Class I-Induced Resistance to Natural Killing: Identification of Nonpermissive Residues in HLA-A2
Structural characteristics of major histocompatibility complex class I antigens associated with natural killer (NK)-resistance phenomena were examined. Previous research has shown that transfection of class I genomic DNA clones into class I-deficient, NK-sensitive target cell lines results in transf...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1991-07, Vol.88 (14), p.5989-5992 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Structural characteristics of major histocompatibility complex class I antigens associated with natural killer (NK)-resistance phenomena were examined. Previous research has shown that transfection of class I genomic DNA clones into class I-deficient, NK-sensitive target cell lines results in transfectants exhibiting class I+, NK-resistant phenotypes. In contrast to the HLA-A3, -B7, -B27, and -Bw58 class I molecules, the HLA-A2 class I molecules were shown not to protect target cells from NK activity. Here we show that this nonprotective phenotype maps to the α1 domain of the HLA-A2 molecule by examining the NK-protective capacity of the natural interdomain recombinant HLA-Aw69 molecule. HLA-Aw69, which consists of an α1 domain exhibiting homology with HLA-Aw68, and α2/α3/transmembrane-cytoplasmic domains, exhibiting homologies with HLA-A2, mimics HLA-Aw68 and provides HLA-A,B null target cell (C1R) transfectants with increased resistance to NK. Further, the inability of transfected HLA-A2 to confer protection against NK activity can be completely attributed to the expression of a "nonpermissive" residue at position 74 in the α1 domain. Site-directed mutation of the His-74 residue in HLA-A2 to the Asp-74 (HLA-A3, -Aw68, -Aw69, -B7, and -B27) residue generates a mutant that provides C1R cell line transfectants an NK-resistant phenotype. As His-74 blocks access to a side pocket in the HLA-A2 antigenbinding cleft, these results support the critical involvement of residues within the peptide-binding groove of class I molecules in determining the NK susceptibility phenotype of class I+target cells. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.88.14.5989 |