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Pikaart Michael - - 2011
An exercise using simple paper strips to illustrate protein helical and sheet secondary structures is presented. Drawing on the rich historical context of the use of physical models in protein biochemistry by early practitioners, in particular Linus Pauling, the purpose of this activity is to cultivate in students a hands-on, ...
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Polacco Benjamin J - - 2011
The identification of peptides that result from post-translational modifications (PTM) is critical for understanding normal pathways of cellular regulation as well as identifying damage from, or exposures to xenobiotics, i.e. the exposome. However, due to their low abundance in proteomes, effective detection of modified peptides by mass spectrometry (MS) typically ...
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Kotsiou Eleni - - 2011
Abstract Stable presentation of peptide epitope by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules is a prerequisite for the efficient expansion of CD8(+) T cells. The construction of single-chain MHC class I molecules in which the peptide, β(2)-microglobulin, and MHC heavy chain are all joined together via flexible linkers increases ...
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Wolf Benjamin J - - 2011
MHC class I molecules present short peptides, usually 8-10 amino acids in length, to CD8(+) T cells. These peptides are typically generated from full-length endogenously synthesized proteins degraded by the antigen processing machinery of the target cell. However, exogenous proteins, whether originating from intracellular bacteria or parasites or via phagocytosis ...
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Vatner Ralph E - - 2010
The tailless complex polypeptide-1 ring complex (TRiC) is a eukaryotic heat shock protein 60 (hsp60) molecule that has been shown to bind N-terminally extended precursors of OVA-derived SIINFEKL in vivo. Binding of peptides to TRiC was shown to be essential for their presentation on MHC class I. We demonstrate in ...
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Cho Sunglim - - 2011
Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules bind antigens in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and deliver them to the cell surface for immune surveillance of viruses and tumors. Whereas key steps of MHC-I assembly and its acquisition of peptides in the ER are relatively well defined, little is known about ...
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Dolan Brian P - - 2010
Following viral infection, cells rapidly present peptides from newly synthesized viral proteins on MHC class I molecules, likely from rapidly degraded forms of nascent proteins. The nature of these defective ribosomal products (DRiPs) remains largely undefined. Using inhibitors of RNA polymerase II that block influenza A virus neuraminidase (NA) mRNA ...
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van Nispen tot Pannerden Hezder E - - 2010
DC (dendritic cells) continuously capture pathogens and process them into small peptides within the endolysosomal compartment, the MIIC (MHC class II-containing compartment). In MIICs peptides are loaded on to MHC class II and rapidly redistributed to the cell surface. This redistribution is accompanied by profound changes of the MIICs into ...
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Harndahl Mikkel - - 2011
Efficient presentation of peptide-MHC class I complexes to immune T cells depends upon stable peptide-MHC class I interactions. Theoretically, determining the rate of dissociation of a peptide-MHC class I complexes is straightforward; in practical terms, however, generating the accurate and closely timed data needed to determine the rate of dissociation ...
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Kilpeläinen Miia - - 2011
Peptide molecules can improve the treatment of a number of pathological conditions, but due to their physicochemical properties, their delivery is very challenging. The study aim was to determine whether nanostructured porous silicon could sustain the release and prolong the duration of action of a model peptide Melanotan II (MTII). ...
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Kumar Narendra - - 2010
Identification of MHC binding peptides is essential for understanding the molecular mechanism of immune response. However, most of the prediction methods use motifs/profiles derived from experimental peptide binding data for specific MHC alleles, thus limiting their applicability only to those alleles for which such data is available. In this work ...
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Douat-Casassus Céline - - 2010
There is growing interest in using tumor associated antigens presented by class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) proteins as cancer vaccines. As native peptides are poorly stable in biological fluids, researchers have sought to engineer synthetic peptidomimetics with greater biostability. Here, we demonstrate that antigenic peptidomimetics of the Melan-A/MART-1(26(27L)-35) melanoma ...
