4.6 Article

Mimotopes for alloreactive and conventional T cells in a peptide-MHC display library

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 523-533

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0020090

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R56 AI017134, AI-18785, R01 AI017134, R56 AI018785, R01 AI018785, AI-17134, AI-22295, P01 AI022295, R37 AI018785] Funding Source: Medline

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The use of peptide libraries for the identification and characterization of T cell antigen peptide epitopes and mimotopes has been hampered by the need to form complexes between the peptides and an appropriate MHC molecule in order to construct a complete T cell ligand. We have developed a baculovirus-based peptide library method in which the sequence encoding the peptide is embedded within the genes for the MHC molecule in the viral DNA, such that insect cells infected with virus encoding a library of different peptides each displays a unique peptide-MHC complex on its surface. We have fished in such a library with two different fluorescent soluble T cell receptors (TCRs), one highly peptide specific and the other broadly allo-MHC specific and hypothesized to be much less focused on the peptide portion of the ligand. A single peptide sequence was selected by the former alphabetaTCR that, not unexpectedly, was highly related to the immunizing peptide. As hypothesized, the other alphabetaTCR selected a large family of peptides, related only by a similarity to the immunizing peptide at the p5 position. These findings have implications for the relative importance of peptide and MHC in TCR ligand recognition. This display method has broad applications in T cell epitope identification and manipulation and should be useful in general in studying interactions between complex proteins.

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