23 research outputs found

    KIR Polymorphisms Modulate Peptide-Dependent Binding to an MHC Class I Ligand with a Bw6 Motif

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    Molecular interactions between killer immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) and their MHC class I ligands play a central role in the regulation of natural killer (NK) cell responses to viral pathogens and tumors. Here we identify Mamu-A1*00201 (Mamu-A*02), a common MHC class I molecule in the rhesus macaque with a canonical Bw6 motif, as a ligand for Mamu-KIR3DL05. Mamu-A1*00201 tetramers folded with certain SIV peptides, but not others, directly stained primary NK cells and Jurkat cells expressing multiple allotypes of Mamu-KIR3DL05. Differences in binding avidity were associated with polymorphisms in the D0 and D1 domains of Mamu-KIR3DL05, whereas differences in peptide-selectivity mapped to the D1 domain. The reciprocal exchange of the third predicted MHC class I-contact loop of the D1 domain switched the specificity of two Mamu-KIR3DL05 allotypes for different Mamu-A1*00201-peptide complexes. Consistent with the function of an inhibitory KIR, incubation of lymphocytes from Mamu-KIR3DL05+ macaques with target cells expressing Mamu-A1*00201 suppressed the degranulation of tetramer-positive NK cells. These observations reveal a previously unappreciated role for D1 polymorphisms in determining the selectivity of KIRs for MHC class I-bound peptides, and identify the first functional KIR-MHC class I interaction in the rhesus macaque. The modulation of KIR-MHC class I interactions by viral peptides has important implications to pathogenesis, since it suggests that the immunodeficiency viruses, and potentially other types of viruses and tumors, may acquire changes in epitopes that increase the affinity of certain MHC class I ligands for inhibitory KIRs to prevent the activation of specific NK cell subsets

    Stimulated plasmacytoid dendritic cells impair human T-cell development

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    Thymic plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are located predominantly in the medulla and at the corticomedullary junction, the entry site of bone marrow–derived multipotential precursor cells into the thymus, allowing for interactions between thymic pDCs and precursor cells. We demonstrate that in vitro–generated pDCs stimulated with CpG or virus impaired the development of human autologous CD34+CD1a– thymic progenitor cells into the T-cell lineage. Rescue by addition of neutralizing type I interferon (IFN) antibodies strongly implies that endogenously produced IFN-α/β is responsible for this inhibitory effect. Consistent with this notion, we show that exogenously added IFN-α had a similar impact on IL-7– and Notch ligand–induced development of thymic CD34+CD1a– progenitor cells into T cells, because induction of CD1a, CD4, CD8, and TCR/CD3 surface expression and rearrangements of TCRβ V-DJ gene segments were severely impaired. In addition, IL-7–induced proliferation but not survival of the developing thymic progenitor cells was strongly inhibited by IFN-α. It is evident from our data that IFN-α inhibits the IL-7R signal transduction pathway, although this could not be attributed to interference with either IL-7R proximal (STAT5, Akt/PKB, Erk1/2) or distal (p27kip1, pRb) events

    Substitutions at position 8 of Gag GY9 or Nef YY9 alter binding of Mamu-A1*002 to Mamu-KIR3DL05.

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    <p>(A) Jurkat cells expressing HA-tagged Mamu-KIR3DL05 were stained with an anti-HA antibody and Mamu-A1*002 tetramers folded with Gag GY9, Nef YY9, or variant peptides with alanine or tryptophan substitutions at position 8 as indicated. (B) Tetramer integrity was confirmed by staining LILRB1-expressing Ba/F3 cells with each tetramer.</p
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