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Generation of functional HLA-DR*1101 tetramers receptive for loading with pathogen or tumour derived synthetic peptides

BACKGROUND: MHC class I-peptide tetramers are currently utilised to characterize CD8(+ )T cell responses at single cell level. The generation and use of MHC class II tetramers to study antigen-specific CD4(+ )T cells appears less straightforward. Most MHC class II tetramers are produced with a homog...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Moro, Monica, Cecconi, Virginia, Martinoli, Chiara, Dallegno, Eliana, Giabbai, Barbara, Degano, Massimo, Glaichenhaus, Nicholas, Protti, Maria Pia, Dellabona, Paolo, Casorati, Giulia
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1325046/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16329759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2172-6-24
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: MHC class I-peptide tetramers are currently utilised to characterize CD8(+ )T cell responses at single cell level. The generation and use of MHC class II tetramers to study antigen-specific CD4(+ )T cells appears less straightforward. Most MHC class II tetramers are produced with a homogeneously built-in peptide, reducing greatly their flexibility of use. We attempted the generation of "empty" functional HLA-DR*1101 tetramers, receptive for loading with synthetic peptides by incubation. No such reagent is in fact available for this HLA-DR allele, one of the most frequent in the Caucasian population. RESULTS: We compared soluble MHC class II-immunoglobulin fusion proteins (HLA-DR*1101-Ig) with soluble MHC class II protein fused with an optimised Bir site for enzymatic biotynilation (HLA-DR*1101-Bir), both produced in insect cells. The molecules were multimerised by binding fluorochrome-protein A or fluorochrome-streptavidin, respectively. We find that HLA-DR*1101-Bir molecules are superior to the HLA-DR*1101-Ig ones both in biochemical and functional terms. HLA-DR*1101-Bir molecules can be pulsed with at least three different promiscuous peptide epitopes, derived from Tetanus Toxoid, influenza HA and the tumour associated antigen MAGE-3 respectively, to stain specific CD4(+ )T cells. Both staining temperature and activation state of CD4(+ )T cells are critical for the binding of peptide-pulsed HLA-DR*1101-Bir to the cognate TCR. CONCLUSION: It is therefore possible to generate a soluble recombinant HLA-DR*1101 backbone that is receptive for loading with different peptides to stain specific CD4(+ )T cells. As shown for other HLA-DR alleles, we confirm that not all the strategies to produce soluble HLA-DR*1101 multimers are equivalent.