Publication | Open Access
The inhibitory NK cell receptor CD94/NKG2A and the activating receptor CD94/NKG2C bind the top of HLA‐E through mostly shared but partly distinct sets of HLA‐E residues
100
Citations
35
References
2003
Year
HistocompatibilityHla ImmunogeneticsImmunologyImmune RegulationAntigen ProcessingImmune SystemImmunotherapySame EpitopeImmunogeneticsReceptor Cd94/nkg2cCell SignalingNkg2d Binding SiteAutoimmune DiseaseHuman Leukocyte AntigenDistinct SetsImmune SurveillanceAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityHla‐e ResiduesCell BiologyHla TypingCellular Immune ResponseMedicineHla-e Surface
The human non-classical MHC class I molecule HLA-E is a ligand for both an inhibitory NK cell receptor (CD94/NKG2A) and an activating receptor (CD94/NKG2C). To identify HLA-E surface recognized by both receptors, especially to determine if both receptors recognize the same epitope, we made a series of individually Ala-substituted HLA-E proteins and analyzed their binding to CD94/NKG2A orCD94/NKG2C. Eight HLA-E mutations that significantly impaired HLA-E binding to CD94/NKG2A are all found in the top of alpha1/alpha2 domain of HLA-E. These results suggest that CD94/NKG2A binds a HLA-E surface equivalent to a NKG2D binding site on MICA. Of the eight mutations that impaired HLA-E binding to CD94/NKG2A, six significantly impaired HLA-E binding to CD94/NKG2C suggesting that CD94/NKG2C also binds a similar surface of HLA-E. Unexpectedly, the two HLA-E mutations (D69A and H155A) selectively abrogated HLA-E binding to CD94/NKG2A, not largely affected CD94/NKG2C. These results indicate that a mostly shared, but partly distinct set of HLA-E residues is discriminated by the two receptors.
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