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Publication : MHC class II region encoding proteins related to the multidrug resistance family of transmembrane transporters.

First Author  Deverson EV Year  1990
Journal  Nature Volume  348
Issue  6303 Pages  738-41
PubMed ID  1979660 Mgi Jnum  J:28149
Mgi Id  MGI:75776 Doi  10.1038/348738a0
Citation  Deverson EV, et al. (1990) MHC class II region encoding proteins related to the multidrug resistance family of transmembrane transporters [see comments]. Nature 348(6303):738-41
abstractText  The T-cell immune response is directed against antigenic peptide fragments generated in intracellular compartments, the cytosol or the endocytic system. Peptides derived from cytosolic proteins, usually of biosynthetic origin, are presented efficiently to T-cell receptors by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules, with which they assemble, probably in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the absence of recognizable N-terminal signal sequences, such cytosolic peptides must be translocated across the ER membrane by a novel mechanism. Genes apparently involved in the normal assembly and transport of class I molecules may themselves be encoded in the MHC. Here we show that one of these, the rat cim gene, maps to a highly polymorphic part of the MHC class II region encoding two novel members of the family of transmembrane transporters related to multidrug resistance. Other members of this family of transporter proteins are known to be capable of transporting proteins and peptides across membranes independently of the classical secretory pathway. Such molecules are credible candidates for peptide pumps that move fragments of antigenic proteins from the cytosol into the ER.
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