By
From the * Department of Molecular Medicine, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115; the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts
02138; the § Department of Cancer Immunology and AIDS, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115; and the
Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115
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Abstract |
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Susceptibility to multiple sclerosis is associated with the human histocompatibility leukocyte
antigen (HLA)-DR2 (DRB1*1501) haplotype. The structure of HLA-DR2 was determined
with a bound peptide from human myelin basic protein (MBP) that is immunodominant for
human MBP-specific T cells. Residues of MBP peptide that are important for T cell receptor
recognition are prominent, solvent exposed residues in the crystal structure. A distinguishing
feature of the HLA-DR2 peptide binding site is a large, primarily hydrophobic P4 pocket that
accommodates a phenylalanine of the MBP peptide. The necessary space for this aromatic side
chain is created by an alanine at the polymorphic DR 71 position. These features make the P4
pocket of HLA-DR2 distinct from DR molecules associated with other autoimmune diseases.
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Introduction |
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The MHC region on chromosome 6 represents an important susceptibility locus for a number of polygenic, chronic inflammatory human diseases, such as type I diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and multiple sclerosis (MS)1 (for reviews see references 1). In the case of MS, the highest linkage of disease scores within the MHC were obtained with markers for the MHC class II region (4). Many previous studies had demonstrated that the DR2 (DRB1*1501) haplotype is present at an increased frequency in patients with MS, in particular in patients of Scandinavian descent who carry the highest risk. This haplotype includes the DRB1*1501, DRB5*0101, DQA1*0102, and DQB1*0602 alleles that are in linkage disequilibrium; these encode HLA-DR2b (DRA, DRB1*1501), HLA-DR2a (DRA, DRB5*0101), and HLA-DQ6 (DQA1*0102, DQB1*0602) (7). Disease-associated MHC alleles may confer susceptibility by affecting T cell repertoire selection in the thymus/peripheral immune system and/or by presenting self-peptides against which an autoimmune response is directed. The observation that particular alleles are associated with a given autoimmune disease suggests that a limited number of self-peptides are involved in early stages of the disease process. In later stages of the disease, the autoimmune response may broaden to a larger set of antigens/peptides (epitope spreading; reference 10).
The target antigens in MS are not known; major candidate antigens include myelin basic protein (MBP), proteolipid protein, and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG). In experimental animal models of MS, central nervous system inflammation and demyelination can be induced by immunization with peptides representing immunodominant T cell epitopes of these antigens or by transfer of antigen-specific T cell clones (for review see reference 11). In addition, antibodies to MOG were shown to enhance demyelination after an inflammatory response had been initiated by myelin-specific T cells (12, 13).
The analysis of the human immune response to myelin antigens has focused primarily on human MBP. A peptide from the middle region of human MBP (residues 84-102) was found to be immunodominant for human MBP-specific T cells, in particular in patients with the HLA-DR2 haplotype (14). MBP(85-99)-specific T cell clones from patients with the HLA-DR2 haplotype were HLA-DR2b (DRA, DRB1*1501) restricted and the peptide was found to bind to purified HLA-DR2b (DRA, DRB1*1501) (17, 18). Val 89 and Phe 92 of the MBP(85-99) peptide were identified as P1 and P4 anchor residues for HLA-DR2b binding. The peptide also bound, with a lower affinity, to HLA-DR2a (DRA, DRB5*0101), with Phe 92 identified as the P1 anchor residue for binding to this MHC class II molecule (17).
Several lines of evidence indicate that MBP-specific T
cells are activated and clonally expanded in MS patients.
First, hprt mutants reactive to MBP were obtained from
blood lymphocytes of MS patients but not control subjects
(19). The hprt
mutant frequency is higher in cells that
have undergone expansion in vivo. Clonal expansion of
MBP-specific T cells was also demonstrated by TCR sequence analysis of independent MBP-specific T cell clones from MS patients (20, 21). In addition, T cells specific for the MBP(85-99) peptide could be expanded from the
blood of MS patients but not control subjects by stimulation with transfectants that expressed HLA-DR2 but not
costimulatory molecules; expansion after MHC/peptide
stimulation in the absence of costimulation is a characteristic of memory T cells (22).
We have determined the crystal structure of HLA-DR2
(DRA, DRB1*1501) complexed with a peptide from human MBP. Peptide residues that were previously found to
be important for TCR recognition of the MBP peptide are
prominent, solvent exposed residues in the HLA-DR2/
MBP peptide crystal structure. HLA-DR2 is characterized by a large, primarily hydrophobic P4 pocket, due to the
presence of alanine at the polymorphic DR71 position.
