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Thermal-exchange HLA-E multimers reveal specificity in HLA-E and NKG2A/CD94 complex interactions.

Paula RuibalIan DerksenMarjolein van WolfswinkelLinda VoogdKees L M C FrankenAngela F El HebieshyThorbald van HallTom A W SchoufourRuud H WijdevenTom H M OttenhoffFerenc A ScheerenSimone A Joosten
Published in: Immunology (2022)
There is growing interest in HLA-E-restricted T-cell responses as a possible novel, highly conserved, vaccination targets in the context of infectious and malignant diseases. The developing field of HLA multimers for the detection and study of peptide-specific T cells has allowed the in-depth study of TCR repertoires and molecular requirements for efficient antigen presentation and T-cell activation. In this study, we developed a method for efficient peptide thermal exchange on HLA-E monomers and multimers allowing the high-throughput production of HLA-E multimers. We optimized the thermal-mediated peptide exchange, and flow cytometry staining conditions for the detection of TCR and NKG2A/CD94 receptors, showing that this novel approach can be used for high-throughput identification and analysis of HLA-E-binding peptides which could be involved in T-cell and NK cell-mediated immune responses. Importantly, our analysis of NKG2A/CD94 interaction in the presence of modified peptides led to new molecular insights governing the interaction of HLA-E with this receptor. In particular, our results reveal that interactions of HLA-E with NKG2A/CD94 and the TCR involve different residues. Altogether, we present a novel HLA-E multimer technology based on thermal-mediated peptide exchange allowing us to investigate the molecular requirements for HLA-E/peptide interaction with its receptors.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • high throughput
  • immune response
  • flow cytometry
  • single cell
  • regulatory t cells
  • gene expression
  • dendritic cells
  • natural killer cells
  • optical coherence tomography
  • single molecule