Publication | Open Access
Secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure of T-cell-specific immunoglobulin-like polypeptide chains.
144
Citations
32
References
1986
Year
AllergyAdaptive Immune SystemT CellsMedicineImmunologyAntigen RecognitionImmunodominanceAntigen ChainAntigen ProcessingAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityImmunoglobulin EQuaternary StructureCellular Immune ResponseImmune SystemImmunotherapyCell Biology
To explore the possibility that the difference in antigen recognition between B and T cells derives from a structural difference in their respective antigen-specific receptors (immunoglobulins on B cells and immunoglobulin-like molecules on T cells), we compared the extracellular segments of the T-cell receptor alpha, beta, and gamma polypeptide chains and the N-terminal segment of the T-cell T8 (Lyt-2) antigen chain with the corresponding regions of immunoglobulins whose three-dimensional structures are known. The results indicate that the four T-cell polypeptide chains are organized into immunoglobulin-like domains consisting of multistranded antiparallel beta-sheet bilayers. Invariant amino acid side chains that are conserved in diverse immunoglobulins, including those that mediate domain-domain interactions and form a constant scaffold for antibody binding sites, are also conserved in the chains encoded by the T-cell receptor genes and in the N-terminal domain of T8 (Lyt-2). It appears that the binding sites of the antigen-specific T-cell alpha beta-chain receptors and of antibodies are very similar in their overall dimensions and geometry: a T-cell alpha beta receptor molecule probably has an antigen-specific binding site that is fundamentally no different than the conventional binding site of an antibody.
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