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1.
Class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins are essential for normal immune system function but also drive many autoimmune responses. They bind peptide antigens in endosomes and present them on the cell surface for recognition by CD4(+) T cells. A small molecule could potentially block an autoimmune response by disrupting MHC-peptide interactions, but this has proven difficult because peptides bind tightly and dissociate slowly from MHC proteins. Using a high-throughput screening assay we discovered a class of noble metal complexes that strip peptides from human class II MHC proteins by an allosteric mechanism. Biochemical experiments indicate the metal-bound MHC protein adopts a 'peptide-empty' conformation that resembles the transition state of peptide loading. Furthermore, these metal inhibitors block the ability of antigen-presenting cells to activate T cells. This previously unknown allosteric mechanism may help resolve how gold(I) drugs affect the progress of rheumatoid arthritis and may provide a basis for developing a new class of anti-autoimmune drugs.  相似文献   

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Diversification in MHC class II invariant chain-like proteins among fishes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II invariant chains are important for an efficient and complete presentation of antigens by MHC class II molecules. Invariant chain‐like proteins (Iclp) 1 and 2 were identified by expressed sequence tag analysis from cDNA library of common carp head kidney (HK) stimulated with concanavalin A and lipopolysaccharide. The sequences were 1043 and 1016 bp in length encoding 234 and 198 amino acid proteins, respectively. Based on their predicted structure, the genes harboured transmembrane domain (TMD) and Tg (thyroglobulin) type 1 domains. Expression analysis revealed that both genes were expressed in normal tissues of HK, intestine, brain and gill. By database search, similar homologues were found in Atlantic salmon, fugu and catfish. Phylogenetic and alignment analysis indicate diversity among fish Iclps.  相似文献   

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The molecular details of antigen processing and presentation by MHC class I and class II molecules have been studied extensively for almost three decades. Although the basic principles of these processes were laid out approximately 10 years ago, the recent years have revealed many details and provided new insights into their control and specificity. MHC molecules use various biochemical reactions to achieve successful presentation of antigenic fragments to the immune system. Here we present a timely evaluation of the biology of antigen presentation and a survey of issues that are considered unresolved. The continuing flow of new details into our understanding of the biology of MHC class I and class II antigen presentation builds a system involving several cell biological processes, which is discussed in this Review.  相似文献   

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Class II antigens from the Xenopus laevis MHC (f haplotype) were identified by using a rabbit antihuman class II beta-chain serum (anti-p29boost). This xenoantiserum inhibits bidirectional Xenopus MLR (but not PHA-stimulation), recognizes the same molecules as certain MHC-linked Xenopus alloantisera, and immunoprecipitates class II molecules from Xenopus cells consistent with the tissue distribution of mammalian class II molecules. The Xenopus class II molecules are composed of two different chains, both of which are 30 to 35kD transmembrane glycoproteins. The alpha-chains have some N-terminal sequence homology with mammalian class II alpha-chains (both I-E/DR and I-A/DC); the beta-chains are directly recognized by anti-p29boost and have a markedly increased SDS gel mobility under nonreducing conditions. During biosynthesis, they are noncovalently associated with a number of other chains, including ones at 25kD, 33kD, and 40 to 45kD. The alpha-chains bear three N-linked glycans (two Endo H insensitive in mature material) and the beta-chains bear two (one Endo H insensitive). Unlike most mammalian class II molecules, the deglycosylated beta-chains are significantly larger and more acidic than the alpha-chains.  相似文献   

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MHC class II tetramers have emerged as an important tool for characterization of the specificity and phenotype of CD4 T cell immune responses, useful in a large variety of disease and vaccine studies. Issues of specific T cell frequency, biodistribution, and avidity, coupled with the large genetic diversity of potential class II restriction elements, require targeted experimental design. Translational opportunities for immune disease monitoring are driving the rapid development of HLA class II tetramer use in clinical applications, together with innovations in tetramer production and epitope discovery.  相似文献   

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Glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (GPI) is the target autoantigen recognized by KRN T cells in the K/BxN model of rheumatoid arthritis. T cell reactivity to this ubiquitous Ag results in the recruitment of anti-GPI B cells and subsequent immune complex-mediated arthritis. Because all APCs have the capacity to process and present this autoantigen, it is unclear why systemic autoimmunity with polyclonal B cell activation does not ensue. To this end, we examined how GPI is presented by B cells relative to other immunologically relevant APCs such as dendritic cells (DCs) and macrophages in the steady state, during different phases of arthritis development, and after TLR stimulation. Although all APCs can process and present the GPI:I-A(g7) complex, they do so with different efficiencies. DCs are the most potent at baseline and become progressively more potent with disease development correlating with immune complex uptake. Interestingly, in vivo and in vitro maturation of DCs did not enhance GPI presentation, suggesting that DCs use mechanisms to regulate the presentation of self-peptides. Non-GPI-specific B cells are the weakest APCs (100-fold less potent than DCs) and fail to productively engage KRN T cells at steady state and during arthritis. However, the ability to stimulate KRN T cells is strongly enhanced in B cells after TLR ligation and provides a mechanism whereby polyclonal B cells may be activated in the wake of an acute infection.  相似文献   

