RESUMO
The polymorphic nature and intrinsic instability of class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) and MHC-like molecules loaded with suboptimal peptides, metabolites, or glycolipids presents a fundamental challenge for identifying disease-relevant antigens and antigen-specific T cell receptors (TCRs), hindering the development of autologous therapeutics. Here, we leverage the positive allosteric coupling between the peptide and light chain (ß2 microglobulin, ß2m) subunits for binding to the MHC-I heavy chain (HC) through an engineered disulfide bond bridging conserved epitopes across the HC/ß2m interface, to generate conformationally stable, peptide-receptive molecules named "open MHC-I." Biophysical characterization shows that open MHC-I molecules are properly folded protein complexes of enhanced thermal stability compared to the wild type when loaded with low- to moderate-affinity peptides. Using solution NMR, we characterize the effects of the disulfide bond on the conformation and dynamics of the MHC-I structure, ranging from local changes in ß2m-interacting sites of the peptide-binding groove to long-range effects on the α2-1 helix and α3 domain. The interchain disulfide bond stabilizes MHC-I molecules in an open conformation to promote peptide exchange across multiple human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allotypes, covering representatives from five HLA-A supertypes, six HLA-B supertypes, and oligomorphic HLA-Ib molecules. Our structure-guided design, combined with conditional ß-peptide ligands, provides a universal platform to generate ready-to-load MHC-I systems of enhanced stability, enabling a range of approaches to screen antigenic epitope libraries and probe polyclonal TCR repertoires covering highly polymorphic HLA-I allotypes, as well as oligomorphic nonclassical molecules.
Assuntos
Antígenos de Histocompatibilidade Classe II , Antígenos de Histocompatibilidade , Humanos , Peptídeos/genética , Complexo Principal de Histocompatibilidade , Epitopos , DissulfetosRESUMO
Human Tapasin (hTapasin) is the main chaperone of MHC-I molecules, enabling peptide loading and antigen repertoire optimization across HLA allotypes. However, it is restricted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen as part of the protein loading complex (PLC), and therefore is highly unstable when expressed in recombinant form. Additional stabilizing co-factors such as ERp57 are required to catalyze peptide exchange in vitro, limiting uses for the generation of pMHC-I molecules of desired antigen specificities. Here, we show that the chicken Tapasin (chTapasin) ortholog can be expressed recombinantly at high yields in a stable form, independent of co-chaperones. chTapasin can bind the human HLA-B∗37:01 with low micromolar-range affinity to form a stable tertiary complex. Biophysical characterization by methyl-based NMR methods reveals that chTapasin recognizes a conserved ß2m epitope on HLA-B∗37:01, consistent with previously solved X-ray structures of hTapasin. Finally, we provide evidence that the B∗37:01/chTapasin complex is peptide-receptive and can be dissociated upon binding of high-affinity peptides. Our results highlight the use of chTapasin as a stable scaffold for protein engineering applications aiming to expand the ligand exchange function on human MHC-I and MHC-like molecules.
