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The impact of HLA-B micropolymorphism outside primary peptide anchor pockets on the CTL response to CMV

✍ Scribed by Jacqueline M. Burrows; Katherine K. Wynn; Fleur E. Tynan; Julia Archbold; John J. Miles; Melissa J. Bell; Rebekah M. Brennan; Susan Walker; James McCluskey; Jamie Rossjohn; Rajiv Khanna; Scott R. Burrows


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
249 KB
Volume
37
Category
Article
ISSN
0014-2980

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The factors controlling epitope selection in the T cell response to persistent viruses are not fully understood, and we have examined this issue in the context of four HLA‐B*35‐binding peptides from the pp65 antigen of human cytomegalovirus, two of which are previously undescribed. Striking differences in the hierarchy of immunodominance between these four epitopes were observed in healthy virus carriers expressing HLA‐B*3501 versus B*3508, two HLA‐B allotypes that differ by a single amino acid at position 156 (HLA‐B*3501, ^156^Leucine; HLA‐B*3508, ^156^Arginine) that projects from the α2 helix into the centre of the peptide‐binding groove. While HLA‐B*3501^+^ individuals responded most strongly to the ^123^IPSINVHHY^131^ and ^366^HPTFTSQY^373^ epitopes, HLA‐B*3508^+^ individuals responded preferentially to ^103^CPSQEPMSIYVY^114^ and ^188^FPTKDVAL^195^. By comparing peptide‐MHC association and disassociation rates with peptide immunogenicity, it was clear that dissociation rates correlate more closely with the hierarchy of immunodominance among the four pp65 peptides. These findings demonstrate that MHC micropolymorphism at positions outside the primary anchor residue binding pockets can have a major impact on determinant selection in antiviral T cell responses. Such influences may provide the evolutionary pressure that maintains closely related MHC molecules in diverse human populations.