User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
tetramers- Plural of tetramer
Extensive Definition
A tetramer is a protein with four subunits
(tetrameric). There are homo-tetramers (all subunits are identical) such as
glutathione
S-transferase or
single-strand binding protein, dimers of hetero-dimers such as
haemoglobin (a
dimer of an alpha/beta
dimer), and
hetero-tetramers, where each subunit is different.
In Immunology, MHC tetramers can be used to
quantitate numbers of antigen-specific T cells (especially CD8+ T
cells). MHC tetramers are based on recombinant class I molecules
that, through the action of bacterial BirA, have been biotinylated.
These molecules are folded with the peptide of interest and β2M and
tetramerized by a fluorescently labeled streptavidin. (Streptavidin
binds to four biotins per molecule.) This tetramer reagent will
specifically label T cells that express T cell receptors that are
specific for a given peptide-MHC complex. For example, a
Kb/FAPGNYPAL tetramer will specifically bind to Sendai virus
specific CTL in a C57BL/6 mouse. Antigen specific responses can be
measured as CD8+, tetramer+ T cells as a fraction of all CD8+
lymphocytes.
The reason for using a tetramer, as opposed to a
single labeled MHC class I molecule is that the tetrahedral
tetramers can bind to three TCRs at once, allowing specific binding
in spite of the low (10-6 molar) affinity of the typical class
I-peptide-TCR interaction. MHC Class II tetramers can also be made
although these are more difficult to work with practically.
tetramers in Polish: Tetramer