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Title: Structural features of an antigen required for cellular interactions and for T cell activation in a MHC-restricted response. Author: Langton BC, Mackewicz CE, Wan AM, Andria ML, Benjamini E. Journal: J Immunol; 1988 Jul 15; 141(2):447-56. PubMed ID: 3260252. Abstract: The protein Ag, tobacco mosaic virus protein, (TMVP) and its tryptic peptide number 8 (residues 93-112 of the protein) exhibit cross-reactivity on the T cell level in some strains of mice (e.g., C3H.SW, C57BL/10); these strains are termed cross-reactive (CR). In other strains such as A/J or B10.BR, no cross-reactivity is exhibited; these strains are termed non-cross-reactive (NCR). Genetic experiments indicated that the cross-reactivity is dominant and that it is mapped to the I-A or I-E region of the MHC, with cross-reactivity exhibited by the I-Ab haplotype but not by I-Ak or I-Ek. Cell reconstitution experiments have indicated that the non-cross-reactivity is associated with the inability of the NCR APC to present Ag. Analysis of the area(s) on peptide 8 which serve(s) as epitope revealed that both strains recognize an overlapping area consisting of 11 amino acid residues in the middle of peptide 8 (residues 97-107), which by itself is nonstimulatory to TMVP- or peptide 8-immune T cells of the CR or the NCR strains. However, the addition of a few amino acid residues of the sequence of peptide 8 to this area converts it to a complete stimulatory epitope. Additivity experiments revealed that the CR strain contains two major T cell populations each recognizing this middle region of peptide 8 when elongated by a few amino acids N-terminally and C-terminally, respectively. In contrast, the NCR strain contains one major T cell population recognizing elongation only N-terminally. Because TMVP (but not peptide 8) requires processing before presentation to T cells, it is postulated that, during processing of TMVP, there occur alterations in the area of the proximal three or four N-terminal amino acids of the region consisting of peptide 8, destroying the only region containing the T cell epitope recognized by the NCR strain, hence TMVP and peptide 8 do not exhibit cross-reactivity in this strain. The same alterations of TMVP still leave intact an epitope consisting of amino acid residues C-terminal to the altered area which is recognized by the CR strain, hence the cross-reactivity exhibited by this strain. The results suggest that the difference in cross-reactivity on the T cell level between TMVP and peptide 8 exhibited by the strains may be due to differences in the orientation of presentation and the subsequent cell recognition of an epitope contained within peptide 8.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]