Loading
PDBj
MenuPDBj@FacebookPDBj@X(formerly Twitter)PDBj@BlueSkyPDBj@YouTubewwPDB FoundationwwPDBDonate
RCSB PDBPDBeBMRBAdv. SearchSearch help

6G3J

MHC A02 Allele presenting MTSAIGILVP

Summary for 6G3J
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb6g3j/pdb
DescriptorHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, A-2 alpha chain, Beta-2-microglobulin, MET-THR-SER-ALA-ILE-GLY-ILE-LEU-PRO-VAL, ... (4 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsmhci, immune system
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (Human)
More
Total number of polymer chains6
Total formula weight89663.83
Authors
Rizkallah, P.J.,Sewell, A.K. (deposition date: 2018-03-26, release date: 2019-02-20, Last modification date: 2024-11-13)
Primary citationGalloway, S.A.E.,Dolton, G.,Attaf, M.,Wall, A.,Fuller, A.,Rius, C.,Bianchi, V.,Theaker, S.,Lloyd, A.,Caillaud, M.E.,Svane, I.M.,Donia, M.,Cole, D.K.,Szomolay, B.,Rizkallah, P.,Sewell, A.K.
Peptide Super-Agonist Enhances T-Cell Responses to Melanoma.
Front Immunol, 10:319-319, 2019
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Recent immunotherapeutic approaches using adoptive cell therapy, or checkpoint blockade, have demonstrated the powerful anti-cancer potential of CD8 cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTL). While these approaches have shown great promise, they are only effective in some patients with some cancers. The potential power, and relative ease, of therapeutic vaccination against tumour associated antigens (TAA) present in different cancers has been a long sought-after approach for harnessing the discriminating sensitivity of CTL to treat cancer and has seen recent renewed interest following cancer vaccination successes using unique tumour neoantigens. Unfortunately, results with TAA-targeted "universal" cancer vaccines (UCV) have been largely disappointing. Infectious disease models have demonstrated that T-cell clonotypes that recognise the same antigen should not be viewed as being equally effective. Extrapolation of this notion to UCV would suggest that the of response in terms of the T-cell receptor (TCR) clonotypes induced might be more important than the of the response. Unfortunately, there is little opportunity to assess the effectiveness of individual T-cell clonotypes . Here, we identified effective, persistent T-cell clonotypes in an HLA A2 patient following successful tumour infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy. One such T-cell clone was used to generate super-agonist altered peptide ligands (APLs). Further refinement produced an APL that was capable of inducing T-cells in greater magnitude, and with improved effectiveness, from the blood of all 14 healthy donors tested. Importantly, this APL also induced T-cells from melanoma patient blood that exhibited superior recognition of the patient's own tumour compared to those induced by the natural antigen sequence. These results suggest that use of APL to skew the clonotypic of T-cells induced by cancer vaccination could provide a promising avenue in the hunt for the UCV "magic bullet."
PubMed: 30930889
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00319
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.45 Å)
Structure validation

237423

PDB entries from 2025-06-11

PDB statisticsPDBj update infoContact PDBjnumon