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Between innate and adaptive immune responses: NKG2A, NKG2C, and CD8⁺ T cell recognition of HLA-E restricted self-peptides acquired in the absence of HLA-Ia.

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Huyton,  T.
Department of Cellular Logistics, MPI for Biophysical Chemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Pump, W. C., Kraemer, T., Huyton, T., Hò, G. G. T., Blasczyk, R., & Bade-Doeding, C. (2019). Between innate and adaptive immune responses: NKG2A, NKG2C, and CD8⁺ T cell recognition of HLA-E restricted self-peptides acquired in the absence of HLA-Ia. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 20(6): 1454. doi:10.3390/ijms20061454.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-4162-5
Abstract
On healthy cells the non-classical HLA class Ib molecule HLA-E displays the cognate ligand for the NK cell receptor NKG2A/CD94 when bound to HLA class I signal peptide sequences. In a pathogenic situation when HLA class I is absent, HLA-E is bound to a diverse set of peptides and enables the stimulatory NKG2C/CD94 receptor to bind. The activation of CD8⁺ T cells by certain p:HLA-E complexes illustrates the dual role of this low polymorphic HLA molecule in innate and adaptive immunity. Recent studies revealed a shift in the HLA-E peptide repertoire in cells with defects in the peptide loading complex machinery. We recently showed that HLA-E presents a highly diverse set of peptides in the absence of HLA class Ia and revealed a non-protective feature against NK cell cytotoxicity mediated by these peptides. In the present study we have evaluated the molecular basis for the impaired NK cell inhibition by these peptides and determined the cell surface stability of individual p:HLA-E complexes and their binding efficiency to soluble NKG2A/CD94 or NKG2C/CD94 receptors. Additionally, we analyzed the recognition of these p:HLA-E epitopes by CD8⁺ T cells. We show that non-canonical peptides provide stable cell surface expression of HLA-E, and these p:HLA-E complexes still bind to NKG2/CD94 receptors in a peptide-restricted fashion. Furthermore, individual p:HLA-E complexes elicit activation of CD8⁺ T cells with an effector memory phenotype. These novel HLA-E epitopes provide new implications for therapies targeting cells with abnormal HLA class I expression.