Analysis of peptide-SLA binding by establishing immortalized porcine alveolar macrophage cells with different SLA class II haplotypes

AbstractPrimary porcine alveolar macrophages (PAM) are useful for studying viral infections and immune response in pigs; however, long-term use of these cells is limited by the cells ’ short lifespan. We immortalized primary PAMs by transfecting them with bothhTERT andSV40LT and established two immortalized cell lines (iPAMs) actively proliferating even after 35 passages. These cells possessed the characteristics of primary PAMs, including strong expression of swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) class II genes and the inability to grow anchorage-independently. We characterized their SLA genes and subsequently performed peptide-SLA binding assays using a peptide from porcine circovirus type 2 open reading frame 2 to experimentally measure the binding affinity of the peptide to SLA class II. The number of peptides bound to cells measured by fluorescence was very low for PK15 cells (7.0%  ± 1.5), which are not antigen-presenting cells, unlike iPAM61 (33.7% ± 3.4;SLA-DQA*0201/0303,DQB1*0201/0901,DRB1*0201/1301) and iPAM303 (73.3%  ± 5.4;SLA DQA*0106/0201,DQB1*0202/0701,DRB1*0402/0602). The difference in peptide binding between the two iPAMs was likely due to the allelic differences between the SLA class II molecules that were expressed. The development of an immortal PAM cell panel harboring diverse SLA haplotypes and the use of an established method in this study can become a valuable tool for evaluating the interaction between antigenic peptides and SLA molecules and...
Source: Veterinary Research - Category: Veterinary Research Source Type: research