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Nova Scotia duck tolling retrievers are predisposed to a SLE-related disease complex including immune-mediated rheumatic disease (IMRD) and steroid-responsive meningitis–arteritis (SRMA). IMRD involves symptoms that resemble those seen in systemic autoimmune rheumatic diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, SLE, or SLE-related diseases, in humans. This disease complex involves persistent lameness, stiffness, mainly after resting, and palpable pain from several joints of extremities. The majority of affected dogs display antinuclear autoantibody (ANA)-reactivity. SRMA is manifested in young dogs with high fever and neck stiffness and can be treated with corticosteroids. We have investigated the possible role of MHC class II as a genetic risk factor in IMRD and SRMA etiology. We performed sequence-based typing of the DLA-DRB1, -DQA1, and -DQB1 class II loci in a total of 176 dogs including 51 IMRD (33 ANA-positive), 49 SRMA cases, and 78 healthy controls (two dogs were both IMRD- and SRMA-affected). Homozygosity for the risk haplotype DRB1*00601/DQA1*005011/DQB1*02001 increased the risk for IMRD (OR?=?4.9; ANA-positive IMRD: OR?=?7.2) compared with all other genotypes. There was a general heterozygote advantage, homozygotes had OR?=?4.4 (ANA-positive IMRD: OR?=?8.9) compared with all heterozygotes. The risk haplotype contains the five amino acid epitope RARAA, known as the shared epitope for rheumatoid arthritis. No association was observed for SRMA. We conclude that DLA class II is a highly significant genetic risk factor for ANA-positive IMRD. The results indicate narrow diversity of DLA II haplotypes and identify an IMRD-related risk haplotype, which becomes highly significant in homozygous dogs.  相似文献   

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Capacity of intact proteins to bind to MHC class II molecules   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Here we have demonstrated that denatured, but not native protein antigens can interact with Ia molecules. Thus, the failure of native antigens to be recognized as such by T cells appears to be at least in part due to a deficient antigen/Ia interaction. These results also support previous observations that some T cells can recognize denatured antigens without a further processing requirement. Moreover, a striking correlation was observed between the in vitro binding pattern of denatured proteins and the pattern of restriction of T cell responses elicited by immunization with the native antigen, raising the possibility that an unfolding step may actually occur early during in vivo processing and influence the final outcome of Ia-restricted T cell responses.  相似文献   

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Single-molecule epifluorescence microscopy was used to observe the translational motion of GPI-linked and native I-E(k) class II MHC membrane proteins in the plasma membrane of CHO cells. The purpose of the study was to look for deviations from Brownian diffusion that might arise from barriers to this motion. Detergent extraction had suggested that these proteins may be confined to lipid microdomains in the plasma membrane. The individual I-E(k) proteins were visualized with a Cy5-labeled peptide that binds to a specific extracytoplasmic site common to both proteins. Single-molecule trajectories were used to compute a radial distribution of displacements, yielding average diffusion coefficients equal to 0.22 (GPI-linked I-E(k)) and 0.18 microm(2)/s (native I-E(k)). The relative diffusion of pairs of proteins was also studied for intermolecular separations in the range 0.3-1.0 microm, to distinguish between free diffusion of a protein molecule and diffusion of proteins restricted to a rapidly diffusing small domain. Both analyses show that motion is predominantly Brownian. This study finds no strong evidence for significant confinement of either GPI-linked or native I-E(k) in the plasma membrane of CHO cells.  相似文献   

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Monoclonal antibody 33.1 defines a non-DR, class 11, human major histocompatibility complex antigen, 33.1, which appears to be distinct from other class II antigens in its cellular distribution and primary structure. To characterize the structure more fully and to determine the degree of polymorphism within 33.1, a comparative N-terminal sequence study has been undertaken using a series of ten B lymphoblastoid cell lines with different DR and MB types. The results confirm that both the and chains of 33.1 are homologues of the corresponding chains of the murine I-A antigen and indicate that while 33.1 does not appear to be identical with MB, it is closely related. Sequence analyses revealed two major variants of 33.1, corresponding to cells with specificities MB1 and MB 3, respectively. Within each MB type, other polymorphisms have been detected. Cells that are MB2 do not react with monoclonal antibody 33.1. Suggestive evidence is presented that monoclonal antibody 33.1 reacts predominantly with the chain of the antigen. The preferential expression of 33.1 on activated B cells suggests that expression of at least the 33.1 chain gene is greatly enhanced in the course of B-cell activation, but the specific function of 33.1 remains to be determined.Abbreviations used in this paper McAb monoclonal antibody - BLCL B lymphoblastoid cell lines - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - NP-40 Nonidet P-40 Fellow of the Arthritis Foundation  相似文献   

