1. Academic Validation
  2. HLA-A1 and HLA-A3 T cell epitopes derived from influenza virus proteins predicted from peptide binding motifs

HLA-A1 and HLA-A3 T cell epitopes derived from influenza virus proteins predicted from peptide binding motifs

  • J Immunol. 1993 Dec 1;151(11):5930-5.
M DiBrino 1 T Tsuchida R V Turner K C Parker J E Coligan W E Biddison
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Biological Resources Branch, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.
PMID: 7504010
Abstract

The potential value of peptide binding motifs of HLA class I molecules for the prediction of viral epitopes presented to T cells has been analyzed for two common HLA alleles. CTL generated against type A Influenza Virus recognize peptide epitopes derived from the nucleoprotein (NP) and basic polymerase 1 presented by HLA-A1, and epitopes derived from NP presented by HLA-A3. Distinct peptide binding motifs with characteristic anchor residues were previously identified for each of these class I molecules based on the sequences of endogenous peptides: for HLA-A1, position 3 = Asp or Glu and position 9 = Tyr; for HLA-A3, position 2 = Leu and position 9 = Lys or Tyr. Six Peptides containing the HLA-A1 binding motif were identified within the sequences of the NP and basic polymerase 1 proteins, and one peptide containing the HLA-A3 motif was identified in the NP molecule. Three of the six HLA-A1 Peptides and the one HLA-A3 NP peptide could bind to HLA-A1 or HLA-A3, respectively, in an in vitro peptide binding assay. Two of the HLA-A1-binding Peptides could sensitize target cells for lysis by influenza virus-immune CTL populations restricted by HLA-A1 (NP 44-52 CTELKLSDY and PB1 591-599 VSDGGPNLY), and the one HLA-A3 NP peptide (NP 265-273 ILRGSVAHK) could sensitize target cells for lysis by HLA-A3-restricted influenza-immune CTL. Each peptide was also shown to be able to induce peptide-specific class I-restricted CTL in vitro, and the CTL generated against two of these Peptides could specifically recognize virus-infected targets. Thus, these peptide binding motifs can be used to construct immunogenic synthetic epitopes which are capable of inducing Antiviral T cell-mediated immune responses.

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