[PDF][PDF] A major role for TPPII in trimming proteasomal degradation products for MHC class I antigen presentation

E Reits, J Neijssen, C Herberts, W Benckhuijsen… - Immunity, 2004 - cell.com
E Reits, J Neijssen, C Herberts, W Benckhuijsen, L Janssen, JW Drijfhout, J Neefjes
Immunity, 2004cell.com
Intracellular proteins are degraded by the proteasome, and resulting peptides surviving
cytoplasmic peptidase activity can be presented by MHC class I molecules. Here, we show
that intracellular aminopeptidases degrade peptides within seconds, almost irrespectively of
amino acid sequence. N-but not C-terminal extension increases the half-life of peptides until
they are 15 amino acids long. Beyond 15 amino acids, peptides are exclusively trimmed by
the peptidase TPPII, which displays both exo-and endopeptidase activity. Surprisingly, most …
Abstract
Intracellular proteins are degraded by the proteasome, and resulting peptides surviving cytoplasmic peptidase activity can be presented by MHC class I molecules. Here, we show that intracellular aminopeptidases degrade peptides within seconds, almost irrespectively of amino acid sequence. N- but not C-terminal extension increases the half-life of peptides until they are 15 amino acids long. Beyond 15 amino acids, peptides are exclusively trimmed by the peptidase TPPII, which displays both exo- and endopeptidase activity. Surprisingly, most proteasomal degradation products are handled by TPPII before presentation by MHC class I molecules. We define three distinct proteolytic activities during antigen processing in vivo. Proteasome-generated peptides relevant for antigen presentation are mostly 15 amino acids or longer. These require TPPII activity for further trimming before becoming substrates for other peptidases and MHC class I. The heterogeneous pool of aminopeptidases will process TPPII products into MHC class I peptides and beyond.
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