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Publication : Hydrophobicity as a driver of MHC class I antigen processing.

First Author  Huang L Year  2011
Journal  EMBO J Volume  30
Issue  8 Pages  1634-44
PubMed ID  21378750 Mgi Jnum  J:171252
Mgi Id  MGI:4949041 Doi  10.1038/emboj.2011.62
Citation  Huang L, et al. (2011) Hydrophobicity as a driver of MHC class I antigen processing. EMBO J 30(8):1634-44
abstractText  The forces that drive conversion of nascent protein to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I-restricted peptides remain unknown. We explored the fundamental property of overt hydrophobicity as such a driver. Relocation of a membrane glycoprotein to the cytosol via signal sequence ablation resulted in rapid processing of nascent protein not because of the misfolded luminal domain but because of the unembedded transmembrane (TM) domain, which serves as a dose-dependent degradation motif. Dislocation of the TM domain during the natural process of endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) similarly accelerated peptide production, but in the context of markedly prolonged processing that included nonnascent species. These insights into intracellular proteolytic pathways and their selective contributions to MHC class I-restricted peptide supply, may point to new approaches in rational vaccine design.
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