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1.
The finding that MHC class I molecules are physically associated with the TAP transporter has suggested that peptides may be directly transported into the binding groove of the class I molecules rather than into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) where they subsequently would encounter class I molecules by diffusion. Such a mechanism would protect peptides from peptidases in the ER and/or escaping back into the cytoplasm. However, we find that an anti-peptide Ab that is cotranslationally transported into the ER prevents TAP-transported peptides from being presented on class I molecules. The Ab only blocks the binding of its cognate peptide (SIINFEKL) but not other peptides (KVVRFKDL, ASNENMETM, and FAPGNYPAL). Therefore, most TAP-transported peptides must diffuse through the lumen of the ER before binding stably to MHC class I molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Cytotoxic CD8(+) T lymphocytes kill infected cells that display major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules presenting peptides processed from pathogen proteins. In general, the peptides are proteolytically processed from newly made endogenous antigens in the cytosol and require translocation to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) for MHC class I loading. This last task is performed by the transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP). Sampling of suspicious pathogen-derived proteins reaches beyond the cytosol, and MHC class I loading can occur in other secretory or endosomal compartments besides the ER. Peptides processed from exogenous antigens can also be presented by MHC class I molecules to CD8(+) T lymphocytes, in this case requiring delivery from the extracellular medium to the processing and MHC class I loading compartments. The endogenous or exogenous antigen can be processed before or after its transport to the site of MHC class I loading. Therefore, mechanisms that allow the full-length protein or processed peptides to cross several subcellular membranes are essential. This review deals with the different intracellular pathways that allow the traffic of antigens to compartments proficient in processing and loading of MHC class I molecules for presentation to CD8(+) T lymphocytes and highlights the need to molecularly identify the transporters involved.  相似文献   

3.
Presentation of antigen-derived peptides by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules is dependent on an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident glycoprotein, tapasin, which mediates their interaction with the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). Independently of TAP, tapasin was required for the presentation of peptides targeted to the ER by signal sequences in MHC class I-transfected insect cells. Tapasin increased MHC class I peptide loading by retaining empty but not peptide-containing MHC class I molecules in the ER. Upon co-expression of TAP, this retention/release function of tapasin was sufficient to reconstitute MHC class I antigen presentation in insect cells, thus defining the minimal non-housekeeping functions required for MHC class I antigen presentation.  相似文献   

4.
MHC class I molecules assemble with peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To ensure that only peptide-loaded MHC molecules leave the ER, empty molecules are retained by ER-resident chaperones, most notably the MHC-specific tapasin. ER exit of class I MHC is also controlled by viruses, but for the opposite purpose of preventing peptide presentation to T cells. Interestingly, some viral proteins are able to retain MHC class I molecules in the ER despite being transported. By contrast, other viral proteins exit the ER only upon binding to class I MHC, thereby rerouting newly synthesized class I molecules to intracellular sites of proteolysis. Thus, immune escape can be achieved by reversing, inhibiting or redirecting the chaperone-assisted MHC class I folding, assembly and intracellular transport.  相似文献   

5.
MHC class I molecules present precisely cleaved peptides of intracellular proteins on the cell surface. For most antigenic precursors, presentation requires transport of peptide fragments into the ER, but the nature of the cytoplasmic peptides and their chaperones is obscure. By tracking proteolytic intermediates in living cells, we show that intracellular proteolysis yields a mixture of antigenic peptides containing only N-terminal flanking residues for ER transport. Some of these peptides were bound to the group II chaperonin TRiC and were protected from degradation. Destabilization of TRiC by RNA interference inhibited the expression of peptide-loaded MHC I molecules on the cell surface. Thus, the TRiC chaperonin serves a function in protecting proteolytic intermediates in the MHC I antigen processing pathway.  相似文献   

6.
The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) gene product US11 dislocates MHC I heavy chains from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and targets them for proteasomal degradation in the cytosol. To identify the structural and functional domains of US11 that mediate MHC class I molecule degradation, we constructed truncated mutants and chimeric proteins, and analyzed these to determine their intracellular localization and their ability to degrade MHC class I molecules. We found that only the luminal domain of US11 was essential to confer ER localization to the protein but that the ability to degrade MHC class I molecules required both the transmembrane domain and the luminal domain of US11. By analyzing a series of point mutants of the transmembrane domain, we were also able to identify Gln(192) and Gly(196) as being crucial for the functioning of US11, suggesting that these residues may play a critical role in interacting with the components of the protein degradation machinery.  相似文献   

