TY - JOUR
T1 - Selection of immunodominant epitopes during antigen processing is hierarchical
AU - Sadegh-Nasseri, Scheherazade
AU - Kim, Ae Ryon
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Drs. Peter Cresswell and Laura Ciaccia West for providing recombinant murine GILT and advice. We also wish to thank all members of SS-N lab, past and present, for contributing to different aspects of the work described here, and Robin Welsh for the critical reading of the manuscript. Supported by grants from the United States National Institute of Health (NIH), R01AI063764, R21AI101987, and 1R01AI120634 to SS-N.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2019/9
Y1 - 2019/9
N2 - MHC II proteins present processed antigens to CD4 + T cells through a complex set of events and players that include chaperons and accessory molecules. Antigen processing machinery is optimized for the selection of the best fitting peptides, called ‘immunodominant epitopes’, in the MHC II groove to which, specific CD4 + T cells respond and differentiate into memory T cells. However, due to the complexity of antigen processing, understanding the parameters that lead to immunodominance has proved difficult. Moreover, immunodominance of epitopes vary, depending on multiple factors that include; simultaneous processing of multiple proteins, involvement of multiple alleles of MHC II that can bind to the same antigen, or competition among several suitable epitopes on a single protein antigen. The current dogma assumes that once an antigenic determinant is selected under a specific condition, it would emerge immunodominant wherever it is placed. Here we will discuss some established parameters that contribute to immunodominance as well as some new findings, which demonstrate that slight changes to antigen structure can cause a complete shift in epitope selection during antigen processing and distort the natural immunodominant epitope.
AB - MHC II proteins present processed antigens to CD4 + T cells through a complex set of events and players that include chaperons and accessory molecules. Antigen processing machinery is optimized for the selection of the best fitting peptides, called ‘immunodominant epitopes’, in the MHC II groove to which, specific CD4 + T cells respond and differentiate into memory T cells. However, due to the complexity of antigen processing, understanding the parameters that lead to immunodominance has proved difficult. Moreover, immunodominance of epitopes vary, depending on multiple factors that include; simultaneous processing of multiple proteins, involvement of multiple alleles of MHC II that can bind to the same antigen, or competition among several suitable epitopes on a single protein antigen. The current dogma assumes that once an antigenic determinant is selected under a specific condition, it would emerge immunodominant wherever it is placed. Here we will discuss some established parameters that contribute to immunodominance as well as some new findings, which demonstrate that slight changes to antigen structure can cause a complete shift in epitope selection during antigen processing and distort the natural immunodominant epitope.
KW - Cathepsins
KW - Cell free antigen processing
KW - Epitope hierarchy
KW - HLA-DR
KW - Immunodominance
KW - Structural constraints
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U2 - 10.1016/j.molimm.2018.08.011
DO - 10.1016/j.molimm.2018.08.011
M3 - Article
C2 - 30146122
AN - SCOPUS:85052069833
SN - 0161-5890
VL - 113
SP - 115
EP - 119
JO - Immunochemistry
JF - Immunochemistry
ER -