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Antigen processing by nardilysin and thimet oligopeptidase generates cytotoxic T cell epitopes

Authors :
Peter M. Kloetzel
Annik Prat
Paul F. van Swieten
Arnoud H. de Ru
Arend Mulder
Jill Brooks
Jan W. Drijfhout
Cornelis J. M. Melief
Kallol Ray
Ferry Ossendorp
Peter A. van Veelen
Hermen S. Overkleeft
Willemien E. Benckhuijsen
Thorbald van Hall
Sandra A. Bres-Vloemans
Birgitta Tomkinson
Selina Khan
Louis B. Hersh
Ilias I.N. Doxiadis
David W. Rodgers
Nadine van Montfoort
Jan H. Kessler
K. Martin Chow
Kees L. M. C. Franken
Jacques Neefjes
Annette Paschen
Ulrike Seifert
Sylvie Le Gall
Source :
Nature Immunology, 12(1), 45, Nature Immunology, 12(1), 45-53
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) recognize peptides presented by HLA class I molecules on the cell surface. The C terminus of these CTL epitopes is considered to be produced by the proteasome. Here we demonstrate that the cytosolic endopeptidases nardilysin and thimet oligopeptidase (TOP) complemented proteasome activity. Nardilysin and TOP were required, either together or alone, for the generation of a tumor-specific CTL epitope from PRAME, an immunodominant CTL epitope from Epstein-Barr virus protein EBNA3C, and a clinically important epitope from the melanoma protein MART-1. TOP functioned as C-terminal trimming peptidase in antigen processing, and nardilysin contributed to both the C-terminal and N-terminal generation of CTL epitopes. By broadening the antigenic peptide repertoire, nardilysin and TOP strengthen the immune defense against intracellular pathogens and cancer.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Immunology, 12(1), 45, Nature Immunology, 12(1), 45-53
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....301f43f8446029ad2610edc9a07b417e