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1.
In B cells, the non-classical human leukocyte antigens HLA-DO (DO) and HLA-DM (DM) are residents of lysosome-like organelles where they form tight complexes. DM catalyzes the removal of invariant chain-derived CLIP peptides from classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules, chaperones them until peptides are available for loading, and functions as a peptide editor. Here we show that DO preferentially promotes loading of MHC class II molecules that are dependent on the chaperone activity of DM, and influences editing in a positive way for some peptides and negatively for others. In acidic compartments, DO is engaged in DR-DM-DO complexes whose physiological relevance is indicated by the observation that at lysosomal pH DM-DO stabilizes empty class II molecules more efficiently than DM alone. Moreover, expression of DO in a melanoma cell line favors loading of high-stability peptides. Thus, DO appears to act as a co-chaperone of DM, thereby controlling the quality of antigenic peptides to be presented on the cell surface.  相似文献   

2.
HLA-DM (DM) is a non-classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecule that interacts with classical MHC II molecules in acidic compartments. During this association DM is supposed to catalyze the release of invariant chain (II)-derived CLIP peptides thereby rendering the peptide binding groove accessible for antigenic peptide loading. However, in situations of peptide scarcity the fate of these DM:DR complexes is not known. We could show that DR molecules incubated at lysosomal pH in the absence of peptide rapidly undergo functional inactivation and aggregation. In the presence of DM, however, empty DR molecules were shown to be stabilised and kept receptive for peptide loading, with the degree of the stabilising effect of DM varying for different DR alleles. In addition, in lysosomal compartments a considerable fraction of DM was found to be stably associated with empty DR alpha beta dimers thereby preserving their functionality. Upon encounter with antigenic peptide the DM-associated DR molecules could be rapidly loaded, whereupon they did no longer bind to DM. Thus, DM seems to act as a dedicated class II-specific chaperone that rescues uncharged alpha beta dimers. In view of the suggested shortage of self-peptides in the loading compartment, empty class II molecules that are kept receptive for loading by the chaperone function of DM may enable the antigen processing system to respond promptly to the challenge by newly entering antigens.  相似文献   

3.
The CD19-CD21-CD81 complex regulates signal transduction events critical for B lymphocyte development and humoral immunity. CD81, a molecule with 4 transmembrane domains, member of the tetraspan superfamily, is engaged, together with other tetraspans such as CD9, CD53, CD63, and CD82, in multimolecular complexes containing beta1 integrins and major histocompatibility complex antigens. Here we demonstrate that two other tetraspans, CD82 and the early B cell marker CD9, are coimmunoprecipitated with CD19 from Brij97 lysates of B cell lines. Moreover, CD9 was coprecipitated from lysates of purified CD10(+) early B cells. These associations were confirmed by the cocapping of CD19 with CD9 or CD82. The CD9/CD19 association was disrupted in the presence of digitonin, contrary to the CD81/CD19 association, indicating that CD9 and CD81 interact with CD19 in different ways. The CD9/CD81 association is also disrupted in the presence of digitonin, suggesting that CD9 associates with CD19 only through CD81. To characterize the regions involved in the CD81/CD19 association, two reciprocal CD9/CD81 chimeric molecules were tested for the association with CD19, but none of them could be coprecipitated with CD19 in digitonin, indicating that the domain of CD81 responsible for its association with CD19 is complex. Finally, engagement of CD9 could induce the tyrosine phosphorylation of different proteins, including CD19 itself, suggesting that the CD9/CD19 association is functionally relevant. Thus, a physical and functional link is formed between the CD19-CD21-CD81 complex and the integrin-tetraspan complexes, which is dynamically modulated in the process of B cell differentiation.  相似文献   

