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Three-Dimensional Structure Determines the Pattern of CD4+T-Cell Epitope Dominance in Influenza Virus Hemagglutinin

Authors :
Samuel J. Landry
Source :
Journal of Virology. 82:1238-1248
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2008.

Abstract

The structural context of a CD4+T-cell epitope is known to influence immunodominance at the level of antigen processing, but general rules have not emerged. Dominant epitopes of influenza virus hemagglutinin are found to be localized to the C-terminal flanks of conformationally stable segments identified by low crystallographic B-factors or high COREX residue stabilities. The bias toward C-terminal flanks is distinctive for antigens from the influenza virus. Dominant epitopes in antigens/allergens from other sources also localize to the flanks of stable segments but are found on either N- or C-terminal flanks. Thus, dominance arises from preferential endoproteolytic nicking between stable segments followed by loading of fragment terminal regions into antigen-presenting proteins. This mechanism probably arose in order to direct CD4+responses onto sequences that are conserved for structure and function. Structure-guided presentation could enhance protection against genetically drifting influenza virus variants but most likely reduces protection against new viral subtypes.

Details

ISSN :
10985514 and 0022538X
Volume :
82
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dffc669f3c64537a79f1f3cb33a6990a