Artículos de revistas
Toxoplasma gondii peptide ligands open the gate of the HLA class I binding groove
Fecha
2016-01Registro en:
McMurtrey, Curtis; Trolle, Thomas; Sansom, Tiffany; Remesh, Soumya G.; Kaever, Thomas; et al.; Toxoplasma gondii peptide ligands open the gate of the HLA class I binding groove; eLife Sciences Publications; eLife; 5; 1-2016; 1-19
2050-084X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
McMurtrey, Curtis
Trolle, Thomas
Sansom, Tiffany
Remesh, Soumya G.
Kaever, Thomas
Bardet, Wilfried
Jackson, Kenneth
McLeod, Rima
Sette, Alessandro
Nielsen, Morten
Zajonc, Dirk M.
Blader, Ira J
Peters, Bjoern
Hildebrand, William
Resumen
HLA class I presentation of pathogen-derived peptide ligands is essential for CD8+ T-cell recognition of Toxoplasma gondii infected cells. Currently, little data exist pertaining to peptides that are presented after T. gondii infection. Herein we purify HLA-A*02:01 complexes from T. gondii infected cells and characterize the peptide ligands using LCMS. We identify 195 T. gondii encoded ligands originating from both secreted and cytoplasmic proteins. Surprisingly, T. gondii ligands are significantly longer than uninfected host ligands, and these longer pathogen-derived peptides maintain a canonical N-terminal binding core yet exhibit a C-terminal extension of 1-30 amino acids. Structural analysis demonstrates that binding of extended peptides opens the HLA class I F' pocket, allowing the C-terminal extension to protrude through one end of the binding groove. In summary, we demonstrate that unrealized structural flexibility makes MHC class I receptive to parasite-derived ligands that exhibit unique C-terminal peptide extensions.