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HLA-A2-peptide complexes: refolding and crystallization of molecules expressed in Escherichia coli and complexed with single antigenic peptides.

694

Citations

29

References

1992

Year

TLDR

Two influenza virus peptides that bind HLA‑A2 support refolding of recombinant HLA‑A2. Recombinant HLA‑A2 subunits were refolded from 8 M urea aggregates in the presence of antigenic peptides to form HLA‑A2‑peptide complexes. Recombinant HLA‑A2 expressed in E.

Abstract

The two subunits of the human class I histocompatibility antigen (HLA)-A2 have been expressed at high levels (20-30 mg/liter) as insoluble aggregates in bacterial cells. The aggregates were dissolved in 8 M urea and then refolded to form an HLA-A2-peptide complex by removal of urea in the presence of an antigenic peptide. Two peptides from the matrix protein and nucleoprotein of influenza virus are known to bind to HLA-A2, and both support the refolding of the recombinant HLA-A2 molecule. An additional peptide, a nonamer from the gp120 envelope protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1, also supported refolding. Yields of purified recombinant HLA-A2 are 10-15%. In the absence of an HLA-A2-restricted peptide, a stable HLA-A2 complex was not formed. Monoclonal antibodies known to bind to native HLA-A2 also bound to the recombinant HLA-A2-peptide complex. Three purified HLA-A2-peptide complexes refolded from bacterially produced protein aggregates crystallize under the identical conditions as HLA-A2 purified from human lymphoblastoid cells. Crystals of the recombinant HLA-A2 molecule in complex with the influenza matrix nonamer peptide, Mp(58-66), diffract to greater than 1.5-A resolution.

References

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