Abstract

A peptide display library was evaluated as a means to identify peptide binding motifs for class II molecules. Peptides expressed as part of a soluble fusion protein with a maltose binding protein (malE) were produced by Escherichia coli. Constructs containing the high-affinity binding influenza hemagglutinin peptide 307W–319 (mal-HA) or the low-affinity binding tetanus toxoid peptide 830–843 (mal-TT) were used as controls. mal-HA, but not mal-TT, inhibited synthetic biotinylated-HA peptide from binding to purified DR4 Dw4 molecules in a dose-dependent manner. The fusion-peptide presentation system was also evaluated for its ability to induce antigen-specific T cell proliferation. DR4 Dw4 + B cells pulsed with mal-HA, but not mal-TT, induced dose-dependent proliferation of an HA-specific DR4 Dw4-restricted T cell line to the same extent as synthetic HA peptide. Using this type of peptide display library, it may be possible to determine the antigenic specificity of T cell clones isolated from patients with autoimmune diseases.

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