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. 2005 Jul;66(7):749-61.
doi: 10.1016/j.humimm.2005.04.002.

HLAMatchmaker-based analysis of human monoclonal antibody reactivity demonstrates the importance of an additional contact site for specific recognition of triplet-defined epitopes

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HLAMatchmaker-based analysis of human monoclonal antibody reactivity demonstrates the importance of an additional contact site for specific recognition of triplet-defined epitopes

René J Duquesnoy et al. Hum Immunol. 2005 Jul.

Abstract

Five HLA-A3 reactive human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) originating from a parous woman were screened against HLA-typed panels by means of complement-dependent lymphocytotoxicity, high-definition ELISA, and flow cytometry with single antigen beads. Antibody reactivity profiles were compared with triplet amino acid sequence polymorphisms identified by HLAMatchmaker, and a three-dimensional structural modeling program (Cn3D of the National Center for Biotechnology Information) was used to determine the topography of epitopes recognized by each mAb. These mAbs originated from a woman who during pregnancy developed antibodies to the paternal HLA-A3 antigen of her child. Each mAb was specific for one mismatched triplet on HLA-A3, and the reactivity patterns of these IgM-type mAbs were practically the same in lymphocytotoxicity and antigen-binding assays. One mAb was specific for 163dT, a unique triplet present only on A3. The other mAbs reacted with 62Qe, 142mI, or 144tKr; these triplets are present on different groups of HLA-A alleles, some of which, however, did not react. Topographic modeling of triplet-defined epitopes identified clusters of polymorphic surface residues that were shared between reactive alleles. These clusters may serve as primary contact sites for the specificity-determining complementarity-determining region (CDR) loops of antibody. The reactivity with these mAbs required also the presence of self-sequence elsewhere on the HLA molecular surface as a critical secondary contact site for antibody, likely through another CDR loop. For instance, the reactivity of the 62Qe-specific mAb required the presence of a glycine residue in position 56 and the reactivity of the 142mI-specific mAb required the presence of the GTLRG sequence in positions 79-83. Conversely, there were many other amino acid differences between the mAb-reactive alleles and HLA-A3 that did not prevent antibody binding. For instance, the 62Qe-specific mAb-reactive alleles had 35 and the 142mI-reactive alleles had 50 of such "permissive" residue differences. An HLAMatchmaker-based analysis of the reactivity of human mAbs will increase our understanding of the structural definition of HLA epitopes and their reactivity with alloantibodies.

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