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1.
Tapasin is a resident ER protein believed to be critical for antigen presentation by HLA class I molecules. We demonstrate that allelic variation in MHC class I molecules influences their dependence on tapasin for peptide loading and antigen presentation. HLA-B*2705 molecules achieve high levels of surface expression and present specific viral peptides in the absence of tapasin. In contrast, HLA-B*4402 molecules are highly dependent upon human tapasin for these functions, while HLA-B8 molecules are intermediate in this regard. Significantly, HLA-B*2705 like HLA-B*4402, requires tapasin to associate efficiently with TAP (transporters associated with antigen processing). The unusual ability of HLA-B*2705 to form peptide complexes without associating with TAP or tapasin confers flexibility in the repertoire of peptides presented by this molecule. We speculate that these properties might contribute to the role of HLA-B27 in conferring susceptibility to inflammatory spondyloarthropathies.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
4.
In human cells the association of MHC class I molecules with TAP is thought to be mediated by a third protein termed tapasin. We now show that tapasin is present in murine TAP-class I complexes as well. Furthermore, we demonstrate that a mutant H-2Dd molecule that does not interact with TAP due to a Glu to Lys mutation at residue 222 of the H chain (Dd(E222K)) also fails to bind to tapasin. This finding supports the view that tapasin bridges the association between class I and TAP and implicates residue 222 as a site of contact with tapasin. The inability of Dd(E222K) to interact with tapasin and TAP results in impaired peptide loading within the endoplasmic reticulum. However, significant acquisition of peptides can still be detected as assessed by the decay kinetics of cell surface Dd(E222K) molecules and by the finding that prolonged viral infection accumulates sufficient target structures to stimulate T cells at 50% the level observed with wild-type Dd. Thus, although interaction with tapasin and TAP enhances peptide loading, it is not essential. Finally, a cohort of Dd(E222K) molecules decays more rapidly on the cell surface compared with wild-type Dd molecules but much more slowly than peptide-deficient molecules. This suggests that some of the peptides obtained in the absence of an interaction with tapasin and TAP are suboptimal, suggesting a peptide-editing function for tapasin/TAP in addition to their role in enhancing peptide loading.  相似文献   

5.
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules are heterodimers of a class I heavy chain and beta 2-microglobulin that bind peptides supplied by the MHC region-encoded transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP). Peptide binding by class I heterodimers is necessary for their maturation into stable complexes and is dependent on their physical association with TAP. In human mutant 721.220 cells, however, a novel genetic defect causes the failure of class I heterodimers to associate with TAP. This deficiency correlates with lack of expression of a glycoprotein, tapasin (TAP-associated glycoprotein), which has been found in association with class I heterodimers and TAP. Employing a transcomplementation analysis, we obtained evidence co-localizing the genetic defect of mutant 220 cells and the structural or a regulatory gene controlling the expression of tapasin on the short arm of chromosome 6, which includes the MHC. Expression of tapasin and the normal interaction of class I heterodimers with TAP are concomitantly restored, indicating the probable function of tapasin as a physical link between these complexes. In further support of this model, the absence of tapasin in mutant 220 cells correlates with reduced class I heterodimer stability, suggesting that tapasin may stabilize class I heterodimers and thereby enhance their association with TAP. These results further implicate tapasin in a mechanism that promotes peptide binding by class I heterodimers through their interaction with TAP.  相似文献   

6.
The assembly assay for peptide binding to class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is based on the ability to stabilise MHC class I molecules from mutant cell lines by the addition of suitable peptides. Such cell lines lack a functional transporter associated with antigen presentation (TAP) and as a result accumulate empty, unstable class I molecules in the ER. These dissociate rapidly in cell lysates unless they are stabilised by the addition of an appropriate binding peptide during lysis. The extent of stabilisation of class I molecules is directly related to the binding affinity of the added peptide. However, some MHC class I molecules, including HLA-B * 2705 and H-2Kk are unusually stable in their peptide-receptive state making them inappropriate for analysis using this assay or assays which depend on the ability of peptides to stabilise MHC class I molecules at the cell surface. Here we present an improved method that permits reliable measurements of peptide binding to such class I MHC molecules that are unusually stable in the absence of peptide. Cells are lysed in the presence of peptide and incubated at 4 degrees C. After 2 h, during which peptide binding to empty MHC molecules occurs, the lysate is heated to a temperature which preferentially destabilises those MHC molecules that remain empty. We have used this technique to assay peptide binding to HLA-B * 2705, as well as to the murine allele H-2Kk which also displays a stable phenotype when transfected into TAP-deficient T2 cells and show that this method represents a marked improvement over previous methods in terms of lower background signal and higher recovery of peptide bound molecules.  相似文献   