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Cárdenas Constanza - - 2010
Knowledge of the 3D structure of the binding groove of major histocompatibility (MHC) molecules, which play a central role in the immune response, is crucial to shed light into the details of peptide recognition and polymorphism. This work reports molecular modeling studies aimed at providing 3D models for two class ...
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Huang Jim C - - 2011
There has been considerable interest in statistical approaches that leverage the large volumes of experimental data to predict the binding of Major Histocompatibility Complex class I (MHC-I) molecules to peptides. Here we present our method for averaging together multiple predictors for MHC-peptide binding, where given a particular MHC molecule, a ...
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Levasseur Anthony - - 2010
Understanding the nature of MHC class I presentation preferences is a challenging prospect. Large sets of peptide-MHC-class I complexes have been screened for their binding affinities and recent studies have shown that HLA-A share a preference for binding peptides derived from pathogens; however, no mechanism explaining the observed preferences has ...
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Calis Jorg J A - - 2010
Distinguishing self from nonself and pathogenic from nonpathogenic is a fundamental challenge to the immune system but whether adaptive immune systems use pathogen-specific signatures to achieve this is largely unknown. By investigating the presentation of large sets of viruses and bacteria on MHC class I molecules, we analyze whether MHC-I ...
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Van Hateren A - - 2010
Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) proteins protect the host from intracellular pathogens and cellular abnormalities through the binding of peptide fragments derived primarily from intracellular proteins. These peptide-MHC complexes are displayed at the cell surface for inspection by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Here we reveal how MHC I molecules ...
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Hansen Ted H - - 2010
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules can be engineered as single chain trimers (SCTs) that sequentially incorporate all three subunits of the fully assembled proteins, namely peptide, β2 microglobulin, and heavy chain. SCTs have been made with many different MHC-peptide complexes and are used as novel diagnostic and therapeutic ...
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Shen Zu T - - 2010
T cell cross-reactivity describes the phenomenon whereby a single T cell can recognize two or more different peptide antigens presented in complex with MHC proteins. Cross-reactive T cells have previously been characterized at the population level by cytokine secretion and MHC tetramer staining assays, but single-cell analysis is difficult or ...
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Murshid Ayesha - - 2010
Ag cross presentation is an important mechanism for CD8(+) T cell activation by APCs. We have investigated mechanisms involved in heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) chaperone-mediated cross presentation of OVA-derived Ags. Hsp90-OVA peptide complexes bound to scavenger receptor expressed by endothelial cells (SREC-I) on the surface of APCs. SREC-I then ...
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Leddon Scott A - - 2010
The molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie allorecognition of MHC class II molecules have been the subject of much debate and experimentation in recent decades. In this review, we discuss several aspects of MHC class II structure, peptide acquisition and TcR-MHC-peptide interactions that have particular relevance to recognition of cells ...
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Jiang Wei - - 2010
Class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC-II) proteins govern stimulation of adaptive immunity by presenting antigenic peptides to CD4+ T lymphocytes. Many allelic variants of MHC-II exist with implications in peptide presentation and immunity; thus, high-throughput experimental tools for rapid and quantitative analysis of peptide binding to MHC-II are needed. Here, ...
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Borbulevych Oleg Y - - 2010
Presentation of peptides by class I or class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules is required for the initiation and propagation of a T cell-mediated immune response. Peptides from the Wilms Tumor 1 transcription factor (WT1), upregulated in many hematopoetic and solid tumors, can be recognized by T cells and ...
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Sadegh-Nasseri Scheherazade - - 2010
T cells bearing alphabeta receptors recognize antigenic peptides bound to class I and class II glycoproteins encoded in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Cytotoxic and helper T cells respond respectively to peptide antigens derived from endogenous sources presented by MHC class I, and exogenous sources presented by MHC II, on ...
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Agudelo W A - - 2010
The development of an adequate immune response against pathogens is mediated by molecular interactions between different cell types. Among them, binding of antigenic peptides to the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) molecule expressed on the membrane of antigen presenting cells (APCs), and their subsequent recognition by the T cell receptor have ...
