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Functional and structural characteristics of HLA-B*13:01-mediated specific T cells reaction in dapsone-induced drug hypersensitivity

Haiqin Jiang, Chuang‐Wei Wang, Zhaoxi Wang, Yufei Dai, Yanping Zhu, Yun‐Shien Lee, Yang Cao, Wen‐Hung Chung, Songying Ouyang, Hongsheng Wang

2022Journal of Biomedical Science27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions (SCARs) are a group of serious clinical conditions caused by immune reaction to certain drugs. The allelic variance of human leukocyte antigens of HLA-B*13:01 has been strongly associated with hypersensitivities induced by dapsone (DDS). T-cell receptor mediated activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) has also been suggested to play an essential role in pathogenesis of SCARs. However, HLA-B*13:01-DDS-TCR immune synapse that plays role in drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome (DIHS) associated T cells activation remains uncharacterized. METHODS: To investigate the molecular mechanisms for HLA-B*13:01 in the pathogenesis of Dapsone-induced drug hypersensitivity (DDS-DIHS), we performed crystallization and expanded drug-specific CTLs to analyze the pathological role of DDS-DIHS. RESULTS: Results showed the crystal structure of HLA-B*13:01-beta-2-microglobulin (β2M) complex at 1.5 Å resolution and performed mutation assays demonstrating that I118 or I119, and R121 of HLA-B*13:01 were the key residues that mediate the binding of DDS. Subsequent single-cell TCR and RNA sequencing indicated that TCRs composed of paired TRAV12-3/TRBV28 clonotype with shared CDR3 region specifically recognize HLA-B*13:01-DDS complex to trigger inflammatory cytokines associated with DDS-DIHS. CONCLUSION: Our study identified the novel p-i-HLA/TCR as the model of interaction between HLA-B*13:01, DDS and the clonotype-specific TCR in DDS-DIHS.

Topics & Concepts

T-cell receptorCytotoxic T cellImmunologyT cellBiologyImmune systemPathogenesisGeneticsIn vitroDrug-Induced Adverse ReactionsPharmacovigilance and Adverse Drug ReactionsAutoimmune Bullous Skin Diseases