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Disulfide Bond Engineering to Trap Peptides in the MHC Class I Binding Groove
60
Citations
68
References
2007
Year
Adaptive Immune SystemPeptide EngineeringViral ImmunityImmunologyMolecular BiologyImmunodominanceAntigen ProcessingImmunologic MechanismPeptide ScienceCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmunotherapeuticsSynthetic ImmunologyDisulfide BondDisulfide TrapsProtein FoldingTumor ImmunityBiochemistryTrap PeptidesT Cell ImmunityNon-peptide LigandMolecular EngineeringCell BiologyDisulfide TrapBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPeptide SynthesisBinding GrooveProtein EngineeringCellular Immune ResponseMedicineDisulfide Bond Engineering
Abstract Immunodominant peptides in CD8 T cell responses to pathogens and tumors are not always tight binders to MHC class I molecules. Furthermore, antigenic peptides that bind weakly to the MHC can be problematic when designing vaccines to elicit CD8 T cells in vivo or for the production of MHC multimers for enumerating pathogen-specific T cells in vitro. Thus, to enhance peptide binding to MHC class I, we have engineered a disulfide bond to trap antigenic peptides into the binding groove of murine MHC class I molecules expressed as single-chain trimers or SCTs. These SCTs with disulfide traps, termed dtSCTs, oxidized properly in the endoplasmic reticulum, transited to the cell surface, and were recognized by T cells. Introducing a disulfide trap created remarkably tenacious MHC/peptide complexes because the peptide moiety of the dtSCT was not displaced by high-affinity competitor peptides, even when relatively weak binding peptides were incorporated into the dtSCT. This technology promises to be useful for DNA vaccination to elicit CD8 T cells, in vivo study of CD8 T cell development, and construction of multivalent MHC/peptide reagents for the enumeration and tracking of T cells—particularly when the antigenic peptide has relatively weak affinity for the MHC.
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