Artículos de revistas
The length distribution of class I-restricted T cell epitopes is determined by both peptide supply and MHC allele-specific binding preference
Fecha
2016-02Registro en:
Trolle, Thomas; McMurtrey, Curtis; Sidney, John; Bardet, Wilfried; Osborn, Sean C.; et al.; The length distribution of class I-restricted T cell epitopes is determined by both peptide supply and MHC allele-specific binding preference; American Association of Immunologists; Journal of Immunology; 196; 4; 2-2016; 1480-1487
0022-1767
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Trolle, Thomas
McMurtrey, Curtis
Sidney, John
Bardet, Wilfried
Osborn, Sean C.
Kaever, Thomas
Sette, Alessandro
Hildebrand, Willliam H.
Nielsen, Morten
Peters, Bjoern
Resumen
HLA class I-binding predictions are widely used to identify candidate peptide targets of human CD8+ T cell responses. Many such approaches focus exclusively on a limited range of peptide lengths, typically 9 aa and sometimes 9-10 aa, despite multiple examples of dominant epitopes of other lengths. In this study, we examined whether epitope predictions can be improved by incorporating the natural length distribution of HLA class I ligands. We found that, although different HLA alleles have diverse length-binding preferences, the length profiles of ligands that are naturally presented by these alleles are much more homogeneous. We hypothesized that this is due to a defined length profile of peptides available for HLA binding in the endoplasmic reticulum. Based on this, we created a model of HLA allele-specific ligand length profiles and demonstrate how this model, in combination with HLA-binding predictions, greatly improves comprehensive identification of CD8+ T cell epitopes.