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A more recent version of this article appeared on January 1, 2008.
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Submitted on August 14, 2007
Revised on October 10, 2007
Accepted on October 12, 2007

Identification of endogenously presented peptides from Chlamydia trachomatis with high homology to human proteins and to a natural self-ligand of HLA-B27

Juan J. Cragnolini and José A. López de Castro

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa, Madrid 28049

Corresponding Author: aldecastro{at}cbm.uam.es

A strategy for the stable expression of proteins, or large protein fragments, from Chlamydia trachomatis into human cells was designed to identify bacterial epitopes endogenously processed and presented by HLA-B27. Fusion protein constructs in which the green fluorescence protein gene was placed at the 5’-end of the bacterial DNA primase gene or some of its fragments were transfected into B*2705-C1R cells. One of these constructs, including residues 90-450 of the bacterial protein was stably and efficiently expressed. Mass spectrometry-based comparative analysis of HLA-B27-bound peptide pools lead to identification of 3 HLA-B27 ligands differentially presented in the transfectant cells. Sequencing of these peptides confirmed that they derived from the bacterial DNA primase. One of them, spanning residues 211-221, showed 55% sequence identity with a known self-ligand of HLA-B27 derived from its own molecule. The other two bacterial ligands, P(112-121) and P(112-122) derived from the same region and differed in length by one residue at the C-terminus. Both peptides showed >50% identity with multiple human protein sequences that possessed the optimal peptide motifs for HLA-B27 binding. Thus, expression of proteins from arthritogenic bacteria in HLA-B27-positive human cells allows identifying bacterial peptides that are endogenously processed and presented by HLA-B27 and show molecular mimicry with known self-ligands of this molecule and human proteins.







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