Ligand Design for Specific MHC Class I Molecules on the Cell Surface

26 August 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We have validated that ligand peptides designed from antigen peptides could be used for targeting specific major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules on cell surface. To design the ligand peptides, we used reported antigen peptides for each MHC-I molecule with high binding affinity. From the crystal structure of the peptide/MHC-I complexes, we determined a modifiable residue in the antigen peptides and replaced this residue with a lysine with an ε-amine group modified with functional molecules. The designed ligand peptides successfully bound to cells expressing the corresponding MHC-I molecules via exchange of peptides bound to the MHC-I. We demonstrated that the peptide ligands could be used to transport a protein or a liposome to cells expressing the corresponding MHC-I. The present strategy may be useful for targeted delivery to cells overexpressing MHC-I, which have been observed autoimmune diseases.

Keywords

mhc-i
ligand peptide
peptide exchange
liposome delivery
protein delivery

Supplementary materials

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