4.
Invariant chain (Ii) associates with class II MHC molecules and is crucial for Ag presentation by class II molecules. A general explanation for how invariant chain (Ii) associates with polymorphic MHC class II molecules has been suggested by the crystallographic structure of CLIP (class II-associated Ii peptide) complexed with an HLA class II molecule, HLA-DR3. We show here that methionine residues at positions 93 and 99 in Ii are important in MHC class II-mediated Ag presentation, but function in an allele-dependent manner. Introduction of a Met-->Ala mutation at position 99 in Ii (M99AIi) impaired presentation of peptides derived from exogenous proteins by I-Ad and I-Au class II molecules. Mutating Met-->Ala in Ii at position 93 (M93AIi) abrogated presentation by I-Au molecules, but not by I-Ad. Impaired Ag presentation was associated with conformationally altered expression of I-A molecules on the surface of cells expressing mutated Ii. Cell surface CLIP staining and immunoprecipitation studies showed that both I-Ad and I-Au molecules were associated with an increased abundance of Ii peptides, CLIP, in cells expressing mutated Ii. These results show that methionine 93 and methionine 99 play an important physiologic role in Ii association with class II molecules by regulating release of CLIP from class II in the endocytic compartments to allow binding of cognate peptides.  相似文献   

5.
Optimal immunity to the Gram-positive pathogen Listeria monocytogenes (LM) requires both CD8+ and CD4+ antigen-specific T cell responses. Understanding how CD4+ T cells function in an immune response to LM and how bacterial proteins are processed to peptide/MHC class II complexes in infected cells requires identification of these proteins. Using LacZ-inducible, LM-specific CD4+ T cells as probes, we identified two immunogenic LM proteins by a novel expression cloning strategy. The antigenic peptides contained within these proteins were defined by deletion analysis of the genes, and their antigenicity was confirmed with synthetic peptides. The nucleotide sequences of the genes showed that they encode previously unknown LM proteins that are homologous to surface proteins in other bacterial species. Consistent with their surface topology, mild trypsin treatment of LM protoplasts ablated T cell recognition of these Ags. These findings establish a general strategy for identifying unknown CD4+ T cell Ags and demonstrate that LM surface proteins can provide the peptides for presentation by MHC class II molecules that are specific targets for CD4+ T cells during murine LM infection.  相似文献   

6.
HLA-DM catalyzes the release of invariant chain fragments from newly synthesized major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules, stabilizes empty class II molecules, and edits class II-associated peptides by preferentially releasing those that are loosely bound. The ability of HLA-DM to carry out these functions in vitro is pH dependent, with an optimum at pH 4.5-5.5 and poor activity at pH 7. The structural basis for these properties of HLA-DM is unknown. Sequence homology suggests that HLA-DM resembles classical, peptide-binding MHC class II molecules. In this study, we examined whether HLA-DM has a secondary structure composition consistent with an MHC fold and whether HLA-DM changes conformation between pH 5 and pH 7. Far-UV circular dichroism (CD) spectra of recombinant soluble HLA-DM (sDM) indicate that HLA-DM belongs to the alpha/beta class of proteins and structurally resembles both MHC class I and class II molecules. The CD peak around 198 nm increases upon going from neutral to endosomal pH and drops sharply upon denaturation below pH 3.5, distinguishing at least three states of sDM: the denatured state and two highly similar folded states. Fluorescence emission spectra show a slight blue-shift and a approximately 20% drop in intensity at pH 5 compared with pH 7. Unfolding experiments using guanidinium chloride show that the stability of sDM is somewhat reduced but not lost at pH 5. These results indicate that sDM undergoes a pH-dependent conformational change between neutral and endosomal pH. The change seems to involve both hydrogen bonding patterns and the hydrophobic core of sDM and may contribute to the pH dependence of DM activity.  相似文献   