The P4 pocket is occupied by a phenylalanine of the MBP
peptide that represents a major anchor residue for HLA-DR2 binding.
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Materials and Methods |
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Protein Expression and Purification.
HLA-DR2 (DRA, DRB1* 1501) was expressed in the Baculovirus system by replacing the hydrophobic transmembrane regions of DRProtein Crystallization.
For crystallization, DR2-MBP was buffer exchanged to 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and concentrated to 10 mg/ml in Centricon 10 concentrators (Amicon, Beverly, MA). Crystals were obtained at 18°C in 100 mM glycine, pH 3.5, and 15-18% polyethylene glycol (PEG) 6K. Microseeding was used to improve the quality of the crystals. Crystals (0.3 × 0.2 × 0.1 mm) were harvested for 10-12 h in 30% PEG 6K and 100 mM glycine, pH 3.5, and were prepared for liquid nitrogen cryo-cooling by slowly transferring individual crystals to harvest buffer containing 5, 10, and 15% ethylene glycol. The final cryoprotectant contained 30% PEG 6K, 15% ethylene glycol, and 100 mM glycine, pH 3.5. Crystals were then flash cooled in cryogenic nitrogen gas for data collection.Data Collection and Processing.
High-resolution data (15-2.6 Å) were collected on beamline A1 at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS, Ithaca, NY) (
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Structure Determination and Refinement.
The structure was determined by molecular replacement with the program AMoRe (26) using the DR1/hemagglutinin (HA) structure as a search model (27). Before molecular replacement, the HA peptide was removed from the model and 13 polymorphic residues that are different between DR1 and DR2 were changed to alanine. The rotation search gave two different solutions that were related by 180° and represent two noncrystallographically related molecules. A translation search identified the correct space group enantiomorph as P43212 and placed one molecule in the asymmetric unit. This solution was fixed and used to place the second molecule in the asymmetric unit. The two molecules are related by an approximate twofold noncrystallographic axis. Rigid body refinement of the molecular replacement solution in XPLOR (data 10- 3.0 Å) yielded Rfree = 40.2%, Rwork = 39.6%. Refinement was carried out using version 3.851 of XPLOR (28). A bulk solvent correction was calculated to allow the inclusion of data from 20 Å resolution in the refinement procedure. Cycles of manual model building in O (29) and refinement in XPLOR were carried out, during which DR2 polymorphic residues and the MBP peptide were built into the model and data was included to 2.6 Å. The refinement protocol involved positional refinement with noncrystallographic symmetry restraints, group B factor refinement for data from 20 to 3.0 Å resolution, and restrained individual B factor refinement for data from 20 to 2.6 Å resolution. The model was built into 2Fo-Fc and Fo-Fc electron density maps. Maps were improved by solvent flattening and averaging across the noncrystallographic twofold symmetry axis. The peptide (P-4 to P9) was built into clear, unambiguous density when Rfree = 32.5% and Rwork = 25.9%; after addition of the peptide, Rfree = 28.1% and Rwork = 24.6%. Crystallographic restraints were lifted for the final two rounds of refinement. The final model (Rfree = 26.6%, Rwork = 23.4%) contains 768 residues, 50 water molecules, and 2 sugar molecules (attached to residue Asn ![]() |
Results |
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The structure of HLA-DR2 complexed with a
peptide from human MBP (residues 85-99) was determined to 2.6 Å resolution by x-ray crystallography (see
Materials and Methods). The complex was produced using
a Baculovirus insect cell expression system with the MBP peptide covalently linked to the NH2 terminus of the mature DR2 chain, as described by Kozono et al. for murine MHC class II molecules (24). The protein also included COOH-terminal leucine zipper dimerization
domains that were proteolytically cleaved before crystallization (23). The complex crystallized in a tetragonal space
group (P43212) with two molecules per asymmetric unit.
The two molecules are related by an approximate twofold
noncrystallographic symmetry axis (177.5°) resulting in the
formation of a dimer similar to that previously observed for
HLA-DR1 and HLA-DR3 (27, 31, 32). Crystallographic
statistics are shown in Table 1.
