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National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 10(106), p. 3889-3894, 2009

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0900411106

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Secondary anchor polymorphism in the HA-1 minor histocompatibility antigen critically affects MHC stability and TCR recognition

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

T cell recognition of minor histocompatibility antigens (mHags) underlies allogeneic immune responses that mediate graft-versus-host disease and the graft-versus-leukemia effect following stem cell transplantation. Many mHags derive from single amino acid polymorphisms in MHC-restricted epitopes, but our understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing mHag immunogenicity and recognition is incomplete. Here we examined antigenic presentation and T-cell recognition of HA-1, a prototypic autosomal mHag derived from single nucleotide dimorphism ( HA-1 H versus HA-1 R ) in the HMHA1 gene. The HA-1 H peptide is restricted by HLA-A2 and is immunogenic in HA-1 R/R into HA-1 H transplants, while HA-1 R has been suggested to be a “null allele” in terms of T cell reactivity. We found that proteasomal cleavage and TAP transport of the 2 peptides is similar and that both variants can bind to MHC. However, the His>Arg change substantially decreases the stability and affinity of HLA-A2 association, consistent with the reduced immunogenicity of the HA-1 R variant. To understand these findings, we determined the structure of an HLA-A2-HA-1 H complex to 1.3Å resolution. Whereas His-3 is accommodated comfortably in the D pocket, incorporation of the lengthy Arg-3 is predicted to require local conformational changes. Moreover, a soluble TCR generated from HA-1 H -specific T-cells bound HA-1 H peptide with moderate affinity but failed to bind HA-1 R , indicating complete discrimination of HA-1 variants at the level of TCR/MHC interaction. Our results define the molecular mechanisms governing immunogenicity of HA-1, and highlight how single amino acid polymorphisms in mHags can critically affect both MHC association and TCR recognition.