7.
Sequence variability in MHC class II molecules plays a major role in genetically determined susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). It is not yet clear whether MHC class II polymorphism allows selective binding of diabetogenic peptides or regulates some key intracellular events associated with class II-restricted Ag presentation. In this study, we have employed gene transfer techniques to analyze the intracellular events that control peptide acquisition by the unique class II molecule expressed by nonobese diabetic mice (I-Ag7). This structurally unique class II molecule fails to demonstrate stable binding to antigenic peptides and fails to undergo the conformational change associated with stable peptide binding to class II molecules. The experiments reported here demonstrate that I-Ag7 can productively associate with two protein cofactors important in class II-restricted Ag presentation, invariant chain (Ii) and DM. DM participates in the removal of the Ii-derived class II-associated Ii chain peptide and the p12 degradation product from the I-Ag7 molecule. In addition, I-Ag7 undergoes a conformational change when DM is expressed within the APC. Finally, DM can mediate accumulation of peptide/class II complexes on the surface of APCs. Collectively, our experiments indicate that the failure of the I-Ag7 molecule to stably bind peptide cannot be attributed to a failure to interact with the DM or Ii glycoproteins.  相似文献   

8.
The maturation of invariant chain (Ii):MHC class II complexes into peptide-loaded alpha beta dimers occurs by proteolytic removal of Ii chain and binding of antigenic peptides derived from exogenous and endogenous Ags. A fragment of the Ii chain (class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP) remains associated with class II alpha beta and is an intermediate in this process. Conversion of alpha beta:CLIP complexes into alpha beta:peptide complexes is facilitated by HLA-DM. Two unique mAbs, specific for I-Ab bound to human CLIP and I-Ab bound to DR alpha peptide, were used to assess the formation of these peptide:class II complexes in a human B lymphoblastoid cell line (B-LCL) (Swei) transfected with I-A(b). In multiple independent Swei:I-Ab transfectants, the amount of human CLIP (hCLIP):I-Ab expressed was inversely proportional to the amount of DR alpha 52-68:I-Ab; quantitative differences in HLA-DM expression accounted for this phenotype. In the low DM transfectant, a substantial proportion of I-Ab, but not DR molecules, was altered structurally and unable to present native protein Ags. Addition of DM transgenes to the DM-low cells resulted in an increase in DR alpha 52-68:I-Ab coupled with a decrease in hCLIP:I-Ab complexes and restoration of exogenous protein Ag presentation. The DR5 molecules in Swei cells, which have a lower affinity for hCLIP than I-Ab, were not affected by low DM expression, suggesting that the amount of DM required for conversion of CLIP:class II to peptide:class II may depend on the affinity of the class II molecules for CLIP or DM.  相似文献   

9.
Ag presentation by APC to class II MHC-restricted T cells involves a sequence of events: 1) intracellular processing of protein Ag into immunogenic peptides, 2) specific binding of peptides to class II MHC molecules, and then 3) transport of the MHC-peptide complexes to the plasma membrane. The critical event in the activation of T cells by APC is the recognition of MHC-associated antigenic determinants by the TCR/CD3 complex. In this report we describe the isolation and characterization of a mutant APC with a defect in an intracellular process that results in its inability to form MHC-peptide complexes for recognition by T cells. The mutant APC cannot present many different protein Ag with both I-A and I-E molecules but is able to present processing-independent peptides. The functional defect in the mutant APC is not caused by either a decrease in expression or a structural mutation in class II MHC molecules. Further, there is no mutation in the invariant chain (li) and it displays a normal kinetics of association and dissociation from the class II MHC molecules during biosynthesis. Although the mutation is not in the genes encoding for the class II MHC molecules or li, the mutant APC expresses class II MHC molecules with distinct serological epitopes suggestive of an altered conformation. Pulse-chase experiments suggest that a conformational difference between I-Ad molecules of wild-type and mutant cells occurs after the class II molecules exit from the endoplasmic reticulum but while they are still associated with li. The mutant cell produces few compact (SDS-resistant) class II heterodimers. This mutant APC provides a tool for studying the cell biology of Ag processing and presentation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In APCs, MHC class II molecules (MHC class II) bind antigenic peptides after HLA-DM mediated removal of CLIP. To characterize intracellular sites of peptide loading in human B lymphoblastoid cell lines, we conducted immunoelectron microscopy studies with Abs recognizing MHC class II associated with CLIP or bound peptide, respectively, together with Abs to HLA-DM and endocytic markers. The distribution of these molecules indicates that peptide binding occurs in compartments with characteristics of normal late endosomes, and in compartments that show characteristics of late endosomes, but are not detectably accessed by endocytosed BSA-gold. The latter compartments may represent or give rise to recycling vesicles that deliver peptide-loaded class II molecules to the cell surface. In addition, we have compared cells in which HLA-DM and HLA-DR interaction is defective with cells in which this interaction is intact, and find that DM/DR interaction is not required for the proper localization of either molecule to peptide-loading compartments.  相似文献   

