDS-stable form (Fig. 2
). Soluble
CII260-270:I-Aq forms compact dimers quantitatively,
whereas MBP1-11:I-Au yields undetectable amounts. This
marked difference in compact dimer formation led us to carry out CD
analyses to assess the thermostability of the I-A complexes. The
spectra show that the proteins are correctly folded (Fig. 3
), but perhaps unexpectedly, for both
proteins the denaturation midpoint temperature (Tm) is 73°C. Thus,
for these two complexes, compact dimer formation does not correlate
with the thermal stability of the folded state assessed by CD.
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Both peptide:I-A complexes were very efficient in stimulating
cognate T cells. MBP1-11:I-Au induced dose-dependent
activation of MBP-specific T cells (1934.4 T cell hybridomas or 1934.4
TCR transfectants) while CII260-270:I-Aq activated
collagen-specific T cell hybridomas qCII85.33 and qCII92.33, as
determined by IL-2 secretion (Fig. 4
).
The T cell activation was highly specific as there was no detectable
cross-recognition of the complexes (Fig. 4
). These molecules also
induced apoptosis of T cells in a ligand-specific manner (data not
shown). Interestingly, the T cells were also activated when the
peptide-MHC complexes were presented in solution and not coated on the
plate: both IL-2 secretion and apoptosis could be detected for T cell
hybridomas and transfectants (Fig. 5
).
Similar results were also seen for the qCII92.33 hybridoma in response
to soluble CII260-270:I-Aq (data not shown). The TUNEL
method was used to confirm that the cell death was apoptotic and not
necrotic (Fig. 5
A). Relative to the soluble I-A
complexes, the plate-coated molecules were, however, approximately 20
times more potent on a per weight basis (not shown). Activation with
the autoantigen molecules in solution was also specific for both
peptide:I-A complexes. It could be blocked by the anti-I-A mAb
Y-3P, which recognizes correctly conformed I-A
polypeptide (Fig. 5
).
However, for reasons that are not clear Y-3P blockade of 1934.4
hybridoma cell death was not complete (Fig. 5
C),
despite the use of a higher Y-3P/I-A molar ratio than was used for
other T cells (Fig. 5
, B and D). As
expected, coincubation of peptide:I-A complexes with anti-I-E Ab
did not have any effect in these functional assays.
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and ß polypeptides was
observed with MBP1-11:I-Au. However, blockade of T cell
activation by Y-3P excludes any involvement of the individual chains in
T cell stimulation. To further investigate the possibility that I-A
aggregates may be involved in T cell stimulation, a time course of IL-2
secretion and apoptosis induction was performed with soluble
MBP1-11:I-Au and 1934.4 hybridoma cells (Fig. 6
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| Discussion |
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ß-chain association with leucine zippers at the
C-termini. The two complexes show a marked difference in compact dimer formation, with CII260-270:I-Aq forming compact dimers quantitatively, whereas MBP1-11:I-Au yields undetectable amounts. Interestingly, CD analyses indicate that compact dimer formation does not correlate with thermal stability of the folded state, as both complexes exhibit indistinguishable denaturation temperatures. Thus, lack of compact dimer formation does not appear to result in thermal instability of the folded state of the proteins. Furthermore, the Tm for both peptide:I-A complexes is similar to that reported for peptide-loaded I-Ek but higher than that for I-Ad covalently linked to antigenic peptide (31). The difference in Tm for peptide:I-Ad vs peptide:I-Au/I-Aq may be due to the absence of leucine zippers in the peptide:I-Ad complexes (4).
The structural basis of compact dimer formation is unclear and
does not appear to be affected by peptide binding affinities (29).
However, for HLA-DR, the interaction of the first anchor residue (P1)
in a hydrophobic pocket has been shown to play a role in mediating SDS
stability (29). In the current study, the difference in compact dimer
formation may therefore be a reflection of the particular anchor
residues present in the sequences of MBP1-11[4Y] and CII260-270, as
it has been suggested that the polymorphic residue at position 52 of
the I-A
-chain may affect the size and nature of the P1 pocket (32).
Both I-Ak and I-Au have arginine at this
position, which is consistent with the preference for acidic residues
at P1 for high affinity binding to I-Ak (32). In contrast,
I-Aq has threonine at
52, which may result in a
preference for larger, bulky residues such as isoleucine at P1 (present
in CII260-270 and known to be important for MHC binding (13)), and this
in turn may facilitate compact dimer formation. This suggests that P1
of MBP1-11[4Y] may not be optimal for the induction of SDS stability.
