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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded nuclear antigen (EBNA)1 is thought to escape cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) recognition through either self-inhibition of synthesis or by blockade of proteasomal degradation by the glycine-alanine repeat (GAr) domain. Here we show that EBNA1 has a remarkably varied cell type-dependent stability. However, these different degradation rates do not correspond to the level of major histocompatibility complex class I-restricted presentation of EBNA1 epitopes. In spite of the highly stable expression of EBNA1 in B cells, CTL epitopes derived from this protein are efficiently processed and presented to CD8+ T cells. Furthermore, we show that EBV-infected B cells can readily activate EBNA1-specific memory T cell responses from healthy virus carriers. Functional assays revealed that processing of these EBNA1 epitopes is
proteasome
and
transporter associated with antigen processing
dependent. We also show that the endogenous presentation of these epitopes is dependent on the newly synthesized protein rather than the long-lived stable EBNA1. Based on these observations, we propose that defective ribosomal products, not the full-length antigen, are the primary source of endogenously processed CD8+ T cell epitopes from EBNA1.
...
PMID:Endogenous presentation of CD8+ T cell epitopes from Epstein-Barr virus-encoded nuclear antigen 1. 1514 40
The
proteasome
is a multi-protein complex that degrades cellular proteins as well as foreign proteins destined for antigen presentation. The latter function involves the immunoproteasome, in which several
proteasome
subunits are exchanged for gamma-interferon-induced subunits. The
transporter associated with antigen processing
(
TAP
) transports
proteasome
-generated peptides across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) prior to presentation on the plasma membrane. We demonstrate interactions between the cytoplasmic domains of
TAP
subunits and subunits of both the
proteasome
and the immunoproteasome, suggesting direct targeting of antigenic peptides to the ER via a
TAP
-
proteasome
association. We also show interaction between one of the cytoplasmic domains of P-glycoprotein and a
proteasome
subunit, but not the corresponding immunoproteasome subunit, suggesting a possible role for P-glycoprotein in the transport of
proteasome
-derived peptides.
...
PMID:Cytoplasmic domains of the transporter associated with antigen processing and P-glycoprotein interact with subunits of the proteasome. 1548 52
The distribution of gene variants of the antigen processing proteins
transporter associated with antigen processing
type 1 (TAP1) and
proteasome
subunit beta type 9 (PSMB9) and of their shared bidirectional promoter was assessed in children with either mild or severe malaria. The genetic study was performed on samples collected during a longitudinal study on malariometric indices in an area hyperendemic for Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Gabon. The allele frequencies of the genes did not differ between the mild and the severe malaria groups. The distributions of alleles among children with distinct phenotypes of severe malaria were similar. A negative association of hypoglycaemia with the PSMB9 promoter variant PSMB9-R was found (odds ratio 0.01; chi2=12.1; P<0.0005; Pc<0.03). The promoter allele TAP1-446G was associated with hyperparasitaemia and absence of hypoglycaemia. TAP1, PSMB9, and TAP1/PSMB9 promoter alleles were in strong linkage disequilibrium. DNA sequencing of the TAP1/PSMB9 promoter region revealed a previously unrecognized single nucleotide polymorphism 455 bp upstream of the TAP1 transcription start site.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms of transporter associated with antigen processing type 1 (TAP1), proteasome subunit beta type 9 (PSMB9) and their common promoter in African children with different manifestations of malaria. 1568 87
We have used bee venom phospholipase A2 as a vector to load human dendritic cells ex vivo with a major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I-restricted epitope fused to its C-terminus. The fusion protein bound to human monocyte-derived dendritic cells and was internalized into early endosomes. In vitro immunization experiments showed that these dendritic cells were able to generate specific CD8 T cell lines against the epitope carried by the fusion protein. Cross-presentation did not require
proteasome
,
transporter associated with antigen processing
, or endosome proteases, but required newly synthesized MHC molecules. Comparison of the antigen presentation pathway observed in this study to that followed by other toxins used as vectors is discussed.
...
PMID:Cross-presentation of a CMV pp65 epitope by human dendritic cells using bee venom PLA2 as a membrane-binding vector. 1575 57
Epitopes presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules are selected by a multi-step process. Here we present the first computational prediction of this process based on in vitro experiments characterizing proteasomal cleavage, transport by the
transporter associated with antigen processing
(
TAP
) and MHC class I binding. Our novel prediction method for proteasomal cleavages outperforms existing methods when tested on in vitro cleavage data. The analysis of our predictions for a new dataset consisting of 390 endogenously processed MHC class I ligands from cells with known
proteasome
composition shows that the immunological advantage of switching from constitutive to immunoproteasomes is mainly to suppress the creation of peptides in the cytosol that
TAP
cannot transport. Furthermore, we show that proteasomes are unlikely to generate MHC class I ligands with a C-terminal lysine residue, suggesting processing of these ligands by a different protease that may be tripeptidyl-peptidase II (TPPII).
...