HLA-DR2 differs from HLA-DR4, which is associated
with susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis, at 10 positions
within the 1 domain (Table 2, reference 33). These polymorphisms affect the specificity of the P1, P4, P6, P7, and
P9 pockets. Of particular importance is the contribution of
DR
71 to the shape and charge of the P4 pocket, as discussed below. The MBP peptide is bound in the binding
groove of DR2 with peptide side chains P1, P4, P6, and P9
occupying pockets within the groove (Fig. 1 A). The P1
and P4 pockets are occupied by valine 89 and phenylalanine 92, respectively, of the MBP(85-99) peptide. Peptide
binding experiments with single amino acid analogues had
demonstrated that these two residues represent the main
anchor residues for DR2 binding. Residues P2, P3, and P5
(histidine, phenylalanine, and lysine) were identified as major TCR contact residues for human MBP-specific T cell
clones (17), and in the crystal structure reported here were
observed to be solvent exposed and accessible for recognition by TCR (Fig. 1, B and D).
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The model for the MBP peptide (85-99) includes
residues 86-99 on one DR2 molecule and residues 85-98
on the second DR2 molecule in the asymmetric unit of the
crystal (Fig. 2 B, yellow and blue, respectively). Electron
density is weak for residues P10 and P11 of the peptides,
suggesting that the COOH termini of the two peptides are
partially disordered (Fig. 2 A). A crystal contact between peptide residue P-3 in one molecule and P5 from a molecule with related symmetry stabilizes the NH2 terminus of
one peptide, enabling P-4 to be included in the model for
this peptide and P5 lysine to be included in the model for
the other peptide. Analysis of MBP-specific T cell clones
demonstrated that truncation of the P-4 residue (glutamic
acid) greatly reduced the stimulatory capacity of the MBP
peptide for some of the human T cell clones, indicating that the peptide NH2 terminus may interact with the TCR
(17). However, the arching up of residues P-3 and P-4 in
the DR2/MBP peptide structure may not represent the
position of these residues in a HLA-DR2-MBP-peptide-
TCR complex, but instead a conformation stabilized by
the crystal contact. The two noncrystallographically related
peptides vary slightly in conformation from P6 to P10, where they are influenced by different crystal contacts to
the 2 helix. Specifically, for one molecule in the asymmetric unit there is a crystal contact of Arg
50 on a symmetry related molecule with Asp
66, Gln
64, Tyr
60,
and P6 Ile.
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The overall conformation of the MBP peptide in the DR2 binding groove is similar to that observed for other HLA-DR-peptide complexes (27, 31, 32, 34; Fig. 3). Superposition of MHC class II peptides shows that the main chain conformation is highly conserved for the NH2-terminal segment of these peptides (P-1 to P4); this segment carries the main DR2 anchor residues (P1 and P4) as well as important TCR contact residues of the MBP peptide (histidine and phenylalanine at P2 and P3, as well as lysine at P5). The conformation of MHC class II-bound peptides is more divergent towards the COOH-terminal segment (P6-P10), as described in Dessen et al. (34). Fig. 3 shows that the COOH terminus of the MBP peptide is positioned higher in the peptide binding groove than other human and murine peptides.
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The NH2 terminus of the
peptide (P-3 to P4) is held in the DR2 peptide binding
groove by a conserved network of hydrogen bonds (27).
Residue P-3 of the peptide is stabilized by an additional hydrogen bond from the NH of the P-3 side chain to Ser
53 O
. Valine at the P1 position of the MBP peptide occupies the hydrophobic P1 pocket. Val
86 at the base of
the P1 pocket results in a smaller P1 pocket than that observed for DR1 and DR4 (Gly at
86), creating a hydrophobic pocket identical to that reported for DR3 (31), which can bind aliphatic amino acids and phenylalanine
(35). Residue P2 His of the MBP peptide packs against His
81, whereas side chain P3 Phe nestles in a hydrophobic
shelf of the
2 helix. The side chains of P2 His and P3 Phe
are both accessible for interaction with the TCR (Fig. 1,
A-D). The peptide main chain from P-3 to P4 of the MBP
peptide superimposes almost identically with the main
chain of other peptides bound to human DR molecules
(Fig. 3), probably because these DR molecules are identical
in this part of the groove; the only polymorphism in this
region is at position
86 at the bottom of the P1 pocket.
In the HLA-DR2-MBP peptide complex, the P4 pocket is
occupied by an aromatic side chain (Phe) that makes an important contribution to the binding of the MBP peptide.