7.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer between cyan fluorescent protein- and yellow fluorescent protein-tagged MHC class I molecules reports on their spatial organization during assembly and export from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). A fraction of MHC class I molecules is clustered in the ER at steady state. Contrary to expectations from biochemical models, this fraction is not bound to the TAP. Instead, it appears that MHC class I molecules cluster after peptide loading. This clustering points toward a novel step involved in the selective export of peptide-loaded MHC class I molecules from the ER. Consistent with this model, we detected clusters of wild-type HLA-A2 molecules and of mutant A2-T134K molecules that cannot bind TAP, but HLA-A2 did not detectably cluster with A2-T134K at steady state. Lactacystin treatment disrupted the HLA-A2 clusters, but had no effect on the A2-T134K clusters. However, when cells were fed peptides with high affinity for HLA-A2, mixed clusters containing both HLA-A2 and A2-T134K were detected.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules is one of the more widely studied examples of protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). It is also one of the most unusual cases of glycoprotein quality control involving the thiol oxidoreductase ERp57 and the lectin-like chaperones calnexin and calreticulin. The multistep assembly of MHC class I heavy chain with beta(2)-microglobulin and peptide is facilitated by these ER-resident proteins and further tailored by the involvement of a peptide transporter, aminopeptidases, and the chaperone-like molecule tapasin. Here we summarize recent progress in understanding the roles of these general and class I-specific ER proteins in facilitating the optimal assembly of MHC class I molecules with high affinity peptides for antigen presentation.  相似文献   

9.
For their efficient assembly in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules require the specific assembly factors transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) and tapasin, as well as generic ER folding factors, including the oxidoreductases ERp57 and protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), and the chaperone calreticulin. TAP transports peptides from the cytosol into the ER. Tapasin promotes the assembly of MHC class I molecules with peptides. The formation of disulfide‐linked conjugates of tapasin with ERp57 is suggested to be crucial for tapasin function. Important functional roles are also suggested for the tapasin transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains, sites of tapasin interaction with TAP. We show that interactions of tapasin with both TAP and ERp57 are correlated with strong MHC class I recruitment and assembly enhancement. The presence of the transmembrane/cytosolic regions of tapasin is critical for efficient tapasin–MHC class I binding in interferon‐γ‐treated cells, and contributes to an ERp57‐independent mode of MHC class I assembly enhancement. A second ERp57‐dependent mode of tapasin function correlates with enhanced MHC class I binding to tapasin and calreticulin. We also show that PDI binds to TAP in a tapasin‐independent manner, but forms disulfide‐linked conjugates with soluble tapasin. Thus, full‐length tapasin is important for enhancing recruitment of MHC class I molecules and increasing specificity of tapasin–ERp57 conjugation. Furthermore, tapasin or the TAP/tapasin complex has an intrinsic ability to recruit MHC class I molecules and promote assembly, but also uses generic folding factors to enhance MHC class I recruitment and assembly.  相似文献   

10.
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules assemble with peptides in the ER lumen and are transported via Golgi to the plasma membrane for recognition by T cells. Inhibiting MHC assembly, transport, and surface expression are common viral strategies of evading immune recognition. Cowpox virus, a clinically relevant orthopoxvirus, downregulates MHC class I expression on infected cells. However, the viral protein(s) and mechanisms responsible are unknown. We identify CPXV203 as a cowpox virus protein that associates with fully assembled MHC class I molecules and blocks their transport through the Golgi. A C-terminal KTEL motif in CPXV203 closely resembles the canonical ER retention motif KDEL and is required for CPXV203 function, indicating that a physiologic pathway is exploited to retain MHC class I in the ER. This viral mechanism for MHC class I downregulation may explain virulence differences between clinical isolates of orthopoxviruses.  相似文献   

11.
Effective immune surveillance by CD8 T cells depends on the presentation of diverse peptides by MHC class I (pMHC I) molecules on the cell surface. The pMHC I repertoire is shaped in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by the ER aminopeptidase associated with Ag processing (ERAAP). The ERAAP activity is required for producing peptides of appropriate length for generating optimal pMHC I. Paradoxically, ERAAP also inhibits generation of certain peptides such as the SVL9 (SSVVGVWYL) peptide encoded by the H13(a) histocompatibility gene and presented by D(b) MHC by an unknown mechanism. In this study, we show that the presentation of the SVL9-D(b) complex is inhibited when other peptides compete for binding D(b). Conversely, improving the binding of SVL9 peptide to D(b) suppresses the inhibition. Interestingly, the inhibitory effect of competitor peptides is observed only when ERAAP is expressed in the same cells. Thus, ERAAP, in concert with MHC I molecules, regulates the quality of processed peptides presented on the cell surface.  相似文献   