PMID:Modeling the MHC class I pathway by combining predictions of proteasomal cleavage, TAP transport and MHC class I binding. 1586 1
It has been shown that exogenous antigens can access the MHC class I pathway of professional antigen-processing cells. However, details as to how the MHC class I-peptide complex forms in the presentation pathway are still poorly understood. Here we used MHC class I-peptide-specific antibodies to investigate the formation and intracellular location of class I-peptide complexes in macrophages. We observed that the formation of class I-peptide complexes occurs within a few hours and lasts for another few hours on the cell surface of macrophages following loading with filamentous phage particles. The class I-peptide complexes in the process were co-localized with MHC class II molecules and endocytic system markers. Moreover, endosomal compartments containing class I-peptide complexes were found within intracellular organelles stained by DiOC6 and calnexin. In addition, the cross-presentation of phage particles was
transporter associated with antigen processing
(
TAP
)-dependent and sensitive to
proteasome
inhibitors and NH(4)Cl. These data suggest that endocytosed phage particles may be processed and cross-presented in organelles positive for phagosome and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) markers via a classical ER MHC class I loading mechanism.
...
PMID:Cross-presentation of phage particle antigen in MHC class II and endoplasmic reticulum marker-positive compartments. 1594 Jun 71
Rational design of epitope-driven vaccines is a key goal of immunoinformatics. Typically, candidate selection relies on the prediction of MHC-peptide binding only, as this is known to be the most selective step in the MHC class I antigen processing pathway. However, proteasomal cleavage and transport by the
transporter associated with antigen processing
(
TAP
) are essential steps in antigen processing as well. While prediction methods exist for the individual steps, no method has yet offered an integrated prediction of all three major processing events. Here we present WAPP, a method combining prediction of proteasomal cleavage,
TAP
transport, and MHC binding into a single prediction system. The proteasomal cleavage site prediction employs a new matrix-based method that is based on experimentally verified proteasomal cleavage sites. Support vector regression is used for predicting peptides transported by
TAP
. MHC binding is the last step in the antigen processing pathway and was predicted using a support vector machine method, SVMHC. The individual methods are combined in a filtering approach mimicking the natural processing pathway. WAPP thus predicts peptides that are cleaved by the
proteasome
at the C terminus, transported by
TAP
, and show significant affinity to MHC class I molecules. This results in a decrease in false positive rates compared to MHC binding prediction alone. Compared to prediction of MHC binding only, we report an increased overall accuracy and a lower rate of false positive predictions for the HLA-A*0201, HLA-B*2705, HLA-A*01, and HLA-A*03 alleles using WAPP. The method is available online through our prediction server at http://www-bs.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/WAPP
...
PMID:Integrated modeling of the major events in the MHC class I antigen processing pathway. 1598 83
In their adaptation to the immune system in vertebrates, viruses have been forced to evolve elaborate strategies for evading the host's immune response. To ensure life-long persistence in the host, herpes viruses, adenoviruses and retroviruses have exploited multiple cellular pathways for their purpose, including the class I antigen-processing machinery. Attractive and prominent targets for viral attacks are the
proteasome
complex, the
transporter associated with antigen processing
, and MHC class I molecules. This review briefly outlines the different mechanisms of viral interference with the antigen-presentation pathway.
...
PMID:Viral evasion of the MHC class I antigen-processing machinery. 1608 62
Defects in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I-restricted antigen presentation are frequently observed in human cancers and result in escape of tumors from cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) immune surveillance in mice. Here, we show the existence of a unique category of CTLs that can prevent this escape. The CTLs target an alternative repertoire of peptide epitopes that emerge in MHC class I at the surface of cells with impaired function of
transporter associated with antigen processing
(
TAP
), tapasin or the
proteasome
. These peptides, although derived from self antigens such as the commonly expressed Lass5 protein (also known as Trh4), are not presented by normal cells. This explains why they act as immunogenic neoantigens. The newly discovered epitopes can be exploited for immune intervention against processing-deficient tumors through adoptive T-cell transfer or peptide vaccination.
...
PMID:Selective cytotoxic T-lymphocyte targeting of tumor immune escape variants. 1655 Jan 90
The immune defences of our organism against pathogens and malignant transformation rely to a large extent on surveillance by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. This surveillance in turn depends on the antigen processing system, which provides peptide samples of the cellular protein composition to MHC (major histocompatibility complex) class I molecules displayed on the cell surface. To continuously and almost in real time provide a representative sample of the array of proteins synthesized by the cell, this system exploits some fundamental pathways of the cellular metabolism, with the help of several dedicated players acting exclusively in antigen processing. Thus, a key element in the turnover of cellular proteins, protein degradation by cytosolic
proteasome
complexes, is exploited as source of peptides, by recruiting a minor fraction of the produced peptides as ligands for MHC class I molecules. These peptides can be further processed and adapted to the precise binding requirements of allelic MHC class I molecules by enzymes in the cytosol and endoplasmic reticulum. The latter compartment is equipped with several dedicated players helping peptide assembly with class I molecules. These include the TAP (
transporter associated with antigen processing
) membrane transporter pumping peptides into the ER, and tapasin, a chaperone with a structure similar to MHC molecules that tethers class I molecules awaiting peptide loading to the TAP transporter, and mediates optimization of MHC class I ligand by a still somewhat mysterious mechanism. Additional "house-keeping" chaperones that are known to act in concert in ER quality control, assist and control correct folding, oxidation and assembly of MHC class I molecules. While this processing system handles exclusively endogenous cellular proteins in most cells, dendritic cells employ one or several special pathways to shuttle exogenous, internalized proteins into the system, in a process referred to as cross-presentation. Deciphering the cell biological mechanism creating the link between the endosomal and secretory pathways that enables cross-presentation is one of the challenges faced by contemporary research in the field of MHC class I antigen processing.
...
PMID:[Processing of MHC class I presented antigens]. 1696 47
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