The P4 pocket of HLA-DR2 has a preference for aromatic
as well as aliphatic residues. Binding is also observed with
analogues of the MBP peptide that carry a substitution by
histidine, arginine, lysine, glutamine or asparagine at P4;
substitution by aspartic acid is not tolerated (reference 17
and Pyrdol, J., and K.W. Wucherpfennig, unpublished
data). In contrast, HLA-DR4 has a preference for negatively charged residues, hydrogen bond donors, and some
aliphatic amino acids at P4; peptides with aromatic or positively charged residues at P4 bind poorly (36, 37). DR2
and DR4 differ only at two positions in the P4 pocket, 71
(Ala in DR2, Lys in DR4) and
13 (Arg in DR2, His in
DR4) (Table 2 and Fig. 4).
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The structural basis for this side chain specificity is clear
from the DR2-MBP structure, which reveals a large, predominantly hydrophobic P4 pocket (Figs. 1 C and 5 A).
The pocket is lined by two aromatic MHC side chains, Tyr
78 and Phe
26, as well as side chains Gln
70, Ala
71,
Asp
28, and Arg
13. The polymorphism at position 71 in DR2 (Ala) appears to be most important in creating the
available space for the P4 aromatic side chain (Phe) of the MBP peptide. The presence of negatively charged Asp
28
at the base of the pocket would allow the binding of positively charged side chains but be unfavorable for the binding of negatively charged side chains.
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In contrast, the P4 pocket of DR4 is smaller and carries a
positive charge at DR71. In the crystal structure of DR4
with a bound type II collagen peptide, a salt bridge was
present between an aspartic acid residue of the peptide and
Lys
71 (reference 34; Fig. 5 B). Since the majority of
DRB1 alleles encode lysine, arginine, or glutamic acid at
DR
71 (33), the binding of aromatic side chains is an important aspect of the DR2 peptide binding specificity.
The DR71 polymorphism, which is not solvent exposed, has also been reported to affect TCR recognition of
DR-peptide complexes (38). The indirect effect of DR
71
on TCR recognition can be understood by comparison of
the P4 pockets of DR2 and DR4 (Fig. 5), which shows
that solvent-exposed MHC residue Gln
70 differs markedly in its position between the two structures. In the
DR2-MBP peptide structure, Gln
70 is in a horizontal
position relative to the peptide binding site while it is
pointing up in the DR4-type II collagen peptide structure.
These results indicate that DR
71 can have an indirect effect on TCR recognition by altering the characteristics of
the P4 pocket and the interactions that a bound peptide anchor residue can make with solvent accessible side chains.
The COOH-terminal half of the peptide main chain, from P5 to P10, is
positioned higher in the groove than peptides bound to DR1, DR3, and DR4 (Fig. 3). P6 Asn of the MBP peptide
binds in a polar P6 pocket (Fig. 1, A and C), forming part
of a complex hydrogen bonding network that includes
conserved MHC side chains Glu 11, Asn
69, Asn
62,
Asp
66, a water molecule, and polymorphic residue Arg
13. The nature of this pocket is likely to be conserved in
all human DR and mouse I-E molecules and has been suggested to determine the pH dependency of MHC class II
peptide loading (39). Single amino acid substitutions of the
MBP peptide show that analogues with a negatively
charged side chain bind poorly at P6 (Pyrdol, J., and K.W.
Wucherpfennig, unpublished data). This is readily explained by the DR2-MBP crystal structure, which reveals a
predominantly negatively charged pocket (Fig. 1, A and C). Available space in the polar P6 pocket is limited compared with other DR alleles due to the presence of polymorphic side chain Arg
13. This prevents P6 Asn from
binding as deeply in the P6 pocket as previously observed
for DR-peptide complexes and is at least partially responsible for the raised position of the MBP peptide COOH terminus within the peptide binding groove.
Peptide side chains P7 Ile and P9 Thr do not fully occupy the available space in their binding pockets (Fig. 1, A
and C). Two water molecules fill the space usually occupied by the P7 side chain. It would appear to be more energetically favorable for the polar P7 pocket to be filled
with water molecules than the hydrophobic P7 Ile peptide
side chain. The water molecules are satisfying hydrogen
bonding requirements (particularly of residues Asp 28 and
Tyr
30) that could not be satisfied by P7 Ile. The hydrophobic DR2 P9 pocket is identical to the DR1 P9 pocket.
