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- Proteasomal degradation within endocytic organelles mediates antigen cross-presentation.
Proteasomal degradation within endocytic organelles mediates antigen cross-presentation.
Citation | “Proteasomal Degradation Within Endocytic Organelles Mediates Antigen Cross-Presentation.”. The Embo Journal, p. e99266. . |
Center | Yale University |
Author | Debrup Sengupta, Morven Graham, Xinran Liu, Peter Cresswell |
Keywords | MHC-I, Rab-GTPase, antigen cross-presentation, proteasomes |
Abstract |
During MHC-I-restricted antigen processing, peptides generated by cytosolic proteasomes are translocated by the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) into the endoplasmic reticulum, where they bind to newly synthesized MHC-I molecules. Dendritic cells and other cell types can also generate MHC-I complexes with peptides derived from internalized proteins, a process called cross-presentation. Here, we show that active proteasomes within cross-presenting cell phagosomes can generate these peptides. Active proteasomes are detectable within endocytic compartments in mouse bone marrow-derived dendritic cells. In TAP-deficient mouse dendritic cells, cross-presentation is enhanced by the introduction of human β -microglobulin, which increases surface expression of MHC-I and suggests a role for recycling MHC-I molecules. In addition, surface MHC-I can be reduced by proteasome inhibition and stabilized by MHC-I-restricted peptides. This is consistent with constitutive proteasome-dependent but TAP-independent peptide loading in the endocytic pathway. Rab-GTPase mutants that restrain phagosome maturation increase proteasome recruitment and enhance TAP-independent cross-presentation. Thus, phagosomal/endosomal binding of peptides locally generated by proteasomes allows cross-presentation to generate MHC-I-peptide complexes identical to those produced by conventional antigen processing. |
Year of Publication |
2019
|
Journal |
The EMBO journal
|
Volume |
38
|
Issue |
16
|
Number of Pages |
e99266
|
Date Published |
12/2019
|
ISSN Number |
1460-2075
|
DOI |
10.15252/embj.201899266
|
Alternate Journal |
EMBO J.
|
PMID |
31271236
|
PMCID |
PMC6694219
|
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