Whether T-cell receptors (TCRs) recognize antigenic peptides bound to major histocompatability complex (MHC) molecules through common or distinct docking modes is currently uncertain. We report the crystal structure of a complex between the murine N15 TCR [1-4] and its peptide-MHC ligand, an octapeptide fragment representing amino acids 52-59 of the vesicular stomatitis virus nuclear capsid protein (VSV8) bound to the murine H-2Kb class I MHC molecule. Comparison of the structure of the N15 TCR-VSV8-H-2Kb complex with the murine 2C TCR-dEV8-H-2Kb [5] and the human A6 TCR-Tax-HLA-A2 [6] complexes revealed a common docking mode, regardless of TCR specificity or species origin, in which the TCR variable Valpha domain overlies the MHC alpha2 helix and the Vbeta domain overlies the MHC alpha1 helix. As a consequence, the complementary determining regions CDR1 and CDR3 of the TCR Valpha and Vbeta domains make the major contacts with the peptide, while the CDR2 loops interact primarily with the MHC. Nonetheless, in terms of the details of the relative orientation and disposition of binding, there is substantial variation in TCR parameters, which we term twist, tilt and shift, and which define the variation of the V module of the TCR relative to the MHC antigen-binding groove.
Soft X-ray microscopy has excellent characteristics for imaging cells and subcellular structures. In this paper, the yeast strain, Candida utilis, was imaged by soft X-ray microscopy and three-dimensional volumes were reconstructed with the SART-TV method. We performed segmentation on the reconstruction in three dimensions and identified several types of subcellular architecture within the specimen cells based on their linear absorption coefficient (LAC) values. Organelles can be identified by the correlation between the soft X-ray LAC values and the subcellular architectures. Quantitative analyses of the volume ratio of organelles to whole cell in different phases were also carried out according to the three-dimensional datasets. With such excellent features, soft X-ray imaging has a great influence in the field of biological cellular and subcellular research.
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