These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Formation of two peptide/MHC II isomers is catalyzed differentially by HLA-DM. Author: Belmares MP, Busch R, Mellins ED, McConnell HM. Journal: Biochemistry; 2003 Jan 28; 42(3):838-47. PubMed ID: 12534297. Abstract: Major histocompatability class II proteins are transmembrane alphabeta-heterodimers that present peptides to T-cells. MHC II may bind exogenous peptides directly at the cell surface. Alternatively, peptides derived from processing of endosomal protein may bind to MHC II in endosomal compartments. There, HLA-DM catalyzes the formation of peptide/MHC complexes, which are then transported to the cell surface. Here we report evidence that the peptide Ii CLIP 81-104 binds to DR*0404 in two alternate registries, whose dissociation rates, while kinetically indistinguishable at pH 5.3 and 37 degrees C, are kinetically resolved in the presence of HLA-DM. In one registry isomer, CLIP Met 91 is placed in the N-terminal P1 pocket of DR*0404, and peptide dissociation is readily catalyzed by HLA-DM. In a second proposed registry, likely with CLIP Leu 97 in the P1 pocket, the complex is substantially less sensitive to HLA-DM catalysis. Without HLA-DM, or at pH 7, the fraction of each isomer formed in solution is relatively insensitive to the duration of incubation with peptide. However, with HLA-DM, the fraction of the DM-insensitive isomer is dramatically influenced by peptide incubation time. The mechanism of isomer formation appears to be determined by the HLA-DM-modified relative association to the two registries, followed by HLA-DM-catalyzed dissociation of each isomer and rebinding, leading to a final isomer composition determined by these kinetic constants. Intramolecular isomer interconversion does not appear to be involved. The behavior of these complexes may provide a model for peptide editing by DM in endosomes.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]