12.
The molecular mechanisms that regulate sorting of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules into the endocytic pathway are poorly understood. For many proteins, access to endosomal compartments is regulated by cytosolically expressed sequences. We present evidence that a sequence in the lumenal domain of the MHC class II molecule regulates a very late event in class II biogenesis. Class II molecules containing single amino acid changes in the highly conserved 80-82 region of the beta chain were introduced into invariant chain (Ii)-negative fibroblasts with wild-type alpha chain, and the derived transfectants were analyzed biochemically. Using an endosomal isolation technique, we have quantified the level of class II molecules expressed in endocytic compartments and found that in the absence of Ii, approximately 15% of total cellular class II molecules can be isolated from endosomal compartments. Mutation at position 80 enhances this localization, while changes at positions 81 and 82 ablate class II expression in endosomal compartments. In addition, we have evaluated whether the induced changes in intracellular distribution of class II molecules were due to alterations in early biosynthetic events, indicative of misfolding of the molecules, or to modulation of later trafficking events more likely to be a consequence of the modulation of a specific transport event. Despite the dramatic effects on endosomal localization induced by the mutations, early biosynthetic events and maturation of class II were unaffected by the mutations. Collectively, our data argue that late trafficking events that control the ability of the class II molecule to access antigens is regulated by the 80-82 segment of the MHC class II beta chains.  相似文献   

13.
The Iip35 isoform of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-associated invariant chain (Ii) contains an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) targeting motif, but in B cell lines the ER retention is ineffective and a fraction of Iip35 is transported through the Golgi complex associated with class II molecules. We found Iip35 (but not Iip33, the major form of Ii) to be phosphorylated in B cell lines, as well as in transfected HeLa cells. The phosphorylation of Iip35 was found to be necessary for the exit of Iip35-class II complexes out of the ER. This requirement suggests that phosphorylation may change the interaction with factors responsible for ER retention/retrieval, and we did find that phosphorylated Iip35 associates with 14-3-3 proteins, a family of adaptor proteins that are involved in coordinating signal transduction pathways. This finding raises the intriguing possibility that the exit of Ii-class II complexes from the ER is regulated by intracellular signaling events.  相似文献   

14.
Currently available data indicate that the earliest identifiable hemopoietic progenitor in normal marrow is CD34+ MHC class II-; subsequent expression of MHC class II antigens is maturation and lineage dependent. Studies on embryonal cells suggest that CD34+DR- cells are actually the common precursors for stromal and hemopoietic elements, with the earliest hemopoietic precursor being CD34+DR+. DQ antigens are apparently not expressed in cells of hemopoietic potential and the expression of DQ appears to be regulated differentially from DR and DP. MHC class II antigens are also expressed on some stromal cells, especially those with endothelial and macrophage features. MHC class II molecules are involved in hemopoietic cell/stroma interaction. The presence of anti-MHC class II monoclonal antibodies (MABs) at early stages of stem cell proliferation/differentiation, at least under conditions of marrow stress, induces signals which may result in final, especially granulocytic, differentiation of later precursors. These may interfere with the survival of those cells which are required for long-term hemopoietic reconstitution. Observations in allogeneic marrow transplant recipients support a role of MHC molecules as expected in allogeneic interactions. Results in autologous models point towards a role of MHC class II molecules other than that of a histocompatibility marker insofar as these molecules or signals transmitted by them appear to be involved in the regulation of hemopoiesis.  相似文献   

