HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 are naturally occurring MHC class I alleles that are both found at a high frequency in all human populations, and yet they only differ by one residue on the α2 helix (B*4402 Asp156→B*4403 Leu156). CTLs discriminate between HLA-B*4402 and B*4403, and these allotypes stimulate strong mutual allogeneic responses reflecting their known barrier to hemopoeitic stem cell transplantation. Although HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 share >95% of their peptide repertoire, B*4403 presents more unique peptides than B*4402, consistent with the stronger T cell alloreactivity observed toward B*4403 compared with B*4402. Crystal structures of B*4402 and B*4403 show how the polymorphism at position 156 is completely buried and yet alters both the peptide and the heavy chain conformation, relaxing ligand selection by B*4403 compared with B*4402. Thus, the polymorphism between HLA-B*4402 and B*4403 modifies both peptide repertoire and T cell recognition, and is reflected in the paradoxically powerful alloreactivity that occurs across this “minimal” mismatch. The findings suggest that these closely related class I genes are maintained in diverse human populations through their differential impact on the selection of peptide ligands and the T cell repertoire.
A Naturally Selected Dimorphism within the HLA-B44 Supertype Alters Class I Structure, Peptide Repertoire, and T Cell Recognition
Abbreviations used in this paper: H-bond, hydrogen bond; MALDI-TOF, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight; MS, mass spectrometry; RP, reverse phase; v.d.w., van der Waals.
W.A. Macdonald and A.W. Purcell contributed equally to this work.
The online version of this article includes supplemental material.
Whitney A. Macdonald, Anthony W. Purcell, Nicole A. Mifsud, Lauren K. Ely, David S. Williams, Linus Chang, Jeffrey J. Gorman, Craig S. Clements, Lars Kjer-Nielsen, David M. Koelle, Scott R. Burrows, Brian D. Tait, Rhonda Holdsworth, Andrew G. Brooks, George O. Lovrecz, Louis Lu, Jamie Rossjohn, James McCluskey; A Naturally Selected Dimorphism within the HLA-B44 Supertype Alters Class I Structure, Peptide Repertoire, and T Cell Recognition . J Exp Med 1 September 2003; 198 (5): 679–691. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20030066
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