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Dendritic cells (DC), uniquely among APC, express an open/empty conformation of MHC class II (MHC-II) proteins (correctly folded molecules lacking bound peptides). Generation and trafficking of empty HLA-DR during DC differentiation are investigated here. HLA-DR did not fold as an empty molecule in the endoplasmic reticulum/trans-Golgi network, did not derived from MHC/Ii complexes trafficking to the cell surface, but was generated after invariant chain degradation within lysosomal-like MHC-II rich compartments (MIIC). In pre-DC, generated from monocytes cultured in the presence of GM-CSF, Lamp-1(+)MHC-II(+) compartments are predominantly electron dense and, in these cells, empty MHC-II molecules accounts for as much as 20% of total surface HLA-DR. In immature DC, generated in presence of GM-CSF and IL-4, empty HLA-DR reside in multilamellar MIIC, but are scarcely observed at the cell surface. Thus, the morphology/composition of lysosomal MIIC at different DC maturational stages appear important for surface egression or intracellular retention of empty HLA-DR. Ag loading can be achieved for the fraction of empty HLA-DR present in the "peptide-receptive" form. Finally, in vivo, APC-expressing surface empty HLA-DR were found in T cell areas of secondary lymphoid organs.  相似文献   

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The biochemical processing of and Ag presentation by MHC class II molecules were examined in B cell lines derived from pairs of identical twins discordant for type 1 diabetes. MHC class II defects detected exclusively in cells derived from the twins with autoimmunity included increased rates of transport to and subsequent turnover at the cell surface, inadequate glycosylation, and a reduced display at the cell surface of antigenic peptides. These defects appeared to be secondary to a decreased abundance of the p35 isoform of the invariant chain (Ii), a human-specific chaperone protein for MHC class II normally generated by use of an alternative translation start site. Stable transfection of diabetic B cell lines with an Ii p35 expression vector corrected the defects in MHC class II processing and peptide presentation. A defect in the expression of Ii p35 may thus result in impairment of Ag presentation by MHC class II molecules and thereby contribute to the development of type 1 diabetes in at-risk genotypes.  相似文献   

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Joshi RV  Zarutskie JA  Stern LJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3751-3762
Peptide binding reactions of class II MHC proteins exhibit unusual kinetics, with extremely slow apparent rate constants for the overall association (<100 M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) and dissociation (<10(-)(5) s(-)(1)) processes. Various linear and branched pathways have been proposed to account for these data. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer between tryptophan residues in the MHC peptide binding site and aminocoumarin-labeled peptides, we measured real-time kinetics of peptide binding to empty class II MHC proteins. Our experiments identified an obligate intermediate in the binding reaction. The observed kinetics were consistent with a binding mechanism that involves an initial bimolecular binding step followed by a slow unimolecular conformational change. The same mechanism is observed for different peptide antigens. In addition, we noted a reversible inactivation of the empty MHC protein that competes with productive binding. The implications of this kinetic mechanism for intracellular antigen presentation pathways are discussed.  相似文献   

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MHC class II molecules (MHC II) play a pivotal role in the cell-surface presentation of antigens for surveillance by T cells. Antigen loading takes place inside the cell in endosomal compartments and loss of the peptide ligand rapidly leads to the formation of a non-receptive state of the MHC molecule. Non-receptiveness hinders the efficient loading of new antigens onto the empty MHC II. However, the mechanisms driving the formation of the peptide inaccessible state are not well understood. Here, a combined approach of experimental site-directed mutagenesis and computational modeling is used to reveal structural features underlying "non-receptiveness." Molecular dynamics simulations of the human MHC II HLA-DR1 suggest a straightening of the α-helix of the β1 domain during the transition from the open to the non-receptive state. The movement is mostly confined to a hinge region conserved in all known MHC molecules. This shift causes a narrowing of the two helices flanking the binding site and results in a closure, which is further stabilized by the formation of a critical hydrogen bond between residues αQ9 and βN82. Mutagenesis experiments confirmed that replacement of either one of the two residues by alanine renders the protein highly susceptible. Notably, loading enhancement was also observed when the mutated MHC II molecules were expressed on the surface of fibroblast cells. Altogether, structural features underlying the non-receptive state of empty HLA-DR1 identified by theoretical means and experiments revealed highly conserved residues critically involved in the receptiveness of MHC II. The atomic details of rearrangements of the peptide-binding groove upon peptide loss provide insight into structure and dynamics of empty MHC II molecules and may foster rational approaches to interfere with non-receptiveness. Manipulation of peptide loading efficiency for improved peptide vaccination strategies could be one of the applications profiting from the structural knowledge provided by this study.  相似文献   

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