Sharing of Four DR‐β Sequence Motifs Between HLA‐DRB1*1601 and DRB1*1101 Correlates with Frequent Degenerate T‐Cell Recognition of HA306–320 Peptide Complexed to these Two Molecules

Abstract
This paper shows that the seven HA306-320 specific T-cell clones isolated from one individual recognize the peptide complexed to both autologous HLA-DRB1*1101 and allogeneic HLA-DRB1*1601 (or DRB5*0201) molecules. For each T-cell clone, a single T-cell receptor (TCR) is involved in the recognition of these two different peptide-DR complexes as evidenced by cold target competition experiments. Yet, the seven T-cell clones express several different TCRs as judged by V beta-J beta usage and fine specificities. Furthermore, one representative clone has the same fine specificity for HA306-320 analogues mutated at epitopic residues irrespective of the use of DR1101 or DR1601 APC. These results suggest that structural differences between DRB1*1101 and DRB1*1601 (or DRB5*0201) do not dramatically influence the orientation of HA306-320 in the grooves such that most residues interacting with TCRs are conserved. In another individual, the same pattern of restriction, i.e. DR1101 + DR1601, was found for several HA306-320 specific clones. Two additional patterns, DR1101 + DR0801 and DR1101 + DR0801 + DR1601, were identified. By comparing DR sequences the authors found that DRB1*1101 and DRB1*1601 share four important motifs, i.e. beta 85-86, beta 67-71, beta 57 and beta 28-31 supposed to line three distinct HLA-DR pockets. Three of these motifs are also shared with DRB1*0801. All the results further support that the motif similarities allow the peptide to adopt very similar orientations in the cross-reacting DR molecules.

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