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1.
Several endoplasmic reticulum proteins, including tapasin, play an important role in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I assembly. In this study, we assessed the influence of the tapasin cytoplasmic tail on three mouse MHC class I allotypes (H2-Kb, -Kd, and -Ld) and demonstrated that the expression of truncated mouse tapasin in mouse cells resulted in very low Kb, Kd, and Ld surface expression. The surface expression of Kd also could not be rescued by human soluble tapasin, suggesting that the surface expression phenotype of the mouse MHC class I molecules in the presence of soluble tapasin was not due to mouse/human differences in tapasin. Notably, soluble mouse tapasin was able to partially rescue HLA-B8 surface expression on human 721.220 cells. Thus, the cytoplasmic tail of tapasin (either mouse or human) has a stronger impact on the surface expression of murine MHC class I molecules on mouse cells than on the expression of HLA-B8 on human cells. A K408W mutation in the mouse tapasin transmembrane/cytoplasmic domain disrupted Kd folding and release from tapasin, but not interaction with transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP), indicating that the mechanism whereby the tapasin transmembrane/cytoplasmic domain facilitates MHC class I assembly is not limited to TAP stabilization. Our findings indicate that the C terminus of mouse tapasin plays a vital role in enabling murine MHC class I molecules to be expressed at the surface of mouse cells.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules present antigenic peptides to CD8 T cells. The peptides are generated in the cytosol, then translocated across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum by the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). TAP is a trimeric complex consisting of TAP1, TAP2, and tapasin (TAP-A) as indicated for human cells by reciprocal coprecipitation with anti-TAP1/2 and anti-tapasin antibodies, respectively. TAP1 and TAP2 are required for the peptide transport. Tapasin is involved in the association of class I with TAP and in the assembly of class I with peptide. The mechanisms of tapasin function are still unknown. Moreover, there has been no evidence for a murine tapasin analogue, which has led to the suggestion that murine MHC class I binds directly to TAP1/2. In this study, we have cloned the mouse analogue of tapasin. The predicted amino acid sequence showed 78% identity to human tapasin with identical consensus sequences of signal peptide, N-linked glycosylation site, transmembrane domain and double lysine motif. However, there was less homology (47%) found at the predicted cytosolic domain, and in addition, mouse tapasin is 14 amino acids longer than the human analogue at the C terminus. This part of the molecule may determine the species specificity for interaction with MHC class I or TAP1/2. Like human tapasin, mouse tapasin binds both to TAP1/2 and MHC class I. In TAP2-mutated RMA-S cells, both TAP1 and MHC class I were coprecipitated by anti-tapasin antiserum indicative of association of tapasin with TAP1 but not TAP2. With crosslinker-modified peptides and purified microsomes, anti-tapasin coprecipitated both peptide-bound MHC class I and TAP1/2. In contrast, anti-calreticulin only coprecipitated peptide-free MHC class I molecules. This difference in association with peptide-loaded class I suggests that tapasin functions later than calreticulin during MHC class I assembly, and controls peptide loading onto MHC class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

4.
Before exit from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), MHC class I molecules transiently associate with the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP1/TAP2) in an interaction that is bridged by tapasin. TAP1 and TAP2 belong to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter family, and are necessary and sufficient for peptide translocation across the ER membrane during loading of MHC class I molecules. Most ABC transporters comprise a transmembrane region with six membrane-spanning helices. TAP1 and TAP2, however, contain additional N-terminal sequences whose functions may be linked to interactions with tapasin and MHC class I molecules. Upon expression and purification of human TAP1/TAP2 complexes from insect cells, proteolytic fragments were identified that result from cleavage at residues 131 and 88 of TAP1 and TAP2, respectively. N-Terminally truncated TAP variants lacking these segments retained the ability to bind peptide and nucleotide substrates at a level comparable to that of wild-type TAP. The truncated constructs were also capable of peptide translocation in vitro, although with reduced efficiency. In an insect cell-based assay that reconstituted the class I loading pathway, the truncated TAP variants promoted HLA-B*2705 processing to similar levels as wild-type TAP. However, correlating with the observed reduction in tapasin binding, the tapasin-mediated increase in processing of HLA-B*2705 and HLA-B*4402 was lower for the truncated TAP constructs relative to the wild type. Together, these studies indicate that N-terminal domains of TAP1 and TAP2 are important for tapasin binding and for optimal peptide loading onto MHC class I molecules.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Tapasin is a subunit of the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). It associates with the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I. We show that tapasin interacts with beta- and gamma-subunits of COPI coatomer. COPI retrieves membrane proteins from the Golgi network back to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The COPI subunit-associated tapasin also interacts with MHC class I molecules suggesting that tapasin acts as the cargo receptor for packing MHC class I molecules as cargo proteins into COPI-coated vesicles. In tapasin mutant cells, neither TAP nor MHC class I are detected in association with the COPI coatomer. Interestingly, tapasin-associated MHC class I molecules are antigenic peptide-receptive and detected in both the ER and the Golgi. Our data suggest that tapasin is required for the COPI vesicle-mediated retrograde transport of immature MHC class I molecules from the Golgi network to the ER.  相似文献   

