The general objective of this project is to define the mechanisms by which human lymphoid cells interact with each other and with foreign antigen-bearing cells in order to produce and regulate immune responses. Over the past year, there have been two major efforts underway that are targeted on this objective: 1) dissection of the molecular basis for T cell recognition of class I HLA gene products; and 2) analysis of human T cell receptor gene usage in alloreactive T cell populations. The definition of the structural features of class I HLA molecules that are important for T cell recognition has been pursued using site-directed mutagenesis of a previously defined HLA-A3 variant and by isolating, sequencing, and manipulating additional T cell-defined variants of HLA-A2. The results of these studies demonstrate that a single amino acid change (substitution of valine for glutamic acid) at position 152 in the alpha 2 domain of the A3 heavy chain produces major structural changes in the epitopes that are recognized by both HLA-restricted and alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). The importance of residues in the region 147-160 for HLA-restricted CTL recognition was confirmed by the findings of amino acid changes in this region in two different HLA-A2 variant genes (M7A2.2 and DK1A2.3) that we have isolated and sequenced. Analysis of the diversity of T cell receptor beta chain gene usage indicates that although a larger number of V-beta genes can be used to recognize a particular allospecificity, a limited number of V-beta genes will ultimately predominate in the response.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01NS002603-05
Application #
3945267
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1987
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Gagnon, Susan J; Borbulevych, Oleg Y; Davis-Harrison, Rebecca L et al. (2006) T cell receptor recognition via cooperative conformational plasticity. J Mol Biol 363:228-43
Gagnon, Susan J; Turner, Richard V; Shiue, Michael G et al. (2006) Extensive T cell receptor cross-reactivity on structurally diverse haptenated peptides presented by HLA-A2. Mol Immunol 43:346-56
Gagnon, Susan J; Borbulevych, Oleg Y; Davis-Harrison, Rebecca L et al. (2005) Unraveling a hotspot for TCR recognition on HLA-A2: evidence against the existence of peptide-independent TCR binding determinants. J Mol Biol 353:556-73
Niland, Brian; Banki, Katalin; Biddison, William E et al. (2005) CD8+ T cell-mediated HLA-A*0201-restricted cytotoxicity to transaldolase peptide 168-176 in patients with multiple sclerosis. J Immunol 175:8365-78
Baxter, Tiffany K; Gagnon, Susan J; Davis-Harrison, Rebecca L et al. (2004) Strategic mutations in the class I major histocompatibility complex HLA-A2 independently affect both peptide binding and T cell receptor recognition. J Biol Chem 279:29175-84
Tomaru, Utano; Yamano, Yoshihisa; Nagai, Masahiro et al. (2003) Detection of virus-specific T cells and CD8+ T-cell epitopes by acquisition of peptide-HLA-GFP complexes: analysis of T-cell phenotype and function in chronic viral infections. Nat Med 9:469-76
Buslepp, Jennifer; Wang, Huanchen; Biddison, William E et al. (2003) A correlation between TCR Valpha docking on MHC and CD8 dependence: implications for T cell selection. Immunity 19:595-606
Gagnon, Susan J; Wang, Zichun; Turner, Richard et al. (2003) MHC recognition by hapten-specific HLA-A2-restricted CD8+ CTL. J Immunol 171:2233-41
Stefanova, Irena; Hemmer, Bernhard; Vergelli, Marco et al. (2003) TCR ligand discrimination is enforced by competing ERK positive and SHP-1 negative feedback pathways. Nat Immunol 4:248-54
Biddison, William E; Turner, Richard V; Gagnon, Susan J et al. (2003) Tax and M1 peptide/HLA-A2-specific Fabs and T cell receptors recognize nonidentical structural features on peptide/HLA-A2 complexes. J Immunol 171:3064-74

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