12.
Antigenic peptides are loaded onto class I MHC molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by a complex consisting of the MHC class I heavy chain, beta(2)-microglobulin, calreticulin, tapasin, Erp57 (ER60) and the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). While most mammalian species transport these peptides into the ER via a single allele of TAP, rats have evolved different TAPs, TAP-A and TAP-B, that are present in different inbred strains. Each TAP delivers a different spectrum of peptides and is associated genetically with distinct subsets of MHC class Ia alleles, but the molecular basis for the conservation (or co-evolution) of the two transporter alleles is unknown. We have determined the crystal structures of a representative of each MHC subset, viz RT1-A(a) and RT1-A1(c), in association with high-affinity nonamer peptides. The structures reveal how the chemical properties of the two different rat MHC F-pockets match those of the corresponding C termini of the peptides, corroborating biochemical data on the rates of peptide-MHC complex assembly. An unusual sequence in RT1-A1(c) leads to a major deviation from the highly conserved beta(3)/alpha(1) loop (residues 40-59) conformation in mouse and human MHC class I structures. This loop change contributes to profound changes in the shape of the A-pocket in the peptide-binding groove and may explain the function of RT1-A1(c) as an inhibitory natural killer cell ligand.  相似文献   

13.
The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) binds peptides in its cytosolic part and subsequently translocates the peptides into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where assembly of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and peptide takes place. Tapasin is a subunit of the TAP complex and binds both to TAP1 and MHC class I. In the absence of tapasin, the assembly of MHC class I in the ER is impaired, and the surface expression is reduced. To clarify the function of tapasin in the processing of antigenic peptides, we studied the interaction of peptide and TAP, peptide transport across the membrane of the ER, and association of peptides with MHC class I molecules in the microsomes derived from tapasin mutant cell line 721.220, its sister cell line 721.221 expressing tapasin, and their HLA-A2 transfectants. The binding of peptides to TAP in tapasin mutant 721.220 cells was significantly diminished in comparison with 721.221 cells. Impaired peptide-TAP interaction resulted in a defective peptide transport in tapasin mutant 721.220 cells. Interestingly, despite the diminished peptide binding to TAP, the transport rate of TAP-associated peptides was not significantly altered in 721.220 cells. After transfection of tapasin cDNA into 721.220 cells, efficient peptide-TAP interaction was restored. Thus, we conclude that tapasin is required for efficient peptide-TAP interaction.  相似文献   

14.
The immune defences of our organism against pathogens and malignant transformation rely to a large extent on surveillance by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. This surveillance in turn depends on the antigen processing system, which provides peptide samples of the cellular protein composition to MHC (major histocompatibility complex) class I molecules displayed on the cell surface. To continuously and almost in real time provide a representative sample of the array of proteins synthesized by the cell, this system exploits some fundamental pathways of the cellular metabolism, with the help of several dedicated players acting exclusively in antigen processing. Thus, a key element in the turnover of cellular proteins, protein degradation by cytosolic proteasome complexes, is exploited as source of peptides, by recruiting a minor fraction of the produced peptides as ligands for MHC class I molecules. These peptides can be further processed and adapted to the precise binding requirements of allelic MHC class I molecules by enzymes in the cytosol and endoplasmic reticulum. The latter compartment is equipped with several dedicated players helping peptide assembly with class I molecules. These include the TAP (transporter associated with antigen processing) membrane transporter pumping peptides into the ER, and tapasin, a chaperone with a structure similar to MHC molecules that tethers class I molecules awaiting peptide loading to the TAP transporter, and mediates optimization of MHC class I ligand by a still somewhat mysterious mechanism. Additional "house-keeping" chaperones that are known to act in concert in ER quality control, assist and control correct folding, oxidation and assembly of MHC class I molecules. While this processing system handles exclusively endogenous cellular proteins in most cells, dendritic cells employ one or several special pathways to shuttle exogenous, internalized proteins into the system, in a process referred to as cross-presentation. Deciphering the cell biological mechanism creating the link between the endosomal and secretory pathways that enables cross-presentation is one of the challenges faced by contemporary research in the field of MHC class I antigen processing.  相似文献   

15.
Tardif KD  Siddiqui A 《Journal of virology》2003,77(21):11644-11650
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes chronic hepatitis in most infected individuals by evading host immune defenses. In this investigation, we show that HCV-infected cells may go undetected in the immune system by suppressing major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen presentation to cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Cells expressing HCV subgenomic replicons have lower MHC class I cell surface expression. This is due to reduced levels of properly folded MHC class I molecules. HCV replicons induce endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress (K. Tardif, K. Mori, and A. Siddiqui, J. Virol. 76:7453-7459, 2002), which results from a decline in protein glycosylation. Decreasing protein glycosylation can disrupt protein folding, preventing the assembly of MHC class I molecules. This results in the accumulation of unfolded MHC class I. Therefore, the persistence and pathogenesis of HCV may depend upon the ER stress-mediated interference of MHC class I assembly and cell surface expression.  相似文献   