Assuntos
Apresentação de Antígeno , Galinhas , Antígenos HLA-B , Proteínas de Membrana Transportadoras , Chaperonas Moleculares , Animais , Humanos , Antígenos HLA-B/metabolismo , Imunoglobulinas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Membrana Transportadoras/metabolismo , Chaperonas Moleculares/metabolismo , Peptídeos/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Epitopos/metabolismo , Engenharia de ProteínasRESUMO
The polymorphic nature and intrinsic instability of class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) and MHC-like molecules loaded with suboptimal peptides, metabolites, or glycolipids presents a fundamental challenge for identifying disease-relevant antigens and antigen-specific T cell receptors (TCRs), hindering the development of autologous therapeutics. Here, we leverage the positive allosteric coupling between the peptide and light chain (ß 2 microglobulin, ß 2 m) subunits for binding to the MHC-I heavy chain (HC) through an engineered disulfide bond bridging conserved epitopes across the HC/ß 2 m interface, to generate conformationally stable, open MHC-I molecules. Biophysical characterization shows that open MHC-I molecules are properly folded protein complexes of enhanced thermal stability compared to the wild type, when loaded with low- to intermediate-affinity peptides. Using solution NMR, we characterize the effects of the disulfide bond on the conformation and dynamics of the MHC-I structure, ranging from local changes in ß 2 m interacting sites of the peptide binding groove to long-range effects on the α 2-1 helix and α 3 domain. The interchain disulfide bond stabilizes empty MHC-I molecules in a peptide-receptive, open conformation to promote peptide exchange across multiple human leucocyte antigen (HLA) allotypes, covering representatives from five HLA-A, six HLA-B supertypes, and oligomorphic HLA-Ib molecules. Our structural design, combined with conditional ß-peptide ligands, provides a universal platform for generating ready-to-load MHC-I systems of enhanced stability, enabling a range of approaches to screen antigenic epitope libraries and probe polyclonal TCR repertoires in the context of highly polymorphic HLA-I allotypes, as well as oligomorphic nonclassical molecules. Significance Statement: We outline a structure-guided approach for generating conformationally stable, open MHC-I molecules with enhanced ligand exchange kinetics spanning five HLA-A, all HLA-B supertypes, and oligomorphic HLA-Ib allotypes. We present direct evidence of positive allosteric cooperativity between peptide binding and ß 2 m association with the heavy chain by solution NMR and HDX-MS spectroscopy. We demonstrate that covalently linked ß 2 m serves as a conformational chaperone to stabilize empty MHC-I molecules in a peptide-receptive state, by inducing an open conformation and preventing intrinsically unstable heterodimers from irreversible aggregation. Our study provides structural and biophysical insights into the conformational properties of MHC-I ternary complexes, which can be further applied to improve the design of ultra-stable, universal ligand exchange systems in a pan-HLA allelic setting.
RESUMO
Human Tapasin (hTapasin) is the main chaperone of MHC-I molecules, enabling peptide loading and antigen repertoire optimization across HLA allotypes. However, it is restricted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen as part of the protein loading complex (PLC) and therefore is highly unstable when expressed in recombinant form. Additional stabilizing co-factors such as ERp57 are required to catalyze peptide exchange in vitro , limiting uses for the generation of pMHC-I molecules of desired antigen specificities. Here, we show that the chicken Tapasin (chTapasin) ortholog can be expressed recombinantly at high yields in stable form, independently of co-chaperones. chTapasin can bind the human HLA-B * 37:01 with low micromolar-range affinity to form a stable tertiary complex. Biophysical characterization by methyl-based NMR methods reveals that chTapasin recognizes a conserved ß 2 m epitope on HLA-B * 37:01, consistent with previously solved X-ray structures of hTapasin. Finally, we provide evidence that the B * 37:01/chTapasin complex is peptide-receptive and can be dissociated upon binding of high-affinity peptides. Our results highlight the use of chTapasin as a stable scaffold for future protein engineering applications aiming to expand the ligand exchange function on human MHC-I and MHC-like molecules.
RESUMO
Immunological chaperones tapasin and TAP binding protein, related (TAPBPR) play key roles in antigenic peptide optimization and quality control of nascent class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) molecules. The polymorphic nature of MHC-I proteins leads to a range of allelic dependencies on chaperones for assembly and cell-surface expression, limiting chaperone-mediated peptide exchange to a restricted set of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allotypes. Here, we demonstrate and characterize xeno interactions between a chicken TAPBPR ortholog and a complementary repertoire of HLA allotypes, relative to its human counterpart. We find that TAPBPR orthologs recognize empty MHC-I with broader allele specificity and facilitate peptide exchange by maintaining a reservoir of receptive molecules. Deep mutational scanning of human TAPBPR further identifies gain-of-function mutants, resembling the chicken sequence, which can enhance HLA-A*01:01 expression in situ and promote peptide exchange in vitro. These results highlight that polymorphic sites on MHC-I and chaperone surfaces can be engineered to manipulate their interactions, enabling chaperone-mediated peptide exchange on disease-relevant HLA alleles.