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Conformational changes and flexibility in T-cell receptor recognition of peptide-MHC complexes

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 415, Issue -, Pages 183-196

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20080850

Keywords

conformational selection; cross-reactivity; crystal structure; induced fit; peptide-MHC (pMHC); T-cell receptor (TCR)

Funding

  1. NIGMS (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) [R01GM067097]
  2. Notre Dame Chemistry-Biochemistry-Biology Interface
  3. NIGMS, NIH [T32GM075762]
  4. [NIH (National Institutes for Health)]

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A necessary feature of the immune system, TCR (T-cell receptor) cross-reactivity has been implicated in numerous autoimmune pathologies and is an underlying cause of transplant rejection. Early studies of the interactions of alpha beta TCRs (T-cell receptors) with their peptide-MHC ligands suggested that conformational plasticity in the TCR CDR (complementarity determining region) loops is a dominant contributor to T-cell cross-reactivity. Since these initial studies, the database of TCRs whose structures have been solved both bound and free is now large enough to permit general conclusions to be drawn about the extent of TCR plasticity and the types and locations of motion that occur. In the present paper, we review the conformational differences between free and bound TCRs, quantifying the structural changes that occur and discussing their possible roles in specificity and cross-reactivity. We show that, rather than undergoing major structural alterations or 'folding' upon binding, the majority of TCR CDR loops shift by relatively small amounts. The structural changes that do occur are dominated by hinge-bending motions, with loop remodelling usually occurring near loop apexes. As predicted from previous Studies, the largest changes are in the hypervariable CDR3 alpha and CDR3 beta loops, although in some cases the germline-encoded CDR1 alpha and CDR2 alpha loops shift in magnitudes that approximate those of the CDR3 loops. Intriguingly, the smallest shifts are in the germline-encoded loops of the beta-chain, consistent with recent suggestions that the TCR beta domain may drive ligand recognition.

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