Open Access
Using mass spectrometry to monitor drug induced changes in antigen presentation by the human leukocyte antigen
Author(s) -
Illing Patricia,
Mifsud Nicole,
Croft Nathan,
Dudek Nadine,
McCluskey James,
Purcell Anthony
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
clinical and translational allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.979
H-Index - 37
ISSN - 2045-7022
DOI - 10.1186/2045-7022-4-s3-p43
Subject(s) - abacavir , human leukocyte antigen , antigen , antigen processing , antigen presentation , peptide , chemistry , immunology , biology , t cell , immune system , biochemistry , virus , hepatitis b virus , lamivudine
Background The growing list of associations between idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions and variants of the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) molecule is suggestive of specific interactions between the causative drug and the associated HLA molecule. Currently, most of our understanding of how HLA molecules stimulate drug specific T cell responses comes from observing the conditions necessary for T cell stimulation (e.g. specific HLA, time for drug metabolism, constant drug presence, antigen processing). Whilst this provides indirect evidence of the presence of immunogenic ligands on the cell surface it does not determine the precise nature of the immunogenic HLA ligand (s). Using a mixture of mass spectrometry (MS) and structural biology techniques we recently defined the mode of interaction between abacavir and HLA-B*57:01. We showed how, by occupying the antigen binding cleft, abacavir changes the array of peptides bound by the HLA molecule, furnishing circulating T cells with numerous novel, potentially immunogenic, HLA-B*57:01-abacavirpeptide complexes. Regardless, there is still some debate as to whether T cell responses to abacavir are elicited by i) the binding of abacavir to HLA-peptide complexes directly at the cell surface to generate immediately available immunogenic complexes, ii) the loading of novel, abacavir enabled ligands in the endoplasmic reticulum, or iii) a mixture of both.