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Placental leucine aminopeptidase efficiently generates mature antigenic peptides in vitro but in ...
Georgiadou Dimitra - - 2010
All three members of the oxytocinase subfamily of M1 aminopeptidases, endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1), ERAP2, and placental leucine aminopeptidase (PLAP), also known as insulin-regulated aminopeptidase, have been implicated in the generation of MHC class I-presented peptides. ERAP1 and 2 trim peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum for direct presentation, whereas ...
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Rinderknecht Cornelia H - - 2010
Several MHC class II alleles linked with autoimmune diseases form unusually low-stability complexes with class II-associated invariant chain peptides (CLIP), leading us to hypothesize that this is an important feature contributing to autoimmune pathogenesis. We recently demonstrated a novel post-endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperoning role of the CLIP peptides for the ...
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Haroon Nigil - - 2010
Endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1) and the closely related ERAP2 are involved in the final trimming of peptides within the endoplasmic reticulum for presentation by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. ERAP1 was found to be associated with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) in a genome-wide association study of nonsynonymous single ...
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Hoppes Rieuwert - - 2010
T cell epitopes are peptides, for instance derived from foreign, mutated or overexpressed proteins, that are displayed by MHC molecules on the cell surface and that are recognized by T lymphocytes. Knowledge of the identity of epitopes displayed by MHC molecules is of high value for diagnostic purposes and for ...
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Lundegaard Claus - - 2010
SUMMARY: Over the last decade, in silico models of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I pathway have developed significantly. Before, peptide binding could only be reliably modelled for a few major human or mouse histocompatibility molecules; now, high-accuracy predictions are available for any human leucocyte antigen (HLA) -A or ...
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Solomon Christopher - - 2010
Of the two rhesus macaque subspecies used for AIDS studies, the Simian immunodeficiency virus-infected Indian rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) is the most established model of HIV infection, providing both insight into pathogenesis and a system for testing novel vaccines. Despite the Chinese rhesus macaque potentially being a more relevant model ...
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Hu Xihao - - 2010
As antigenic peptides binding to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules is the prerequisite of cellular immune responses, an accurate computational predictor will be of great benefit to biologists and immunologists for understanding the underlying mechanism of immune recognition as well as facilitating the process of epitope mapping and vaccine design. ...
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Wu Ying - - 2010
The magnitude of CTL-mediated immunity response is highly dependent on the density of antigenic peptide-MHC I complexes at the cell surface. In this study, we adopt a novel strategy to promote the surface level of specific peptide-MHC I complexes. The strategy combines the inhibition of transporter associated with antigen processing ...
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Kropp Laura E - - 2010
Cellular peptides generated by proteasomal degradation of proteins in the cytosol and destined for presentation by MHC class I (MHC-I) are associated with several chaperones. Heat shock proteins 70, 90, and the TCP-1 ring complex have been implicated as important cytosolic players for chaperoning these peptides. In this study, we ...
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Rinderknecht Cornelia H - - 2010
DM catalyses class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP) release, edits the repertoire of peptides bound to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules, affects class II structure, and thereby modulates binding of conformation-sensitive anti-class II antibodies. Here, we investigate the ability of DM to enhance the cell surface binding of ...
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Nielsen Morten - - 2010
SUMMARY: Major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecules sample peptides from the extracellular space, allowing the immune system to detect the presence of foreign microbes from this compartment. To be able to predict the immune response to given pathogens, a number of methods have been developed to predict peptide-MHC binding. ...
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Stranzl Thomas - - 2010
Reliable predictions of immunogenic peptides are essential in rational vaccine design and can minimize the experimental effort needed to identify epitopes. In this work, we describe a pan-specific major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I epitope predictor, NetCTLpan. The method integrates predictions of proteasomal cleavage, transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) ...
