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Basic Characteristics of Mutations
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Mutation Site
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Y453F |
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Mutation Site Sentence
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Our findings demonstrate that, with the exception of L452R and the combined mutation L452Q + Y453F, these mutations have minimal impact on the avidity of recognition by NYN peptide-specific TCRs. |
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Mutation Level
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Amino acid level |
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Mutation Type
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Nonsynonymous substitution |
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Gene/Protein/Region
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Standardized Encoding Gene
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Genotype/Subtype
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- |
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Viral Reference
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-
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Functional Impact and Mechanisms
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Disease
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Cell line
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Immune
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Y |
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Target Gene
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-
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Clinical and Epidemiological Correlations
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Clinical Information
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- |
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Treatment
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- |
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Location
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- |
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Literature Information
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PMID
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39684303
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Title
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Features of Highly Homologous T-Cell Receptor Repertoire in the Immune Response to Mutations in Immunogenic Epitopes
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Author
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Zornikova K,Dianov D,Ivanova N,Davydova V,Nenasheva T,Fefelova E,Bogolyubova A
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Journal
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International journal of molecular sciences
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Journal Info
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2024 Nov 23;25(23):12591
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Abstract
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CD8+ T-cell immunity, mediated through interactions between human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and the T-cell receptor (TCR), plays a pivotal role in conferring immune memory and protection against viral infections. The emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants presents a significant challenge to the existing population immunity. While numerous SARS-CoV-2 mutations have been associated with immune evasion from CD8+ T cells, the molecular effects of most mutations on epitope-specific TCR recognition remain largely unexplored, particularly for epitope-specific repertoires characterized by common TCRs. In this study, we investigated an HLA-A*24-restricted NYN epitope (Spike(448-456)) that elicits broad and highly homologous CD8+ T cell responses in COVID-19 patients. Eleven naturally occurring mutations in the NYN epitope, all of which retained cell surface presentation by HLA, were tested against four transgenic Jurkat reporter cell lines. Our findings demonstrate that, with the exception of L452R and the combined mutation L452Q + Y453F, these mutations have minimal impact on the avidity of recognition by NYN peptide-specific TCRs. Additionally, we observed that a similar TCR responded differently to mutant epitopes and demonstrated cross-reactivity to the unrelated VYF epitope (ORF3a(112-120)). The results contradict the idea that immune responses with limited receptor diversity are insufficient to provide protection against emerging variants.
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Sequence Data
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-
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