Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2830716 Molecular Immunology 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

MHC class I molecules present antigenic peptides to cytotoxic T-cells at the cell surface. Peptide loading of class I molecules in the endoplasmatic reticulum can involve interaction with the tapasin chaperone protein. The human class I allotype HLA-B*44:02 with an Asp at position 116 at the floor of the F pocket (which binds the peptide C-terminal residues) depends on tapasin for efficient peptide loading. However, HLA-B*44:05 (identical to B*44:02 except for tyrosine 116) can efficiently load peptides in the absence of tapasin. Both allotypes adopt very similar structures in the presence of the same peptide. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate a significantly higher conformational flexibility of the F pocket in the absence of a peptide for B*44:02 compared to B*44:05. Free energy simulations to open the F pocket indicate a molecular side chain switch mechanism that underlies the global opening motion. This side chain switch involves the rearrangement of salt bridges and hydrogen bonding of the basic arginine 97 with three acidic aspartate residues 114, 116 and 156 near the F pocket. A replica exchange simulation to specifically accelerate side chain motions demonstrates that the same side chain rearrangements induce global opening motions of the F pocket. In case of B*44:05 the free energy barrier for F pocket opening was significantly higher compared to B*44:02 and no associated side chain rearrangement was observed. Such coupling of local side chain rearrangements with global conformational changes might be the basis for allosteric changes in other class I allotypes as well as for allosteric changes in other proteins.

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