7.
Intracellular antigens are continually presented to cytotoxic T lymphocytes by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules, which consist of a polymorphic 43 kDa heavy chain and a 12 kDa soluble subunit beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m), and which bind an 8-10 amino-acid antigenic peptide. The assembly of this trimolecular complex takes place in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and almost certainly requires cofactors. Most MHC class I molecules in the ER that have not yet acquired peptide are simultaneously bound to the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP), to the 48 kDa glycoprotein tapasin and to the lectin-like chaperone calreticulin, in a multicomponent 'loading complex'. Previous studies have shown that a mutant MHC class I molecule T134K (in which Thr134 was changed to Lys) fails to bind to TAP. Here, we show that this point mutation also disrupted, directly or indirectly, the interaction between MHC class I molecules and calreticulin. T134K molecules did not present viral antigens to T cells even though they bound peptide and beta 2m normally in vitro. They exited the ER rapidly as 'empty' MHC class I complexes, unlike empty wild-type molecules which are retained in the ER and degraded. We show here that, paradoxically, the rapid exit of empty T134K molecules from the ER was dependent on a TAP-derived supply of peptides. This implies that MHC class I assembly is a two-stage process: initial binding of suboptimal peptides is followed by peptide optimisation that depends on temporary ER retention.  相似文献   

8.
The proper folding and assembly of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is an intricate process involving a number of components. Nascent heavy chains of MHC class I molecules, translocated into the ER membrane, are rapidly glycosylated and bind the transmembrane chaperone calnexin. In humans, after dissociation from calnexin, fully oxidized MHC class I heavy chains associate with beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2m) and the soluble chaperone calreticulin. This complex interacts with another transmembrane protein, tapasin, which is believed to assist in MHC class I folding as well as in mediating the interaction between assembling MHC class I molecules and the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). The TAP heterodimer (TAP1-TAP2) introduces the final component of the MHC class I molecule by translocating peptides, predominately generated by the proteasome, from the cytosol into the ER where they can bind dimers of beta 2M and the MHC class I heavy chain. Recently, the thiol oxidoreductase ERp57--also known as GRP58, ERp61, ER60, Q2, HIP-70, and CPT and first misidentified as phospholipase C-alpha--has been shown to bind in conjunction with calnexin or calreticulin to a number of newly synthesized ER glycoproteins when their N-linked glycans are trimmed by glucosidases I and II. It was speculated that ERp57 is a generic component of the glycan-dependent ER quality control system. Here, we show that ERp57 is a component of the MHC class I peptide-loading complex. ERp57 might influence the folding of MHC class I molecules at a critical step in peptide loading.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: To refine the algorithms governing peptide presentation by HLA-B*2705 by analyzing: (i) the specificity of the human transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) for HLA-B27 binding peptides; and (ii) the peptide binding affinity to HLA-B*2705. METHODS: TAP-translocation was measured with a labeled reporter peptide containing an N-linked glycosylation acceptor site in Streptolysin O-permeabilized cells for a panel of HLA-B27 binding peptides. Peptide binding affinity was determined by peptide-induced stabilization of empty HLA-B*2705 expressed by the TAP-deficient cell line T2-B27. RESULTS: Human TAP preferentially translocated analogues with residues leucine, isoleucine, methionine and arginine as the carboxy-terminal amino acids, whereas analogues with aspartic acid and serine were translocated poorly. The binding affinity to HLA-B*2705 of the poorly translocated aspartic acid and serine analogues was about 100-fold less compared to the parent HLA-B27 binding peptide. CONCLUSIONS: Human TAP shows considerable specificity for the C-terminus of potential HLA-B27 ligands. Nonamer peptides with aspartic acid and serine at the C-terminus are poorly translocated by the TAP and have low binding affinity for HLA-B*2705, and are therefore unlikely to become presented by HLA-B*2705.  相似文献   

