Impaired assembly results in the accumulation of multiple HLA-C heavy chain folding intermediates.
J Immunol
; 175(10): 6651-8, 2005 Nov 15.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-16272320
Class I MHC H chains assemble with beta2-microglobulin (beta2m) and are loaded with peptide Ags through multiple folding steps. When free of beta2m, human H chains react with Abs to linear epitopes, such as L31. Immunodepletion and coimmunoprecipitation experiments, performed in this study, detected a preferential association of L31-reactive, beta2m-free H chains with calnexin in beta2m-defective cells, and with calreticulin and TAP in beta2m-expressing cells. In beta2m-defective cells, the accumulation of calnexin-bound H chains stoichiometrically exceeded their overall accumulation, a finding that supports both chaperoning preferences and distinct sorting abilities for different class I folds. No peptide species, in a mass range compatible with that of the classical class I ligands, could be detected by mass spectrometry of acidic eluates from L31-reactive HLA-Cw1 H chains. In vitro assembly experiments in TAP-defective T2 cells, and in cells expressing an intact Ag-processing machinery, demonstrated that L31 H chains are not only free of, but also unreceptive to, peptides. L31 and HC10, which bind nearly adjacent linear epitopes of the alpha1 domain alpha helix, reciprocally immunodepleted free HLA-C H chains, indicating the existence of a local un-/mis-folding involving the N-terminal end of the alpha1 domain alpha helix and peptide-anchoring residues of the class I H chain. Thus, unlike certain murine free H chains, L31-reactive H chains are not the immediate precursors of conformed class I molecules. A model inferring their precursor-product relationships with other known class I intermediates is presented.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Antígenos HLA-C
Tipo de estudo:
Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Animals
/
Humans
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2005
Tipo de documento:
Article