Swietnicki Wieslaw, Barnie Anne M, Dyas Beverly K, Ulrich Robert G
United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2003 Mar 14;278(11):9885-95. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M206957200. Epub 2002 Dec 8.
Streptococcal pyrogenic enterotoxin C (Spe-C) is a superantigen virulence factor produced by Streptococcus pyogenes that activates T-cells polyclonally. The biologically active form of Spe-C is thought to be a homodimer containing an essential zinc coordination site on each subunit, consisting of the residues His(167), His(201), and Asp(203). Crystallographic data suggested that receptor specificity is dependent on contacts between the zinc coordination site of Spe-C and the beta-chain of the major histocompatibility complex type II (MHCII) molecule. Our results indicate that only a minor fraction of dimer is present at T-cell stimulatory concentrations of Spe-C following mutation of the unpaired side chain of cysteine at residue 27 to serine. Mutations of amino acid residues His(167), His(201), or Asp(203) had only minor effects on protein stability but resulted in greatly diminished MHCII binding, as measured by surface plasmon resonance with isolated receptor/ligand pairs and flow cytometry with MHCII-expressing cells. However, with the exception of the mutants D203A and D203N, mutation of the zinc-binding site of Spe-C did not significantly impact T-cell activation. The mutation Y76A, located in a polar pocket conserved among most superantigens, resulted in significant loss of T-cell stimulation, although no effect was observed on the overall binding to human MHCII molecules, perhaps because of the masking of this lower affinity interaction by the dominant zinc-dependent binding. To a lesser extent, mutations of side chains found in a second conserved MHCII alpha-chain-binding site consisting of a hydrophobic surface loop decreased T-cell stimulation. Our results demonstrate that dimerization and zinc coordination are not essential for biological activity of Spe-C and suggest the contribution of an alternative MHCII binding mode to T-cell activation.
链球菌致热外毒素C(Spe-C)是化脓性链球菌产生的一种超抗原毒力因子,可多克隆激活T细胞。Spe-C的生物活性形式被认为是一种同型二聚体,每个亚基上含有一个必需的锌配位位点,由His(167)、His(201)和Asp(203)残基组成。晶体学数据表明,受体特异性取决于Spe-C的锌配位位点与II类主要组织相容性复合体(MHCII)分子β链之间的相互作用。我们的结果表明,在将第27位残基的半胱氨酸未配对侧链突变为丝氨酸后,在Spe-C的T细胞刺激浓度下,只有一小部分二聚体存在。His(167)、His(201)或Asp(203)氨基酸残基的突变对蛋白质稳定性只有轻微影响,但通过与分离的受体/配体对进行表面等离子体共振以及对表达MHCII的细胞进行流式细胞术检测,发现它们导致MHCII结合能力大大降低。然而,除了D203A和D203N突变体之外,Spe-C锌结合位点的突变对T细胞激活没有显著影响。位于大多数超抗原中保守的极性口袋中的Y76A突变导致T细胞刺激能力显著丧失,尽管未观察到对与人MHCII分子的总体结合有影响,这可能是因为占主导地位的锌依赖性结合掩盖了这种低亲和力相互作用。在较小程度上,由疏水表面环组成的第二个保守的MHCIIα链结合位点中的侧链突变降低了T细胞刺激能力。我们的结果表明,二聚化和锌配位对于Spe-C的生物活性不是必需的,并提示了一种替代的MHCII结合模式对T细胞激活的作用。