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Structural and dynamic studies of TAPBPR and Tapasin reveal the mechanism of peptide loading of MHC-I molecules

Authors :
Kannan Natarajan
Jiansheng Jiang
David H. Margulies
Source :
Current opinion in immunology. 64
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Major histocompatibility complex encoded class I (MHC-I) molecules bind a broad spectrum of peptides generated in the cytoplasm and encountered during protein folding and maturation in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). For cell surface expression and recognition by T cell receptors (TCR) and natural killer (NK) receptors, MHC-I require loading with high affinity peptides. Peptide optimization is catalyzed by either of two pathways. The first is via the peptide-loading complex (PLC) which consists of the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP)1/TAP2 heterodimer, tapasin (an ER resident chaperone, also known as TAP-binding protein (TAPBP)), ERp57 (an oxidoreductase), and calreticulin (a sugar-binding chaperone) [1]. The second pathway depends on TAP-binding protein, related (TAPBPR), a PLC-independent chaperone, that is similar in amino acid sequence and structure to tapasin [2]. Until recently, mechanistic understanding of how the PLC or TAPBPR influences MHC-I peptide loading has been hampered by a lack of detailed structural information on the modification of the MHC-I peptide-binding site by chaperone interactions. Here we review recent functional, structural, and computational dynamic studies of tapasin and TAPBPR that contribute to a vivid description of the molecular changes in MHC-I molecules that accompany tapasin or TAPBPR interaction.

Details

ISSN :
18790372
Volume :
64
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current opinion in immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f17558413aa64072c8a56afb4b2402a