Publication | Open Access
Endosomal aspartic proteinases are required for invariant-chain processing.
182
Citations
34
References
1994
Year
Protein SecretionClass Ii AlphaHla ImmunogeneticsImmunologyMolecular BiologyAntigen ProcessingCysteine ProteinaseProtein ExpressionEndocytic PathwayEndosomal Aspartic ProteinasesProteomicsCell SignalingProtein FunctionBiochemistryCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsCell BiologySignal TransductionCellular EnzymologyNatural SciencesImmunoglobulin ECellular BiochemistryMedicine
Immunogenic peptides are displayed in the context of class II histocompatibility proteins on the surface of antigen-presenting cells. Class II alpha and beta subunits bind the invariant chain (I-chain), a transmembrane glycoprotein which must dissociate prior to peptide presentation. Proteolytic release of I-chain in an acidic compartment is followed by class II alpha beta surface expression. Two distinct proteinases sequentially catalyze I-chain dissociation in B-lymphoblastoid cell lines. An aspartic proteinase initiates processing whereas a cysteine proteinase catalyzes the final stages of I-chain release. Inactivation of these enzymes prevents class II alpha beta maturation, demonstrating that acidic proteinases are essential for the generation of functional class II complexes. I-chain processing was localized to a dense endosomal compartment, suggesting this is the first site where class II alpha beta become accessible to peptides. I-chain fragments complexed with class II alpha beta accumulate in dense endosomes of B-lymphoblastoid cells treated with cysteine proteinase inhibitors. A signal for endosomal retention/targeting present in the cytoplasmic tail of these fragments may sequester class II alpha beta in this compartment until I-chain processing is complete.
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