10.
This study describes the characterization of endogenous peptides associated with the two major subtypes of HLA-B44. The two subtypes differ for a single amino acid substitution from Asp (HLA-B*4402) to Leu (HLA-B*4403) in position 156 of the alpha 2 domain, causing strong alloreactivity in vivo. In order to study the involvement of peptides in this phenomenon, the peptide motifs of the two subtypes were determined from natural peptide pools using Edman degradation. The motif was found to be essentially identical for HLA-B*4402 and -B*4403, with a strong predominance for Glu at position 2, Tyr or Phe at positions 9 and 10 and hydrophobic residues, especially Met, at position 3. Two individual naturally processed ligands of HLA-B*4403 were sequenced and shown to be derived from intracellularly expressed proteins found in protein sequence databases. The sequence of these natural peptide ligands conform well to the determined motif. These data will allow the prediction of HLA-B44 restricted peptide epitopes from viral and tumor antigens of known amino acid sequences. Moreover, they indicate that the peptide repertoire presented by HLA-B*4402 and -B*4403 is very similar, suggesting that the strong alloresponse between these two subtypes is not due to presentation of a different set of self peptides.  相似文献   

11.
Using pair-wise comparison of aligned nucleotide sequences of distinct and complete human MHC class I molecules, we have constructed triangular tables to study the similarities and differences of various a1 (exon 2) and a2 (exon 3) region sequences. There are two HLA-A (A*6901 and A*6601) and 13 HLA-B (B*4201, B*8101, B*4102, B*4801, B*4007, B*4001, B*4802, Dw53, B*4406, B*4402, B*3901, B*1514 and B*3702) sequences that have identical a1 sequences with other known MHC class I molecules, while their a2 sequences are the same as those of different ones. Of these 15, A*6901, B*4001 and B*4802 have previously been suggested as the results of recombination between A*6801 and A*0201, B*4101 and B*8101, and B*4801 and B*3501, respectively. However, many other sequences can also be used to generate them by recombination. Furthermore, their reciprocal products have never been identified. Thus, gene conversion has subsequently been suggested as an alternative. Another possible genetic mechanism for generating these nucleotide sequence similarities can be assortment, or that some gene segments can be duplicated or multiplicated to be used in different human MHC class I molecules. Interestingly, this genetic mechanism is probably absent for the generation of different mouse MHC class I molecules.  相似文献   

12.
TAP1 and TAP2 molecules are involved in the transport of peptides prior to their association with class I molecules and are mandatory for efficient antigen presentation. To investigate whether loss of expression of TAP1 or TAP2 is a likely mechanism of immune escape in malignant melanoma, TAP1 and TAP2 mRNA was analyzed by RT-PCR in 39 melanoma cell lines expressing at least 2 of the known melanoma-associated antigens, tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1, gp100, MAGE-1 and MAGE-3. All 39 cell lines expressed both TAP1 and TAP2 at the mRNA level. To investigate other factors potentially involved in immune escape, the expression of LMP2, LMP7, HLA class I molecules, beta2-microglobulin (beta2m) and specific HLA-A alleles was evaluated by RT-PCR and FACS analyses. All 39 cell lines expressed LMP2, LMP7 and beta2m. A single cell line (FM37) had lost the expression of class I molecules, and this same cell line showed loss of expression of the HLA-A2 heavy chain. No cell lines showed loss of expression of the HLA-A1 heavy chain. Based on our studies of in vitro established cell lines, loss of TAP1/2 or LMP2/7 expression does not appear to be a common mechanism of immune escape in malignant melanoma.  相似文献   

13.
HLA-B27 is associated with the etiology of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and acute anterior uveitis (AAU). Transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) 1 and TAP2 polymorphism influences the range of peptide presented by HLA class I molecules. In this report, contribution of TAP polymorphism to the susceptibility to AS and AAU was studied in HLA-B27-positive Japanese individuals. Patients were classified into three groups: 16 AS patients, 14 AAU patients and 22 patients with both AS and AAU. Twelve HLA-B27-positive healthy individuals were included as a control. TAP polymorphism was detected by PCR-RFLP methods. Significant differences in frequencies of TAP1 alleles were not found between patient groups. None of the TAP2 frequencies showed increased or decreased frequencies compared with HLA-B27-positive healthy controls. In comparison with a random Japanese control, TAP2D allele frequency was significantly increased in the AAU group, but failed to reach a significant level in a group consisting of the AAU-only patients and the patients with both AS and AAU. All of the patient groups were noted to have a significantly increased prevalence of the TAP2H allele as compared to random controls; however, the higher frequency of this allele was detected in HLA-B27 healthy controls as well. These observations suggest a linkage disequilibrium between TAP2D, TAP2H and HLA-B27 in Japanese.  相似文献   