15.
X-ray crystallography of several MHC class II molecules revealed a structure described as a dimer of heterodimers, or a superdimer. This discovery led to the hypothesis that MHC class II molecules may interact with the TCR and CD4 as an (alpha beta)2 superdimer, potentially providing more stable and stimulatory interactions than can be provided by the simple alpha beta heterodimer alone. In this study, using chemical cross-linking, we provide evidence for the existence of the superdimers surface of B cells. We further characterize the superdimers and demonstrate that in lysates of B cells, I-Ek dimers and superdimers are derived from the same population of I-Ek molecules. Purified, I-Ek molecules in solution also exist as a mixture of 60-kDa dimers and 120-kDa superdimers, indicating that I-Ek has an intrinsic ability to form 120-kDa complexes in the absence of other cellular components. Peptide mapping showed that the alpha beta and (alpha beta)2 complexes are closely related and that the superdimers do not contain additional polypeptides not present in the dimers. The (alpha beta)2 complex displays thermal and pH stability similar to that of the alpha beta complex, both being denatured by SDS at temperatures above 50 degrees C and at a pH below 5. These data support the model that MHC class II has an intrinsic ability to assume the (alpha beta)2 superdimeric conformation, which may be important for interactions with the TCR and CD4 coreceptor.  相似文献   

16.
The T cell coreceptors CD4 and CD8 enhance T cell responses to TCR signals by participating in complexes containing TCR, coreceptor, and MHC molecules. These ternary complexes are also hypothesized to play a seminal role during T cell development, although the precise timing, frequency, and consequences of TCR-coreceptor-MHC interactions during positive selection and lineage commitment remain unclear. To address these issues, we designed transgenic mice expressing mutant I-Ek molecules with reduced CD4-binding capability. These transgenic lines were crossed to three different lines of I-Ek-specific TCR transgenic mice, and the efficiency of production of CD4+ lineage cells in the doubly transgenic progeny was assessed. Surprisingly, replacing wild-type I-Ek molecules with these mutant molecules did not affect the production of CD4+CD8- thymocytes or CD4+ peripheral T cells expressing any of the three TCRs examined. These data, when considered together with other experiments addressing the role of coreceptor during development, suggest that not all MHC class II-specific thymocytes require optimal and simultaneous TCR-CD4-MHC interactions to mature. Alternatively, it is possible that these particular alterations of I-Ek do not disrupt the CD4-MHC interaction adequately, potentially indicating functional differences between I-A and I-E MHC class II molecules.  相似文献   

17.
The CD4 protein is expressed on a subset of human T lymphocytes that recognize antigen in the context of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules. Using Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing human CD4, we have previously demonstrated that the CD4 protein can mediate cell adhesion by direct interaction with MHC class II molecules. In T lymphocytes, CD4 can also function as a signaling molecule, presumably through its intracellular association with p56lck, a member of the src family of protein tyrosine kinases. In the present report, we show that p56lck can affect cell adhesion mediated by CD4 and MHC class II molecules. The expression of wild-type p56lck in CHO-CD4 cells augments the binding of MHC class II+ B cells, whereas the expression of a mutant p56lck protein with elevated tyrosine kinase activity results in decreased binding of MHC class II+ B cells. Using site-specific mutants of p56lck, we demonstrate that the both the enzymatic activity of p56lck and its association with CD4 are required for this effect on CD4/MHC class II adhesion. Further, the binding of MHC class II+ B cells induces CD4 at the cell surface to become organized into structures resembling adhesions-type junctions. Both wild-type and mutant forms of p56lck influence CD4-mediated adhesion by regulating the formation of these structures. The wild-type lck protein enhances CD4/MHC class II adhesion by augmenting the formation of CD4-associated adherens junctions whereas the elevated tyrosine kinase activity of the mutant p56lck decreases CD4-mediated cell adhesion by preventing the formation of these structures.  相似文献   