7.
Koch J  Guntrum R  Tampé R 《FEBS letters》2006,580(17):4091-4096
The heterodimeric ABC transporter TAP translocates proteasomal degradation products from the cytosol into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, where these peptides are loaded onto MHC class I molecules by a macromolecular peptide-loading complex (PLC) and subsequently shuttled to the cell surface for inspection by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Tapasin recruits, as a central adapter protein, other components of the PLC at the unique N-terminal domains of TAP. We found that the N-terminal domains of human TAP1 and TAP2 can independently bind to tapasin, thus providing two separate loading platforms for PLC assembly. Moreover, tapasin binding is dependent on the first N-terminal transmembrane helix of TAP1 and TAP2, demonstrating that these two helices contribute independently to the recruitment of tapasin and associated factors.  相似文献   

8.
Tapasin has been proposed to function as a peptide editor to displace lower affinity peptides and/or to favor the binding of high affinity peptides. Consistent with this, cell surface HLA-B8 molecules in tapasin-deficient cells were less stable and the peptide repertoire was substantially altered. However, the binding affinities of peptides expressed in the absence of tapasin were unexpectedly higher, not lower. The peptide repertoire from cells expressing soluble tapasin was similar in both appearance and affinity to that presented in the presence of full-length tapasin, but the HLA-B8 molecules showed altered cell surface stability characteristics. Similarly, the binding affinities of HLA-A*0201-associated peptides from tapasin(+) and tapasin(-) cells were equivalent, although steady state HLA-A*0201 cell surface expression was decreased and the molecules demonstrated reduced cell surface stability on tapasin(-) cells. These data are inconsistent with a role for tapasin as a peptide editor. Instead, we propose that tapasin acts as a peptide facilitator. In this role, it stabilizes the peptide-free conformation of class I MHC molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum and thus increases the number and variety of peptides bound to class I MHC. Full-length tapasin then confers additional stability on class I MHC molecules that are already associated with peptides.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Tapasin retains empty or suboptimally loaded MHC class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). However, the molecular mechanism of this process and how tapasin itself is retained in the ER are unknown. These questions were addressed by tagging tapasin with the cyan fluorescent protein or yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and probing the distribution and mobility of the tagged proteins. YFP-tapasin molecules were functional and could be isolated in association with TAP, as reported for native tapasin. YFP-tapasin was excluded from ER exit sites even after accumulation of secretory cargo due to disrupted anterograde traffic. Almost all tapasin molecules were clustered, and these clusters diffused freely in the ER. Tapasin oligomers appear to be retained by the failure of the export machinery to recognize them as cargo.  相似文献   

11.
Tapasin has been shown to stabilize TAP and to link TAP to the MHC class I H chain. Evidence also has been presented that tapasin influences the loading of peptides onto MHC class I. To explore the relationship between the ability of tapasin to bind to TAP and the MHC class I H chain and the ability of tapasin to facilitate class I assembly, we have created novel tapasin mutants and expressed them in 721.220-L(d) cells. One mutant has a deletion of nine amino acid residues (tapasin Delta334-342), and the other has amino acid substitutions at positions 334 and 335. In this report we describe the ability of these mutants to interact with L(d) and their effects on L(d) surface expression. We found that tapasin Delta334-342 was unable to bind to the L(d) H chain, and yet it facilitated L(d) assembly and expression. Tapasin Delta334-342 was able to bind and stabilize TAP, suggesting that TAP stabilization may be important to the assembly of L(d). Tapasin mutant H334F/H335Y, unlike tapasin Delta334-342, bound to L(d). Expression of tapasin H334F/H335Y in 721.220-L(d) reduced the proportion of cell surface open forms of L(d) and retarded the migration of L(d) from the endoplasmic reticulum. In total, our results indicate that the 334-342 region of tapasin influences L(d) assembly and transport.  相似文献   