14.
We show that a rapidly executable computational procedure provides the basis for a predictive understanding of antigenic peptide side chain specificity, for binding to class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. The procedure consists of a combined search to identify the joint conformations of peptide side chains and side chains comprising the MHC pocket, followed by conformational selection, using a target function, based on solvation energies and modified electrostatic energies. The method was applied to the B pocket region of five MHC molecules, which were chosen to encompass the full range of specificities displayed by anchors at peptide position 2. These were a medium hydrophobic residue (Leu or Met) for HLA-A*0201, a basic residue (Arg or Lys) for HLA-B*2705; a small hydrophobic residue (Val) for HLA-A*6801, an acidic residue (Glu) for HLA-B*4001 and a bulky residue (Tyr) for H-2K(d). The observed anchors are correctly predicted in each case. The agreement for HLA-B40 and H-2K(d) is especially promising, since their structures have not yet been determined experimentally. Because the experimental determination of motifs by elution is difficult and these calculations take only hours on a high speed workstation, the results open the possibility of routine determination of motifs computationally.  相似文献   

15.
HLA-B27 molecules are interesting because of their strong association with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and reactive arthritis (ReA). A pathogenetic role for these molecules has been postulated in presenting a putative "arthritogenic" peptide to CD8 T cells. The HLA-B*2709 subtype, although differing by a single amino acid (His116-->Asp116) from the widespread and strongly AS-associated subtype HLA-B*2705, is not found in patients. Since residue 116 interacts with the C terminus of the peptide, it is possible that the two subtypes differ in their antigen-presenting features. We show here that CD8 T cells can distinguish the two HLA-B27 subtypes when presenting a same epitope derived from Epstein-Barr virus-latent membrane protein 2. Moreover, alanine scanning mutagenesis analysis revealed that the peptide residues relevant for such recognition are different depending on whether HLA-B*2705 or -B*2709 molecules present the epitope. These results give support to the belief that functional differences determined by subtype-specific polymorphisms can have a pathogenetic relevance and open up a new scenario where subtle modifications within the peptide/HLA ligand might be responsible for the differential association between HLA-B27 subtypes and spondyloarthropathies.  相似文献   

16.
An important mammalian defence strategy against intracellular pathogens is the presentation of cytoplasmically derived short peptides by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules to cytotoxic T lymphocytes. MHC class I molecules assemble in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with chaperones, including calnexin and calreticulin, before binding to the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP). We show here that the thiol-dependent reductase ERp57 (also known as ER60 protease) is involved in MHC class I assembly. ERp57 co-purified with the rat TAP complex (comprising TAP1 and TAP2), and associated with MHC class I molecules at an early stage in their biosynthesis. This association was sensitive to castanospermine, which inhibits the processing of glycoproteins. Human MHC class I molecules were also found to associate with ERp57. We conclude that ERp57 is a newly identified component of the MHC class I pathway, and that it appears to interact with MHC class I molecules before they associate with TAP.  相似文献   

17.
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules are trimolecular complexes consisting of a heavy chain (HC), beta2-microglobulin (beta2m), and a short peptide. Assembly of MHC class I molecules is thought to take place early during biosynthesis. Deficiency in either beta2m or the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) results in accumulation of class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this study, we have assessed peptide binding to TAP and MHC class I in purified microsomes derived from wild-type, TAP1(-/-), beta2m-/-, and TAP1/beta2m-/- mice using a cross-linkable H-2Kb-binding peptide. This enabled us to study the influence of an intact TAP complex and beta2m on peptide binding to MHC class I and to analyze the stepwise interaction of peptide with TAP and MHC class I molecules. Peptide bound both immature and mature (terminally glycosylated) class I molecules in intact as well as permeabilized microsomes from wild-type mice. Efficient peptide binding to immature class I molecules was also detected in permeabilized microsomes from TAP1(-/-) mice. In contrast, no peptide binding to beta2m-free HC was detected in permeabilized microsomes from beta2m-/- and TAP1/beta2m-/- mice. However, the addition of exogenous beta2m allowed peptide binding to class I in permeabilized beta2m-/- and TAP1/beta2m-/- microsomes. These results demonstrate that a preformed class I HC middle dotbeta2m heterodimer is necessary for efficient peptide binding under physiological conditions. The observed peptide binding to class I in permeabilized TAP1(-/-) microsomes further suggests that TAP1 is not required for peptide binding to class I in the ER. Finally, kinetic studies allowed the demonstration of a stepwise binding of peptide to TAP, subsequent translocation across the ER membrane, a step that required ATP hydrolysis, and binding of peptide to preformed class I HC.beta2m heterodimers.  相似文献   