In this context, I-Au molecules expressed on the surface of
PL-8 cells (I-Au LPS blasts fused with the I-A-negative B
lymphoma M12.C3 (33)) form compact dimers almost quantitatively
(A. Q., unpublished observation) indicating that this I-A molecule
does have the capacity to form an SDS-stable conformation. This is
presumably due to the presence of peptides in PL-8 cells that have the
necessary characteristics to stabilize
ußu
polypeptide association. The alternative explanation that
I-Au is dependent upon the presence of invariant chain or
H-2M for compact dimer formation, as has been reported for other class
II haplotypes (34, 35, 36), is excluded by an observation that
I-Au-transfected, invariant chain, and H-2M-negative BW5147
cells (Ref. 37; a generous gift of Dr. H. McConnell, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA) express significant amounts of compact dimers
(A. Q., unpublished observation).
The lack of compact dimer formation did not, however, affect the
functionality of the MBP-1-11:I-Au complex as has also been
seen in other systems where SDS stability is not a prerequisite for T
cell activation (36); this complex efficiently activates 1934.4 T cells
(Fig. 4
A). Similar results were obtained for
CII260-270:I-Aq, which specifically activates qCII85.33 and
qCII92.33 cells (Fig. 4
, B and C).
Furthermore, both recombinant I-Au and I-Aq
complexes are stable for at least 1 mo of storage at 4°C, again
indicating that differences in compact dimer formation do not appear to
result in differential stabilities.
Our results indicate that the peptide:I-A complexes are also able to
mediate IL-2 secretion and apoptosis of cognate T cells in the absence
of TCR cross-linking. Although plate-bound complexes appear to be more
efficient on a molar basis at apoptosis induction (data not shown), the
soluble complexes (added to previously blocked plates, with
undetectable amounts of aggregates by FPLC) were also effective at
inducing T cells to undergo apoptosis and secrete IL-2 (Fig. 5
). In
contrast, we do not observe apoptosis of 1934.4 T cell transfectants or
1934.4 hybridoma cells when they are stimulated by
I-Au-expressing PL-8 cells (33) pulsed with antigenic
peptide, suggesting that other molecules on the surface of this B
lymphoblast-derived cell line protect against apoptosis (A. Q.,
unpublished observations). The soluble peptide:I-A complexes will be of
use in investigating the molecular basis of this phenomenon.
The stimulatory effects of the peptide:I-A complexes on cognate T cells
were mediated solely by heterodimers, as any single
- or ß-chains
that might be formed by dissociation do not bind to the
conformational-dependent Ab Y-3P. In our studies, this Ab completely
blocks apoptosis and IL-2 secretion for three of four T cell
hybridomas/transfectants tested (Fig. 5
and data not shown). These data
are in contrast to other reports in which the assays were either
designed to induce cross-linking by using plate-bound peptide:MHC (6)
or aggregation of soluble complexes was reported to be necessary for
efficacy (38). Furthermore, in other studies, the HLA-DR or I-A
heterodimers used in soluble form to induce apoptosis were reported to
be aggregated (39) or dimeric (40). The possibility that in our study
the monomeric peptide:MHC complexes aggregate in solution after
addition to the assay wells is unlikely, as the molecules are effective
after only 2 h of coincubation with T cells and are diluted into a
medium containing 10% FCS. However, although believed to be unlikely,
the possibility that amounts of aggregated, Y-3P-reactive I-A molecules
that are undetectable by FPLC are responsible for the effects observed
in Figures 5
and 6
cannot be excluded. Our data also indicate that
soluble I-Aß-chains alone, complexed with peptide, do not induce
apoptosis, as the cell death induction is blocked by Y-3P. This is in
contrast to the study in which HLA-DR
- or ß-chains plus antigenic
peptide were shown to be effective (41). The indications in the current
study that soluble, nonaggregated peptide:I-A complexes can induce IL-2
secretion are reminiscent of the report that a single peptide:MHC
complex on an APC can induce T cell activation (42). This supports
serial triggering models of T cell activation (43).
In summary, we have described the functional expression of two peptide:I-A complexes of relevance to murine autoimmune disease models. The complexes can be produced in milligram quantities and are highly active in specifically stimulating T cells to produce IL-2 and to undergo apoptosis. These complexes should be useful in both analyzing the affinities of autoreactive TCRs and high resolution structural studies. Finally, they may have utility as immunotherapeutic reagents in the modulation of autoreactive T cell activation.
Note added in proof. A study describing the X-ray crystallographic analysis of peptide:I-Ad complexes with covalently linked peptides and leucine zippers has recently been reported (44).
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. E. Sally Ward, Department of Microbiology and Cancer Immunobiology Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 6000 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75235-8576. ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: MBP, myelin basic protein; CII, type II collagen; CD, circular dichroism; TUNEL, TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling; Tm, midpoint temperature; FPLC, fast protein liquid chromatography. ![]()
Received for publication September 30, 1997. Accepted for publication February 6, 1998.
| References |
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1(II)-CB11 in H-2q mice. J. Immunol. 152:3088.[Abstract]
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