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Anchor profiles of HLA-specific peptides: Analysis by a novel affinity scoring method and experimental validation

Authors :
Jurgen Pletinckx
Tessa Braeckman
Johan Desmet
Nathalie Boutonnet
Ignace Lasters
Geert Meersseman
Maja Debulpaep
Krista De Clercq
Physiology
Source :
Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics. 58:53-69
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Wiley, 2004.

Abstract

The study of intermolecular interactions is a fundamental research subject in biology. Here we report on the development of a quantitative structure-based affinity scoring method for peptide-protein complexes, named PepScope. The method operates on the basis of a highly specific force field function (CHARMM) that is applied to all-atom structural representations of peptide-receptor complexes. Peptide side-chain contributions to total affinity are scored after detailed rotameric sampling followed by controlled energy refinement. A de novo approach to estimate dehydration energies was developed, based on the simulation of individual amino acids in a solvent box filled with explicit water molecules. Transferability of the method was demonstrated by its application to the hydrophobic HLA-A2 and -A24 receptors, the polar HLA-A1, and the sterically ruled HLA-B7 receptor. A combined theoretical and experimental study on 39 anchor substitutions in FxSKQYMTx/HLA-A2 and -A24 complexes indicated a prediction accuracy of about two thirds of a log-unit in Kd. Analysis of free energy contributions identified a great role of desolvation and conformational strain effects in establishing a given specificity profile. Interestingly, the method rightly predicted that most anchor profiles are less specific than so far assumed. This suggests that many potential T-cell epitopes could be missed with current prediction methods. The results presented in this work may therefore significantly affect T-cell epitope discovery programs applied in the field of peptide vaccine development.

Details

ISSN :
08873585
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e78e163259761ee1ddc3c08c9b602ba3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/prot.20302