12.
The loading of MHC class I molecules with peptides involves a variety of accessory proteins, including TAP-associated glycoprotein (tapasin), which tethers empty MHC class I molecules to the TAP peptide transporter. We have evaluated the role of tapasin for the assembly of peptides with the class Ib molecule Qa-1b. In normal cells, Qa-1b is predominantly bound by a peptide, the Qa-1 determinant modifier (Qdm), derived from the signal sequence of class Ia molecules. Our results show that tapasin links Qa-1b to the TAP peptide transporter, and that tapasin facilitates the delivery of Qa-1b molecules to the cell surface. Tapasin was also required for the presentation of endogenous Qdm peptides to Qdm-specific, Qa-1b-restricted CTLs. In sharp contrast, tapasin expression was dispensable for the presentation of an insulin peptide to insulin-specific, Qa-1b-restricted CTL isolated from TCR transgenic mice. However, tapasin deficiency significantly impaired the positive selection of these insulin-specific, Qa-1b-restricted transgenic CD8+ T cells. These findings reveal that tapasin plays a differential role in the loading of Qdm and insulin peptides onto Qa-1b molecules, and that tapasin is dispensable for retention of empty Qa-1b molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum, and are consistent with the proposed peptide-editing function of tapasin.  相似文献   

13.
Heterodimers of MHC class I glycoprotein and beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)m) bind short peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Before peptide binding these molecules form part of a multisubunit loading complex that also contains the two subunits of the TAP, the transmembrane glycoprotein tapasin, the soluble chaperone calreticulin, and the thiol oxidoreductase ERp57. We have investigated the assembly of the loading complex and provide evidence that after TAP and tapasin associate with each other, the transmembrane chaperone calnexin and ERp57 bind to the TAP-tapasin complex to generate an intermediate. These interactions are independent of the N:-linked glycan of tapasin, but require its transmembrane and/or cytoplasmic domain. This intermediate complex binds MHC class I-beta(2)m dimers, an event accompanied by the loss of calnexin and the acquisition of calreticulin, generating the MHC class I loading complex. Peptide binding then induces the dissociation of MHC class I-beta(2)m dimers, which can be transported to the cell surface.  相似文献   

14.
Cell surface expression of MHC I molecules depends on the chaperone tapasin; how tapasin functions is not fully understood. We created three fluorescent tapasin constructs: wild-type tapasin, soluble tapasin, which does not interact with TAP, and N300 tapasin, which does not interact with MHC I. In contrast to earlier reports, all three constructs localize to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), though soluble tapasin is more mobile than wild type and N300. Soluble tapasin does not increase MHC I surface levels to the same extent as wild type, which suggests that proximity to TAP is necessary for full tapasin function. N300 acts as a dominant-negative perhaps by blocking wild-type tapasin access to TAP. None of the constructs affects MHC I stability at the cell surface, although stability of ER resident MHC I is decreased in tapasin-negative cells. We propose that tapasin acts primarily to increase efficiency of assembly of MHC I within the ER.  相似文献   

15.
Tapasin is a Mr 48,000 glycoprotein and has a specialized role in MHC class I-restricted antigen presentation. It is encoded by a gene which maps centromeric to the MHC class II region of human Chromosome 6 within 200 kb of HLA-DP. There is variable dependence upon tapasin for MHC class I expression among different MHC class I alleles. HLA-B*4402 and to a lesser extent HLA-A1 and B8 are tapasin dependent, whereas HLA-B27, A2 and to a lesser extent B7 and A3 are tapasin independent. We investigated whether tapasin is polymorphic and whether these Tapasin alleles are in linkage with any MHC class I alleles. We identified three new mutations within intron 4, which are in a particular linkage with the previously described exon 4 (G16003C) dimorphism. The intronic mutations are G16146T, G16232A, and T16317A (numbering according to cosmid clone F0811; GenBank accession number Z97184). The allele frequency of Tapasin*01 (G16003) was 0.47 and Tapasin*02 (C16003) was 0.53 in this UK population. Four of the eight possible intronic haplotypes were identified and their cis linkage with the tapasin dimorphism ascertained. Tapasin*01 was associated with all the identified haplotypes, while Tapasin*02 was only associated with the wild-type intronic sequence (GGT). There was no significant linkage (P>0.01) of the Tapasin dimorphism or new Tapasin alleles to any of the MHC class I A, B, or C alleles studied or to the extended A1 B8 DR3 haplotype.  相似文献   

