Background: HLA-C molecules play a critical role in the immune response, particularly in antigen presentation and immune modulation. Methods: To investigate the effect of the most common HLA-C allotypes on the stability of the HLA-C-β-2 microglobulin-peptide complex, we used the NetMHCpan-4.2 bioinformatic tool that predicts peptide binding to MHC class I molecules. This allowed us to predict the probability of a broad set of peptides to be naturally processed, presented on each HLA-C allotype, and ultimately recognised by the immune system, measured by EL-score. By plotting the EL-score against the percentile of the peptide's stability rank position, curves were drawn to illustrate the relative stability of the binding interaction of each HLA-C allotype tested, and the area under the curve was calculated to determine a stability score for each HLA-C variant. Results: This approach permits us to greatly improve the classification of HLA-C allotypes according to their stability, overcoming the previous coarse stable and unstable binary classification. Analysis of two well-characterised HIV-1 patient cohorts, one focused on disease progression and the other on neurocognitive impairment, demonstrated a significant association between unstable HLA-C alleles, faster disease progression, and worse HIV-associated neurocognitive outcomes. Conclusions: These findings underscore the role of HLA-C stability in AIDS progression, suggesting that profiling HLA-C stability may serve as a predictive tool for HIV-1 disease management and assessing neurocognitive risk, with potential implications in personalised medicine.
Computational characterization of peptide binding stability to HLA-C allotypes and its association with HIV-1 infection progression and HIV-1 related neurocognitive impairment / Voi, Mauro; Sangalli, Antonella; Milano, Erica Ginevra; De Martinis, Carola; Orlandi, Elisa; Tamburin, Stefano; Mantovani, Elisa; Federico, Angela; Lanzafame, Massimiliano; Lattuada, Emanuela; Argañaraz, Gustavo Adolfo; Da Silva, Bosco Christiano Maciel; Da Silva Duarte, Alberto Jose; Casseb, Jorge; Argañaraz, Enrique Roberto; Malena, Marina; Albani, Marco; Ruggiero, Alessandra; Romanelli, Maria Grazia; Valenti, Maria Teresa; Grazioso, Giovanni; Zipeto, Donato. - In: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-3224. - 2025/16:(2025), pp. 170302601-170302616. [10.3389/fimmu.2025.1703026]
Computational characterization of peptide binding stability to HLA-C allotypes and its association with HIV-1 infection progression and HIV-1 related neurocognitive impairment.
Lanzafame, Massimiliano;Romanelli, Maria Grazia;
2025-01-01
Abstract
Background: HLA-C molecules play a critical role in the immune response, particularly in antigen presentation and immune modulation. Methods: To investigate the effect of the most common HLA-C allotypes on the stability of the HLA-C-β-2 microglobulin-peptide complex, we used the NetMHCpan-4.2 bioinformatic tool that predicts peptide binding to MHC class I molecules. This allowed us to predict the probability of a broad set of peptides to be naturally processed, presented on each HLA-C allotype, and ultimately recognised by the immune system, measured by EL-score. By plotting the EL-score against the percentile of the peptide's stability rank position, curves were drawn to illustrate the relative stability of the binding interaction of each HLA-C allotype tested, and the area under the curve was calculated to determine a stability score for each HLA-C variant. Results: This approach permits us to greatly improve the classification of HLA-C allotypes according to their stability, overcoming the previous coarse stable and unstable binary classification. Analysis of two well-characterised HIV-1 patient cohorts, one focused on disease progression and the other on neurocognitive impairment, demonstrated a significant association between unstable HLA-C alleles, faster disease progression, and worse HIV-associated neurocognitive outcomes. Conclusions: These findings underscore the role of HLA-C stability in AIDS progression, suggesting that profiling HLA-C stability may serve as a predictive tool for HIV-1 disease management and assessing neurocognitive risk, with potential implications in personalised medicine.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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