18.
Inside APCs, MHC class II molecules associate with antigenic peptides before reaching the cell surface. This association takes place in compartments of the endocytic pathway, more related to endosomes or lysosomes depending on the cell type. Here, we compared MHC class II transport from endosomal vs lysosomal compartments to the plasma membrane. We show that transport of MHC class II molecules to the cell surface does not depend on the cytosolic domains of the alpha- and beta-chains. In contrast, the stability of the alphabeta-peptide complexes determined the efficiency of transport to the cell surface from lysosomal, but not from endosomal, compartments. In murine B lymphoma cells, SDS-unstable and -stable complexes were transported to the cell surface at almost similar rates, whereas after lysosomal relocalization or in a cell line in which MHC class II molecules normally accumulate in lysosomal compartments, stable complexes were preferentially addressed to the cell surface. Our results suggest that when peptide loading occurs in lysosomal compartments, selective retention and lysosomal degradation of unstable dimers result in the expression of highly stable MHC class II-peptide complexes at the APC surface.  相似文献   

19.
Class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins bind and present peptide antigens to T cells. Moreover, their function as signal transduction molecules has recently been emphasized. Here we used Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed B-cell lines (B-LCL) in experiments to investigate the changes induced by binding of specific antibodies to HLA-DR molecules. Binding of the antibodies induced, in an allele-specific manner, striking non-cytotoxic inhibition of B-LCL proliferation. This inhibition was associated with an increase in shedding of soluble CD23. These findings provide further evidence for the function of MHC class II proteins as signal transduction molecules which may be important in B-cell activation.  相似文献   

20.
Cell-to-cell junction structures play a key role in cell growth rate control and cell polarization. In endothelial cells (EC), these structures are also involved in regulation of vascular permeability and leukocyte extravasation. To identify novel components in EC intercellular junctions, mAbs against these cells were produced and selected using a morphological screening by immunofluorescence microscopy. Two novel mAbs, LIA1/1 and VJ1/16, specifically recognized a 25-kD protein that was selectively localized at cell-cell junctions of EC, both in the primary formation of cell monolayers and when EC reorganized in the process of wound healing. This antigen corresponded to the recently cloned platelet-endothelial tetraspan antigen CD151/PETA-3 (platelet-endothelial tetraspan antigen-3), and was consistently detected at EC cell-cell contact sites. In addition to CD151/PETA-3, two other members of the tetraspan superfamily, CD9 and CD81/ TAPA-1 (target of antiproliferative antibody-1), localized at endothelial cell-to-cell junctions. Biochemical analysis demonstrated molecular associations among tetraspan molecules themselves and those of CD151/ PETA-3 and CD9 with alpha3 beta1 integrin. Interestingly, mAbs directed to both CD151/PETA-3 and CD81/ TAPA-1 as well as mAb specific for alpha3 integrin, were able to inhibit the migration of ECs in the process of wound healing. The engagement of CD151/PETA-3 and CD81/TAPA-1 inhibited the movement of individual ECs, as determined by quantitative time-lapse video microscopy studies. Furthermore, mAbs against the CD151/PETA-3 molecule diminished the rate of EC invasion into collagen gels. In addition, these mAbs were able to increase the adhesion of EC to extracellular matrix proteins. Together these results indicate that CD81/TAPA-1 and CD151/PETA-3 tetraspan molecules are components of the endothelial lateral junctions implicated in the regulation of cell motility, either directly or by modulation of the function of the associated integrin heterodimers.  相似文献   

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