Exosome-driven antigen transfer for MHC class II presentation facilitated by the receptor binding activity of influenza hemagglutinin

JS Testa, GS Apcher, JD Comber… - The Journal of …, 2010 - journals.aai.org
JS Testa, GS Apcher, JD Comber, LC Eisenlohr
The Journal of Immunology, 2010journals.aai.org
The mechanisms underlying MHC class I-restricted cross-presentation, the transfer of Ag
from an infected cell to a professional APC, have been studied in great detail. Much less is
known about the equivalent process for MHC class II-restricted presentation. After infection
or transfection of class II-negative donor cells, we observed minimal transfer of a
proteasome-dependent “class I-like” epitope within the influenza neuraminidase
glycoprotein but potent transfer of a classical, H-2M–dependent epitope within the …
Abstract
The mechanisms underlying MHC class I-restricted cross-presentation, the transfer of Ag from an infected cell to a professional APC, have been studied in great detail. Much less is known about the equivalent process for MHC class II-restricted presentation. After infection or transfection of class II-negative donor cells, we observed minimal transfer of a proteasome-dependent “class I-like” epitope within the influenza neuraminidase glycoprotein but potent transfer of a classical, H-2M–dependent epitope within the hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein. Additional experiments determined transfer to be exosome-mediated and substantially enhanced by the receptor binding activity of incorporated HA. Furthermore, a carrier effect was observed in that incorporated HA improved exosome-mediated transfer of a second membrane protein. This route of Ag presentation should be relevant to other enveloped viruses, may skew CD4+ responses toward exosome-incorporated glycoproteins, and points toward novel vaccine strategies.
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