AI Article Synopsis

  • Major histocompatibility class I (MHC-I) molecules are crucial for presenting peptides on cell surfaces, helping the immune system detect infected or cancerous cells.
  • TAPBPR, a molecule involved in the MHC-I antigen processing pathway, affects how peptides are loaded onto HLA-I by mediating their exchange, specifically through a flexible loop region.
  • Research findings indicate that TAPBPR shapes the peptide repertoire for different HLA-I allotypes and performs its function in both peptide filtering and loading without needing the editing loop to keep HLA-I in an open state.

Article Abstract

Background: Major histocompatibility class I (MHC-I, human leukocyte antigen [HLA]-I in humans) molecules present small fragments of the proteome on the cell surface for immunosurveillance, which is pivotal to control infected and malignant cells. Immunogenic peptides are generated and selected in the MHC-I antigen processing and presentation pathway. In this pathway, two homologous molecules, tapasin and TAPBPR, optimise the MHC-I peptide repertoire that is ultimately presented at the plasma membrane. Peptide exchange on HLA-I by human TAPBPR involves the flexible loop region K22-D35, with the leucine at position 30 (L30) involved in mediating peptide dissociation. However, our understanding of the exact molecular mechanisms governing TAPBPR-mediated peptide exchange on HLA-I allotypes remains incomplete.

Methods: Here, in-depth re-analyses of published immunopeptidomics datasets was used to further examine TAPBPR peptide editing activity and mechanism of action on HLA-I. The role of the TAPBPR editing loop in opening the HLA-I peptide binding groove was assessed using a molecular dynamics simulation.

Results: We show that TAPBPR shapes the peptide repertoire on HLA-A, -B and -C allotypes. The TAPBPR editing loop was not essential to allow HLA-I to adopt an open state. L30 in the TAPBPR editing loop was typically sufficient to mediate peptide repertoire restriction on the three HLA-I allotypes expressed by HeLa cells. TAPBPR was also able to load peptides onto HLA-I in a loop-dependent manner.

Conclusions: These results unify the previously hypothesised and mechanisms of TAPBPR-mediated peptide exchange, with the former involved in peptide filtering and the latter in peptide loading.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11126903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.20738.1DOI Listing

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