16.
Assembly of HLA class I-peptide complexes is assisted by multiple proteins that associate with HLA molecules in loading complexes. These include the housekeeping chaperones calnexin and calreticulin and two essential proteins, the transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP) for peptide supply, and the protein tapasin which is thought to act as a specialized chaperone. We dissected functional effects of processing cofactors by co-expressing in insect cells various combinations of the human proteins HLA-A2, HLA-B27, beta(2)-microglobulin, TAP, calnexin, calreticulin, and tapasin. Stability at 37 degrees C and surface expression of class I dimers correlated closely in baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells, suggesting that these cells retain empty dimers in the endoplasmic reticulum. Both HLA molecules form substantial quantities of stable complexes with insect cell-produced peptide pools. These pools are TAP-selected cytosolic peptides for HLA-B27 but endoplasmic reticulum-derived, i.e. TAP-independent peptides for HLA-A2. This discrepancy may be due to peptide selection by human TAP which is much better adapted to the HLA-B27 than to the HLA-A2 ligand preferences. HLA class I assembly with peptides from TAP-dependent and -independent pools was enhanced strongly by tapasin. Thus, tapasin acts as a chaperone and/or peptide editor that facilitates assembly of peptides with HLA class I molecules independently of mediating their interaction with TAP and/or retention in the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

17.
Presentation of antigenic peptides to CTLs at the cell surface first requires assembly of MHC class I with peptide and beta 2-microglobulin in the endoplasmic reticulum. This process involves an assembly complex of several proteins, including TAP, tapasin, and calreticulin, all of which associate specifically with the beta 2-microglobulin-assembled, open form of the class I heavy chain. To better comprehend at a molecular level the regulation of class I assembly, we have assessed the influence of multiple individual amino acid substitutions in the MHC class I alpha 2 domain on interaction with TAP, tapasin, and calreticulin. In this report, we present evidence indicating that many residues surrounding position 134 in H-2Ld influence interaction with assembly complex components. Most mutations decreased association, but one (LdK131D) strongly increased it. The Ld mutants, with the exception of LdK131D, exhibited characteristics suggesting suboptimal intracellular peptide loading, similar to the phenotype of Ld expressed in a tapasin-deficient cell line. Notably, K131D was less peptide inducible than wild-type Ld, which is consistent with its unusually strong association with the endoplasmic reticulum assembly complex.  相似文献   

18.
 Assembly of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules in human cells is dependent on the accessory protein tapasin, which mediates their interaction with the transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP) and thereby ensures efficient peptide binding. Analysis of a mouse tapasin complementary DNA defined a conserved polypeptide sharing sequences diagnostic of a transmembrane protein related to the immunoglobulin superfamily, and an endoplasmic reticulum retention motif. The mouse tapasin gene was mapped about 70 kilobases from H2-K at the centromeric end of the mouse MHC. Expression of mouse tapasin in a tapasin-deficient human mutant cell line restored the normal assembly and expression of class I alleles. Thus, tapasin is a structurally and functionally conserved component of the MHC class I antigen processing pathway. Its genetic linkage to the class I and TAP subunit genes in the MHC may be of significance in the coordinate expression and functional coadaptation of the diverse gene products. Received: 1 February 1998 / Revised: 23 March 1998  相似文献   

19.
The transporter associated with Ag processing (TAP) translocates antigenic peptides into the endoplasmic reticulum for binding onto MHC class I (MHC I) molecules. Tapasin organizes a peptide-loading complex (PLC) by recruiting MHC I and accessory chaperones to the N-terminal regions (N domains) of the TAP subunits TAP1 and TAP2. To investigate the function of the tapasin-docking sites of TAP in MHC I processing, we expressed N-terminally truncated variants of TAP1 and TAP2 in combination with wild-type chains, as fusion proteins or as single subunits. Strikingly, TAP variants lacking the N domain in TAP2, but not in TAP1, build PLCs that fail to generate stable MHC I-peptide complexes. This correlates with a substantially reduced recruitment of accessory chaperones into the PLC demonstrating their important role in the quality control of MHC I loading. However, stable surface expression of MHC I can be rescued in post-endoplasmic reticulum compartments by a proprotein convertase-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
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