However, the MBP peptide P9 Thr does not fully occupy the available space in the P9 pocket (Fig. 1, A and B). It is possible that this is due to the suboptimal nature of the P9
anchor residue since substitution of the P9 position results
in a modest increase of the binding affinity of the MBP
peptide (reference 17 and Pyrdol, J., and K.W. Wucherpfennig, unpublished data). Also, the position of P9 Thr could
be due to the overall raised position of the COOH terminus of the MBP peptide within the DR2 binding groove
that prevents P9 Thr from binding more deeply in the P9
pocket. The raised position of the peptide COOH terminus compared with other DR-peptide complexes therefore
may be due to a relatively poor fit of the peptide side chains
to the available pockets.
A contribution by the covalent linker on the position of
the COOH terminus of the peptide cannot be excluded. In
this respect it is interesting to compare the DR2-MBP
structure with the mouse I-Ek, I-Ak, and I-Ad crystal structures that were also determined with peptides covalently linked to the NH2 terminus of the class II chain. In the I-Ek
structures, the covalent linker is ordered, positions P9 and P10 of the peptide are not raised, and anchor residue P9
Lys binds deep in the P9 pocket (39). However, for the
peptides bound to the I-A structures, the linkers are disordered, the P9 anchor residue is small, and the peptide
COOH terminus is raised in the groove (40, 41). These results suggest the possibility that in the case where the P9
residue is small, the presence of a covalent linker may influence the position of the peptide COOH terminus.
In addition to the partial occupancy of the P7 and P9
pockets, the hydrogen bonding pattern at the COOH terminus of the MBP peptide is unusual. Hydrogen bonds
from conserved MHC residue Trp 61 to peptide P8 O
and residue
69 to peptide P9 N and P7 O are not formed.
Similarly, the hydrogen bond from Trp
61 to P8 O is absent in the I-Ak/hen egg lysozyme structure (40). The observation that the P7 and P9 pockets are only partially occupied is consistent with peptide binding studies. The
COOH terminus of the MBP peptide could be truncated
to P7 Ile without a significant loss of binding affinity (17),
and substitutions at P6, P7, or P9 of the MBP peptide had
relatively little effect on DR2 binding. Taken together, these data indicate that the peptide COOH terminus does
not contribute significantly to the overall binding energy of
the MBP peptide to HLA-DR2.
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Discussion |
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Previous studies demonstrated that P2 His, P3 Phe, and
P5 Lys are important residues for TCR recognition of the
DR2-MBP peptide complex (17, 42). The DR2-MBP
crystal structure shows that these peptide side chains are
solvent exposed (Fig. 1 D) and available for TCR recognition. Comparison with the recently published high resolution crystal structures of human MHC class I-peptide-
TCR complexes (43, 44) suggests that P5 Lys would bind
in a pocket formed between the TCR V and V
domains
and may form a hydrogen bond to negatively charged residue(s) in the CDR3 loop of
and/or
.
P3 Phe is a primary TCR contact residue for human MBP(85-99)-specific T cell clones since substitution of P3 Phe reduces/abolishes T cell activation without affecting DR2 binding. Some T cell clones are highly specific for this position since substitution by any natural amino acid greatly reduces or abolishes T cell activation. The NH2-terminal segment of the MBP peptide makes a contribution to TCR recognition since truncation of P-4 and P-3 greatly diminishes TCR recognition by some DR2-MBP-specific T cell clones without affecting DR2 binding. In contrast, the COOH-terminal segment of the peptide is not important for recognition by these T cell clones since almost all substitutions at P7, P8 and P9 are tolerated (reference 17 and Pyrdol, J., and K.W. Wucherpfennig, unpublished data). The degenerate HLA-DR2 binding motif as well as the requirement for sequence similarity/identity at a limited number of peptide residues that interact with the TCR account for the observation that microbial peptides that are quite diverse in their primary sequence can activate human MBP-specific T cell clones (42, 45).
A large, primarily hydrophobic P4 pocket was found to
be a prominent feature of the DR2 peptide binding site.
