4.8 Article

The diabetogenic mouse MHC class II molecule I-Ag7 is endowed with a switch that modulates TCR affinity

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 120, Issue 5, Pages 1578-1590

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI41502

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Funding

  1. NIH [CA58896, DK55037]

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Genetic susceptibility to autoimmunity is frequently associated with specific MHC alleles. Diabetogenic MHC class II molecules, such as human HLA-DQ8 and mouse I-M7, typically have a small, uncharged amino acid residue at position 57 of their beta chain (beta 57); this results in the absence of a salt bridge between beta 57 and Arg alpha 76, which is adjacent to the P9 pocket of the peptide-binding groove. However, the influence of Arg alpha 76 on the selection of the TCR repertoire remains unknown, particularly when the MHC molecule binds a peptide with a neutral amino acid residue at position P9. Here, we have shown that diabetogenic MHC class II molecules bound to a peptide with a neutral P9 residue primarily selected and expanded cells expressing TCRs bearing a negatively charged residue in the first segment of their complementarity determining region 3 beta. The crystal structure of one such TCR in complex with I-A(g7) bound to a peptide containing a neutral P9 residue revealed that a network of favorable long-range (greater than 4 angstrom) electrostatic interactions existed among Arg alpha 76, the neutral P9 residue, and TCR, which supported the substantially increased TCR/peptide-MHC affinity. This network could be modulated or switched to a lower affinity interaction by the introduction of a negative charge at position P9 of the peptide. Our results support the existence of a switch at residue beta 57 of the I-A(g7) and HLA-DQ8 class II molecules and potentially link normal thymic TCR selection with abnormal peripheral behavior.

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