HLA-E*01:03 binding "RMAATAQVL" at 2.05Å resolution
Data provenance
Information sections
- Publication
- Peptide details
- Peptide neighbours
- Binding cleft pockets
- Chain sequences
- Downloadable data
- Data license
- Footnotes
Complex type
HLA-E*01:03
RMAATAQVL
Species
Locus / Allele group
Primary and secondary functions of HLA-E are determined by stability and conformation of the peptide-bound complexes.
MHC-E regulates NK cells by displaying MHC class Ia signal peptides (VL9) to NKG2A:CD94 receptors. MHC-E can also present sequence-diverse, lower-affinity, pathogen-derived peptides to T cell receptors (TCRs) on CD8+ T cells. To understand these affinity differences, human MHC-E (HLA-E)-VL9 versus pathogen-derived peptide structures are compared. Small-angle X-ray scatter (SAXS) measures biophysical parameters in solution, allowing comparison with crystal structures. For HLA-E-VL9, there is concordance between SAXS and crystal parameters. In contrast, HLA-E-bound pathogen-derived peptides produce larger SAXS dimensions that reduce to their crystallographic dimensions only when excess peptide is supplied. Further crystallographic analysis demonstrates three amino acids, exclusive to MHC-E, that not only position VL9 close to the α2 helix, but also allow non-VL9 peptide binding with re-configuration of a key TCR-interacting α2 region. Thus, non-VL9-bound peptides introduce an alternative peptide-binding motif and surface recognition landscape, providing a likely basis for VL9- and non-VL9-HLA-E immune discrimination.
Structure deposition and release
Data provenance
Publication data retrieved from PDBe REST API8 and PMCe REST API9
Other structures from this publication
Data provenance
MHC:peptide complexes are visualised using PyMol. The peptide is superimposed on a consistent cutaway slice of the MHC binding cleft (displayed as a grey mesh) which best indicates the binding pockets for the P1/P5/PC positions (side view - pockets A, E, F) and for the P2/P3/PC-2 positions (top view - pockets B, C, D). In some cases peptides will use a different pocket for a specific peptide position (atypical anchoring). On some structures the peptide may appear to sterically clash with a pocket. This is an artefact of picking a standardised slice of the cleft and overlaying the peptide.
Peptide neighbours
P1
ARG
THR163
TRP167
ARG62
TYR159
TYR59
TYR7
LEU5
TYR171
GLU63
|
P2
MET
SER66
ALA67
MET45
SER24
GLU63
TYR159
HIS9
TYR7
PHE36
THR70
|
P3
ALA
TYR159
THR70
TRP97
HIS99
SER66
|
P4
ALA
SER66
ASP69
THR70
|
P5
THR
HIS155
|
P6
ALA
ILE73
THR70
PHE74
TRP97
|
P7
GLN
ASN77
GLU114
GLU152
GLN156
SER147
ILE73
TRP133
LEU124
PHE116
|
P8
VAL
LYS146
ASN77
ILE73
|
P9
LEU
THR80
LEU124
LEU81
LEU95
ILE142
LYS146
TYR84
ASN77
SER143
PHE116
TYR123
|
Colour key
Data provenance
Neighbours are calculated by finding residues with atoms within 5Å of each other using BioPython Neighboursearch module. The list of neighbours is then sorted and filtered to inlcude only neighbours where between the peptide and the MHC Class I alpha chain.
Colours selected to match the YRB scheme. [https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmolb.2015.00056/full]
A Pocket
TYR159
THR163
TRP167
TYR171
LEU5
TYR59
GLU63
SER66
TYR7
|
B Pocket
SER24
VAL34
MET45
GLU63
SER66
ALA67
TYR7
THR70
HIS9
HIS99
|
C Pocket
THR70
ILE73
PHE74
HIS9
TRP97
|
D Pocket
GLU114
HIS155
GLN156
TYR159
LEU160
HIS99
|
E Pocket
GLU114
SER147
GLU152
GLN156
TRP97
|
F Pocket
PHE116
TYR123
SER143
LYS146
SER147
ASN77
THR80
LEU81
TYR84
LEU95
|
Colour key
Data provenance
1. Beta 2 microglobulin
Beta 2 microglobulin
|
10 20 30 40 50 60
MIQRTPKIQVYSRHPAENGKSNFLNCYVSGFHPSDIEVDLLKNGERIEKVEHSDLSFSKD 70 80 90 WSFYLLYYTEFTPTEKDEYACRVNHVTLSQPKIVKWDRDM |
2. Class I alpha
HLA-E*01:03
IPD-IMGT/HLA
[ipd-imgt:HLA34202] |
10 20 30 40 50 60
GSHSLKYFHTSVSRPGRGEPRFISVGYVDDTQFVRFDNDAASPRMVPRAPWMEQEGSEYW 70 80 90 100 110 120 DRETRSARDTAQIFRVNLRTLRGYYNQSEAGSHTLQWMHGCELGPDGRFLRGYEQFAYDG 130 140 150 160 170 180 KDYLTLNEDLRSWTAVDTAAQISEQKSNDASEAEHQRAYLEDTCVEWLHKYLEKGKETLL 190 200 210 220 230 240 HLEPPKTHVTHHPISDHEATLRCWALGFYPAEITLTWQQDGEGHTQDTELVETRPAGDGT 250 260 270 FQKWAAVVVPSGEEQRYTCHVQHEGLPEPVTLRWKP |
3. Peptide
|
RMAATAQVL
|
Data provenance
Sequences are retrieved via the Uniprot method of the RSCB REST API. Sequences are then compared to those derived from the PDB file and matched against sequences retrieved from the IPD-IMGT/HLA database for human sequences, or the IPD-MHC database for other species. Mouse sequences are matched against FASTA files from Uniprot. Sequences for the mature extracellular protein (signal petide and cytoplasmic tail removed) are compared to identical length sequences from the datasources mentioned before using either exact matching or Levenshtein distance based matching.
Downloadable data
Complete structures
Components
Data license
Footnotes
- Protein Data Bank Europe - Coordinate Server
- 1HHK - HLA-A*02:01 binding LLFGYPVYV at 2.5Å resolution - PDB entry for 1HHK
- Protein structure alignment by incremental combinatorial extension (CE) of the optimal path. - PyMol CEALIGN Method - Publication
- PyMol - PyMol.org/pymol
- Levenshtein distance - Wikipedia entry
- Protein Data Bank Europe REST API - Molecules endpoint
- 3Dmol.js: molecular visualization with WebGL - 3DMol.js - Publication
- Protein Data Bank Europe REST API - Publication endpoint
- PubMed Central Europe REST API - Articles endpoint
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.