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Structural basis for the presentation of tumor-associated MHC class II-restricted phosphopeptides to CD4+ T cells.


ABSTRACT: Dysregulated protein phosphorylation is a hallmark of malignant transformation. Transformation can generate major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-bound phosphopeptides that are differentially displayed on tumor cells for specific recognition by T cells. To understand how phosphorylation alters the antigenic identity of self-peptides and how MHC class II molecules present phosphopeptides for CD4(+) T-cell recognition, we determined the crystal structure of a phosphopeptide derived from melanoma antigen recognized by T cells-1 (pMART-1), selectively expressed by human melanomas, in complex with HLA-DR1. The structure revealed that the phosphate moiety attached to the serine residue at position P5 of pMART-1 is available for direct interactions with T-cell receptor (TCR) and that the peptide N-terminus adopts an unusual conformation orienting it toward TCR. This structure, combined with measurements of peptide affinity for HLA-DR1 and of peptide-MHC recognition by pMART-1-specific T cells, suggests that TCR recognition is focused on the N-terminal portion of pMART-1. This recognition mode appears to be distinct from that of foreign antigen complexes but is remarkably reminiscent of the way autoreactive TCRs engage self- or altered self-peptides, consistent with the tolerogenic nature of tumor-host immune interactions.

SUBMITTER: Li Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2904831 | biostudies-literature | 2010 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Structural basis for the presentation of tumor-associated MHC class II-restricted phosphopeptides to CD4+ T cells.

Li Yili Y   Depontieu Florence R FR   Sidney John J   Salay Theresa M TM   Engelhard Victor H VH   Hunt Donald F DF   Sette Alessandro A   Topalian Suzanne L SL   Mariuzza Roy A RA  

Journal of molecular biology 20100424 4


Dysregulated protein phosphorylation is a hallmark of malignant transformation. Transformation can generate major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-bound phosphopeptides that are differentially displayed on tumor cells for specific recognition by T cells. To understand how phosphorylation alters the antigenic identity of self-peptides and how MHC class II molecules present phosphopeptides for CD4(+) T-cell recognition, we determined the crystal structure of a phosphopeptide derived from melanoma  ...[more]

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