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Ayyoub Maha - - 2010
MHC-peptide tetramers have become essential tools for T-cell analysis, but few MHC class II tetramers incorporating peptides from human tumor and self-antigens have been developed. Among limiting factors are the high polymorphism of class II molecules and the low binding capacity of the peptides. Here, we report the generation of ...
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Lee Yvonne - - 2010
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC ) epitope presentation is needed for robust adaptive immune responses. Core peptide binding motifs for class I and class II MHC are 8-10 amino acids long, containing two or more "anchor" residues. These binding motifs define epitope anchor amino acid content and spacing, and knowledge of ...
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Cortese Marc S - - 2010
The E5 oncoprotein of human papillomavirus type 16 downregulates surface MHC Class I and interacts with the heavy chain of the MHC complex via the first hydrophobic domain, believed to form the first helical transmembrane region (TM1) of E5. TM1 contains 4 equally spaced di-leucine (LL1-LL4) motifs. Di-leucine motifs have ...
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Lev Avital - - 2010
MHC class I molecules function to display peptides generated from cellular and pathogen gene products for immune surveillance by CD8(+) T cells. Cells typically express approximately 100,000 class I molecules, or approximately 1 per 30,000 cellular proteins. Given "one protein, one peptide" representation, immunosurveillance would be heavily biased toward the ...
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Liu Changzhen - - 2010
Calreticulin (CRT) is an important chaperone protein, comprising an N-domain, P-domain and C-domain. It is involved in the folding and assembly of multi-component protein complexes in the endoplasmic reticulum, and plays a critical role in MHC class I antigen processing and presentation. To dissect the functional role and molecular basis ...
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Infantes Susana - - 2010
In the classical MHC class I Ag presentation pathway, antigenic peptides derived from viral proteins by multiple proteolytic cleavages are transported to the endoplasmic reticulum lumen and are then exposed to ami-nopeptidase activity. In the current study, a long MHC class I natural ligand recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes was ...
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Blanchard Nicolas - - 2010
The MHC class I (MHC-I) molecules ferry a cargo of peptides to the cell surface as potential ligands for CD8(+) cytotoxic T cells. For nearly 20 years, the cargo has been described as a collection of short 8-9 mer peptides, whose length and sequences were believed to be primarily determined ...
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Leonhardt Ralf M - - 2010
The function of the peptide-loading complex (PLC) is to facilitate loading of MHC class I (MHC I) molecules with antigenic peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum and to drive the selection of these ligands toward a set of high-affinity binders. When the PLC fails to perform properly, as frequently observed in ...
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Chapman Daniel C - - 2010
Class I molecules of the major histocompatibility complex play a vital role in cellular immunity, reporting on the presence of viral or tumor-associated antigens by binding peptide fragments of these proteins and presenting them to cytotoxic T cells at the cell surface. The folding and assembly of class I molecules ...
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Loh Portia Gloria - - 2010
Translation termination is mediated by two classes of peptide release factors (RFs). Class I RF recognizes the stop codons and triggers the release of the polypeptide chain. Class II RF in prokaryotes promotes dissociation of class I RFs from the ribosome whereas in eukaryotes it acts cooperatively with class I ...
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Perreault Claude - - 2010
Under steady-state conditions, cell surface major histocompatibility complex (MHC) I molecules are associated with self-peptides collectively referred to as the self-MHC I immunopeptidome (SMII). The SMII regulates all key events that occur during the lifetime of CD8 T cells in the thymus and in the periphery. The SMII derives mainly ...
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Macdonald Isabel K - - 2010
T cell receptor (TCR) recognition of peptide-MHC class I (pMHC) complexes is a crucial event in the adaptive immune response to pathogens. Peptide epitopes often display a strong dominance hierarchy, resulting in focusing of the response on a limited number of the most dominant epitopes. Such T cell responses may ...
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Praveen P V K - - 2010
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein tapasin is essential for the loading of high-affinity peptides onto MHC class I molecules. It mediates peptide editing, i.e. the binding of peptides of successively higher affinity until class I molecules pass ER quality control and exit to the cell surface. The molecular mechanism of ...
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