16.
Recent reports concluded that tripeptidyl peptidase (TPPII) is essential for MHC class I Ag presentation and that the proteasome in vivo mainly releases peptides 16 residues or longer that require processing by TPPII. However, we find that eliminating TPPII from human cells using small interfering RNA did not decrease the overall supply of peptides to MHC class I molecules and reduced only modestly the presentation of SIINFEKL from OVA, while treatment with proteasome inhibitors reduced these processes dramatically. Purified TPPII digests peptides from 6 to 30 residues long at similar rates, but eliminating TPPII in cells reduced the processing of long antigenic precursors (14-17 residues) more than short ones (9-12 residues). Therefore, TPPII appears to be the major peptidase capable of processing proteasome products longer than 14 residues. However, proteasomes in vivo (like purified proteasomes) release relatively few such peptides, and these peptides processed by TPPII require further trimming in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by ER aminopeptidase 1 for presentation. Taken together, these observations demonstrate that TPPII plays a specialized role in Ag processing and one that is not essential for the generation of most presented peptides. Moreover, these findings reveal that three sequential proteolytic steps (by proteasomes, TPPII, and then ER aminopepsidase 1) are required for the generation of a subset of epitopes.  相似文献   

17.
Tapasin plays an important role in the quality control of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I assembly, but its precise function in this process remains controversial. Whether tapasin participates in the assembly of HLA-G has not been studied. HLA-G, an MHC class Ib molecule that binds a more restricted set of peptides than class Ia molecules, is a particularly interesting molecule, because during assembly, it recycles between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the cis-Golgi until it is loaded with a high affinity peptide. We have taken advantage of this unusual trafficking property of HLA-G and its requirement for high affinity peptides to demonstrate that a critical function of tapasin is to transform class I molecules into a high affinity, peptide-receptive form. In the absence of tapasin, HLA-G molecules cannot bind high affinity peptides, and an abundant supply of peptides cannot overcome the tapasin requirement for high affinity peptide loading. The addition of tapasin renders HLA-G molecules capable of loading high affinity peptides and of transporting to the surface, suggesting that tapasin is a prerequisite for the binding of high-affinity ligands. Interestingly, the "tapasin-dependent" HLA-G molecules are not empty in the absence of tapasin but are in fact associated with suboptimal peptides and continue to recycle between the ER and the cis-Golgi. Together with the finding that empty HLA-G heterodimers are strictly retained in the ER and degraded, our data suggest that MHC class I molecules bind any available peptides to avoid ER-mediated degradation and that the peptides are in turn replaced by higher affinity peptides with the aid of tapasin.  相似文献   

18.
In this review we discuss the influence of chaperones on the general phenomena of folding as well as on the specific folding of an individual protein, MHC class I. MHC class I maturation is a highly sophisticated process in which the folding machinery of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is heavily involved. Understanding the MHC class I maturation per se is important since peptides loaded onto MHC class I molecules are the base for antigen presentation generating immune responses against virus, intracellular bacteria as well as tumours. This review discusses the early stages of MHC class I maturation regarding BiP and calnexin association, and differences in MHC class I heavy chain (HC) interaction with calnexin and calreticulin are highlighted. Late stage MHC class I maturation with focus on the dedicated chaperone tapasin is also discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The transport of antigenic peptides from the cytosol to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is an essential process for presentation to cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is responsible for the intracellular translocation of peptides across the membrane of the ER. Efficient assembly of MHC-peptide complex requires the formation of a macromolecular transport and chaperone complex composed of TAP, tapasin and MHC class I molecules. Therefore, structure and function of TAP is important for the understanding of the immune surveillance.  相似文献   

20.
MHC class I molecules exit the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by an unknown mechanism. Although a selective export mechanism has been proposed for the anterograde transport of class I, a motif responsible for export has never been identified. Although classical class I molecules lacking their cytoplasmic tail are expressed on the cell surface, we found that HLA-F was entirely dependent on its cytoplasmic tail for export from the ER. Two known export motifs were recognizable in HLA-F. A C-terminal valine residue functioned in ER export and interacted with coat complex (COP)II, while an RxR motif also played an important role in anterograde transport and bound to 14-3-3 proteins. This divergent trafficking of HLA-F implicates an alternative function for HLA-F, independent of loading with peptides in the ER.  相似文献   

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