18.
The assembly of newly synthesized MHC class I molecules within the endoplasmic reticulum and their association with the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is a process involving the chaperones calnexin and calreticulin. Using peptide mapping by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry to identify a new component, we now introduce a third molecular chaperone, the thiol-dependent reductase ER-60 (ERp57/GRP58/ERp61/HIP-70/Q2), into this process. ER-60 is found in MHC class I heavy chain complexes with calnexin that are generated early during the MHC class I assembly pathway. The thiol reductase activity of ER-60 raises the possibility that ER-60 is involved in the disulfide bond formation within heavy chains. In addition, ER-60 is part of the late assembly complexes consisting of MHC class I, tapasin, TAP, calreticulin and calnexin. In a beta2-microglobulin (beta2m)-negative mouse cell line, S3, ER-60-calnexin-heavy chain complexes are shown to bind to TAP, suggesting that beta2m is not required for the association of MHC class I heavy chains with TAP.  相似文献   

19.
We describe the recipient of a marrow graft from an HLA-serologically identical unrelated donor from whom highly potent host-reactive CTL of donor origin were isolated in association with acute GVHD. Extensive sequence and biochemical analysis of the HLA complex of this donor and recipient revealed several disparities in class I and class II HLA with the potential to be recognized by T cells from the donor or the host. The donor-derived CTL exclusively recognized a class I HLA difference associated with HLA-B44. Nucleotide sequencing of donor and recipient cells revealed that the patient possessed the HLA-B*4402 allele recognized by IEF as B44.2 while the donor possessed HLA-B*4403 (IEF variant B44.1). These alleles differ at one amino acid residue located at position 156 in the alpha 2 domain. The donor-derived CTL were shown to be specific for B44.2 by blocking studies and by the lysis of five different B44.2+ unrelated cell lines, two of which were confirmed by sequencing to be homozygous for B*4402. A host-specific difference involving a HLA-DRB1 allele was not recognized by the CTL, neither did HLA differences unique to the donor HLA-B*4403 and HLA-DQ8 elicit a host response. These data show that certain HLA disparities may be tolerated at the same time that other disparities elicit a potent immunologic response. The chemical nature of the difference, its structural impact, as well as the conditions of transplant appear to influence the type of response which occurs.  相似文献   

20.
Juvenile arthritis (JA) is a term that covers a number of different disease entities, of which only three present with significant Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) associations. (1) Pauciarticular JA with late onset and a strong male proponderance is associated with HLA-B27 and represents the group of juvenile spondyloarthropathies related to adult ankylosing spondylitis. (2) Early onset pauciarticular JA with a preponderance of females and a frequent occurance of chronic iridocyclitis and the frequent presence of anti-nuclear antibodies is associated with alleles from three different regions of the HLA system: HLA-A2, which shows a very strong correlation with early age of onset; DR8, DR11 and DR12 as well as DQA1*0401, *0501, *0601 and finally DPB1*0201. These alleles show no linkage disequilibrium in the control population. (3) Rheumatoid factor positive polyarticular JA is associated, as is adult rheumatoid arthritis, with DR4. Concerning the possible mechanisms of the immunopathogenesis, it is speculated that the normal function of HLA molecules, namely the presentation of antigenic peptides, plays a major role. Data collected on HLA associations in early onset pauciarticular JA have been interpreted as indicating that alleles of the DQA1 locus (*0401, *0501, *0601) are probably responsible for presenting the hypothetical arthritogenic peptides. It is speculated that the pathogenic process includes the presentation of HLA-A2 or HLA-DPB1*0201 derived peptides presented by DQ molecules. It is clearly stated that typing for HLA alleles has very little or no importance for clinical diagnosis and prognosis.  相似文献   

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