16 research outputs found

    Hydrophobic CDR3 residues promote the development of self-reactive T cells

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    Studies of individual T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) have shed some light on structural features that underlie self-reactivity. However, the general rules that can be used to predict whether TCRs are self-reactive have not been fully elucidated. Here we found that the interfacial hydrophobicity of amino acids at positions 6 and 7 of the complementarity-determining region CDR3β robustly promoted the development of self-reactive TCRs. This property was found irrespective of the member of the β-chain variable region (V[subscript β]) family present in the TCR or the length of the CDR3β. An index based on these findings distinguished V[subscript β]2[superscript +], V[subscript β]6[superscript +] and V[subscript β]8.2[superscript +] regulatory T cells from conventional T cells and also distinguished CD4[superscript +] T cells selected by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecule I-A[superscript g7] (associated with the development of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice) from those selected by a non–autoimmunity-promoting MHC class II molecule I-Ab. Our results provide a means for distinguishing normal T cell repertoires versus autoimmunity-prone T cell repertoires

    Germline bias dictates cross-serotype reactivity in a common dengue-virus-specific CD8(+) T cell response.

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    Adaptive immune responses protect against infection with dengue virus (DENV), yet cross-reactivity with distinct serotypes can precipitate life-threatening clinical disease. We found that clonotypes expressing the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) β-chain variable region 11 (TRBV11-2) were 'preferentially' activated and mobilized within immunodominant human-leukocyte-antigen-(HLA)-A*11:01-restricted CD8(+) T cell populations specific for variants of the nonstructural protein epitope NS3133 that characterize the serotypes DENV1, DENV3 and DENV4. In contrast, the NS3133-DENV2-specific repertoire was largely devoid of such TCRs. Structural analysis of a representative TRBV11-2(+) TCR demonstrated that cross-serotype reactivity was governed by unique interplay between the variable antigenic determinant and germline-encoded residues in the second β-chain complementarity-determining region (CDR2β). Extensive mutagenesis studies of three distinct TRBV11-2(+) TCRs further confirmed that antigen recognition was dependent on key contacts between the serotype-defined peptide and discrete residues in the CDR2β loop. Collectively, these data reveal an innate-like mode of epitope recognition with potential implications for the outcome of sequential exposure to heterologous DENVs

    Flipping out the peptide

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    HLA variation and disease

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    Fifty years since the first description of an association between HLA and human disease, HLA molecules have proven to be central to physiology, protective immunity and deleterious, disease-causing autoimmune reactivity. Technological advances have enabled pivotal progress in the determination of the molecular mechanisms that underpin the association between HLA genetics and functional outcome. Here, we review our current understanding of HLA molecules as the fundamental platform for immune surveillance and responsiveness in health and disease. We evaluate the scope for personalized antigen-specific disease prevention, whereby harnessing HLA–ligand interactions for clinical benefit is becoming a realistic prospect
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