This pocket is occupied by a phenylalanine of the MBP
peptide that makes an important contribution to the binding of the MBP peptide to DR2. The presence of an alanine at the polymorphic DR71 position creates the necessary room for the binding of an aromatic side chain in the
P4 pocket. The binding of aromatic side chains by the P4
pocket of DR2 is also facilitated by two aromatic residues
of the P4 pocket (
26 Phe and
78 Tyr, of which
26 is
polymorphic) (Fig. 5 A). The presence of alanine at
DR
71 is unusual for DRB1 alleles and has only been observed for DR2 alleles (DRB1*1501-DRB1*1506) and
DRB1*1309; all other known DRB1 alleles encode lysine,
arginine, or glutamic acid at this position (33). In Caucasians, DRB1*1501 is the most common DR2 haplotype; it
is also the haplotype that confers an increased susceptibility
to the development of MS. It is not known if other DR2
alleles confer susceptibility to MS because they are relatively uncommon in Europe and Northern America,
where the highest prevalence of MS is observed. Since the
DRB1 gene is in linkage disequilibrium with the DRB5
gene as well as DQA/DQB genes, both DR and DQ molecules encoded by this haplotype may contribute to the
pathogenesis of MS (9).
The P4 pocket of HLA-DR makes an important contribution to susceptibility to other human autoimmune diseases. This is readily explained by the fact that the P4 pocket
is the most polymorphic pocket of the HLA-DR binding
site. For example, an HLA-DR4 allele (DRB1*0402) that
is associated with susceptibility to pemphigus vulgaris, an
autoimmune disease of the skin, differs from a rheumatoid arthritis associated allele (DRB1*0404) only at three positions, DR67, -70, and -71. In the pemphigus vulgaris associated allele, DR
70 and -71 of the P4 pocket carry negative charges (aspartic acid and glutamic acid, respectively).
In contrast, glutamine and lysine/arginine are present at
DR
70 and -71, respectively, in rheumatoid arthritis-associated alleles (DRB1*0401 and *0404) (2, 37, 46). A
peptide from type II collagen that is immunodominant for
murine type II collagen-specific T cells has been identified in HLA-DR1 and HLA-DR4 transgenic mice; this peptide
carries an aspartic acid residue at the P4 position (50, 51).
The structural characteristics of the DR2 binding site
may also help to explain the binding of Cop 1 to DR2 and
other DR molecules. Cop 1 is a random copolymer composed of L-alanine, L-lysine, L-glutamic acid, and L-tyrosine
in a molar ratio of 6.0:4.7:1.9:1.0 that has shown a certain
degree of clinical efficacy in relapsing-remitting MS (52,
53). Cop 1 was found to bind to a number of different DR
molecules and to compete with the binding of peptides
(54). Since DR1 (DRA, DRB1*0101) and DR4 (DRA,
DRB1*0401) have large P1 pockets (Gly at 86), tyrosine
may serve as a P1 anchor for DR1 and DR4 binding. In
contrast, the P1 pocket of HLA-DR2 is too small (Val at
86) to accommodate a tyrosine side chain and too hydrophobic to accommodate lysine or glutamic acid. It is more
likely that a tyrosine residue of Cop 1 could be accommodated in the P4 pocket of DR2 and act as an anchor residue
for Cop 1 binding.
The structural information on the P4 pocket of different DR molecules may be useful for the development of small organic molecules that inhibit peptide presentation by DR molecules associated with particular autoimmune diseases. Introduction of particular moieties in the P4 pocket may allow specificity for certain DR molecules to be introduced. For example, ligands with large, aromatic substituents in the P4 pocket may be relatively selective for DR2, whereas a negatively charged substituents may introduce a certain degree of specificity for rheumatoid arthritis-associated DR4 molecules.
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Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to Kai W. Wucherpfennig, Department of Cancer Immunology and AIDS, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney St., Boston, MA 02115. Phone: 617-632-3086; Fax: 617-632-2662; E-mail: wucherpf{at}mbcrr.harvard.edu
Received for publication 14 July 1998 and in revised form 18 August 1998.
We have benefited from the continuing collaboration with Dr. Jack L. Strominger on aspects of MHC biology. K.W. Wucherpfennig would like to thank Dr. Jack L. Strominger for encouragement and support during earlier stages of the project.This work was supported by grants from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (to K.W. Wucherpfennig), the National Institutes of Health (AI-39619 to D.C. Wiley and K.W. Wucherpfennig, AI-42316 to K.W. Wucherpfennig, and HD-17461 to D.C. Wiley), and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. K.J. Smith is supported by a Wellcome Trust Traveling Fellowship. K.W. Wucherpfennig is a Harry Weaver Neuroscience Scholar of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. D.C. Wiley is an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Abbreviations used in this paper HA, hemagglutinin; MBP, myelin basic protein; MS, multiple sclerosis.
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