Charge-based interactions through peptide position 4 drive diversity of antigen presentation by human leukocyte antigen class I molecules

Kyle R. Jackson, Dinler A. Antunes, Amjad H. Talukder, Ariana R. Maleki, Kano Amagai, Avery Salmon, Arjun S. Katailiha, Yulun Chiu, Romanos Fasoulis, Maurício Menegatti Rigo, Jayvee R. Abella, Brenda D. Melendez, Fenge Li, Yimo Sun, Heather M. Sonnemann, Vladislav Belousov, Felix Frenkel, Sune Justesen, Aman Makaju, Yang LiuDavid Horn, Daniel Lopez-Ferrer, Andreas F. Huhmer, Patrick Hwu, Jason Roszik, David Hawke, Lydia E. Kavraki, Gregory Lizée

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA-I) molecules bind and present peptides at the cell surface to facilitate the induction of appropriate CD8+ T cell-mediated immune responses to pathogen- and self-derived proteins. The HLA-I peptide-binding cleft contains dominant anchor sites in the B and F pockets that interact primarily with amino acids at peptide position 2 and the C-terminus, respectively. Nonpocket peptide HLA interactions also contribute to peptide binding and stability, but these secondary interactions are thought to be unique to individual HLA allotypes or to specific peptide antigens. Here, we show that two positively charged residues located near the top of peptide-binding cleft facilitate interactions with negatively charged residues at position 4 of presented peptides, which occur at elevated frequencies across most HLA-I allotypes. Loss of these interactions was shown to impair HLA-I/peptide binding and complex stability, as demonstrated by both in vitro and in silico experiments. Furthermore,mutation of these Arginine-65 (R65) and/or Lysine-66 (K66) residues in HLA-A*02:01 and A*24:02 significantly reduced HLA-I cell surface expression while also reducing the diversity of the presented peptide repertoire by up to 5-fold. The impact of the R65mutation demonstrates that nonpocket HLA-I/peptide interactions can constitute anchor motifs that exert an unexpectedly broad influence on HLA-I-mediated antigen presentation. These findings provide fundamental insights into peptide antigen binding that could broadly inform epitope discovery in the context of viral vaccine development and cancer immunotherapy.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberpgac124
JournalPNAS nexus
Volume1
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2022

Keywords

  • computational modeling
  • human leukocyte antigen (HLA)
  • mass spectrometry
  • molecular dynamics
  • peptide antigen presentation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

MD Anderson CCSG core facilities

  • Proteomics Facility
  • Advanced Technology Genomics Core

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