MHC lecture 7 Flashcards
lecture 7
what is the Major histocompatability complex
a large genetic locus on chromosome 6 that codes for MHC class 1 and 2 molecules and many other proteins involved in processing and presentation of antigen.
MHC1 structure
alpha chain non covalently linked to a small beta2 microglobulin
- groove fomred by alpha1 and 2 domains, supported by alpha 3 and beta 2 micro
how many domains does the alpha chain have
3 in mhc1 but 2 in mhc2
size of peptide binding groove
8-9 amino acids
- beta pleated sheet with a alphahelix on the 2 sides
structure of MHC2
an alpha and a beta chain of basically the same size
- binding groove formed by alpha 1 and beta1 domains, supported by alpha2 and beta2
MHC1 and 2 size of peptides acocomodated
1 = 9 amino acids , pockets at ach end to interactwith carboxy terminus. 10 aa if it bends
2 = open ended so 13-25 aa.
2 ways that MHC is designed so that it can present any antigen
1 - polygeny
2 - polymorphism
describe MHC polygeny
3 loci for 1 (HLA-A,B,C) and for 2 (HLA-DP,DQ,DR). each is a different isotype
describe MHC polymorphism
many different forms of the genes within the population. over 250 alleles at some loci. often differ by many aa. the allelic polymorphism is thought to be pathogen driven
what are haplotypes
MHC loci are closely linked and so are often inherited together as haplotypes.
- the alleles are codominantly expressed ie both maternal and paternal types on the same cell.
- the polymorphism at each of these loci make it basically impossible to express the same combination of alleles as another individual.
where is the MHC variability concentrated
in the peptide binding groove.
- the TCR can only bind a particular MHC-peptide combination in what is called MHC restriction
what are anchor residues
aa at certain positions of a bound peptide that must always be the same in order to interact with specific pockets in the binding groove
- they anchor the peptide in the groove and determine the peptide binding motif for that MHC molecule.
- non anchor residues can vary
- the MHCs have to have low specificity or they wont be able to bind any of the peptides made from small genome viruses
origin of peptides for MHC 1
endogenous. for CD8 T cells
origin of peptides for MHC 2
exogenous
endogenous pathway of peptide presentation
proteins in the cytosol continually broken down into peptides, mainly by the proteasome.
- peptides moved into the ER via TAP1 and 2 heterodimer
- suitable peptides are loadedd onto partially folded classs 1 molecules by a series of chaperones that make up the peptide loading complex
the loaded MHC 1 is then released from the chaperones and follows the secretory pathway via the golgi to the surface