Human Leukocyte Antigen F Presents Peptides and Regulates Immunity through Interactions with NK Cell Receptors

  • Charles L Dulberger
  • Curtis P McMurtrey
  • Angelique Hölzemer
  • Karlynn E Neu
  • Victor Liu
  • Adriana M Steinbach
  • Wilfredo F Garcia-Beltran
  • Michael Sulak
  • Bana Jabri
  • Vincent J Lynch
  • Marcus Altfeld
  • William H Hildebrand
  • Erin J Adams

Related Research units

Abstract

Evidence is mounting that the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule HLA-F (human leukocyte antigen F) regulates the immune system in pregnancy, infection, and autoimmunity by signaling through NK cell receptors (NKRs). We present structural, biochemical, and evolutionary analyses demonstrating that HLA-F presents peptides of unconventional length dictated by a newly arisen mutation (R62W) that has produced an open-ended groove accommodating particularly long peptides. Compared to empty HLA-F open conformers (OCs), HLA-F tetramers bound with human-derived peptides differentially stained leukocytes, suggesting peptide-dependent engagement. Our in vitro studies confirm that NKRs differentiate between peptide-bound and peptide-free HLA-F. The complex structure of peptide-loaded β2m-HLA-F bound to the inhibitory LIR1 revealed similarities to high-affinity recognition of the viral MHC-I mimic UL18 and a docking strategy that relies on contacts with HLA-F as well as β2m, thus precluding binding to HLA-F OCs. These findings provide a biochemical framework to understand how HLA-F could regulate immunity via interactions with NKRs.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1074-7613
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20.06.2017
PubMed 28636952