MHC class I-restricted presentation of maleylated protein binding to scavenger receptors

P Bansal, P Mukherjee, SK Basu, A George… - The Journal of …, 1999 - journals.aai.org
P Bansal, P Mukherjee, SK Basu, A George, V Bal, S Rath
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
Pathways for loading exogenous protein-derived peptides on MHC class I are thought to be
present mainly in monocyte-lineage cells and to involve phagocytosis-or macropinocytosis-
mediated antigenic leakage into either cytosol or extracellular milieu to give peptide access
to MHC class I. We show that maleylation of OVA enhanced its presentation to an OVA-
specific MHC class I-restricted T cell line by both macrophages and B cells. This enhanced
presentation involved uptake through receptors of scavenger receptor (SR)-like ligand …
Abstract
Pathways for loading exogenous protein-derived peptides on MHC class I are thought to be present mainly in monocyte-lineage cells and to involve phagocytosis-or macropinocytosis-mediated antigenic leakage into either cytosol or extracellular milieu to give peptide access to MHC class I. We show that maleylation of OVA enhanced its presentation to an OVA-specific MHC class I-restricted T cell line by both macrophages and B cells. This enhanced presentation involved uptake through receptors of scavenger receptor (SR)-like ligand specificity, was TAP-1-independent, and was inhibited by low levels (2 mM) of ammonium chloride. No peptide loading of bystander APCs by maleylated (maleyl) OVA-pulsed macrophages was detected. Demaleylated maleyl-OVA showed enhanced MHC class I-restricted presentation through receptor-mediated uptake and remained highly sensitive to 2 mM ammonium chloride. However, if receptor binding of maleyl-OVA was inhibited by maleylated BSA, the residual presentation was relatively resistant to 2 mM ammonium chloride. Maleyl-OVA directly introduced into the cytosol via osmotic lysis of pinosomes was poorly presented, confirming that receptor-mediated presentation of exogenous maleyl-OVA was unlikely to involve a cytosolic pathway. Demaleylated maleyl-OVA was well presented as a cytosolic Ag, consistent with the dependence of cytosolic processing on protein ubiquitination. Thus, receptor-specific delivery of exogenous protein Ags to APCs can result in enhanced MHC class I-restricted presentation, suggesting that the exogenous pathway of peptide loading for MHC class I may be a constitutive property dependent mainly on the quantity of Ag taken up by APCs.
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