| Literature DB >> 10593509 |
B G Barisas1, W F Wade, T M Jovin, D Arndt-Jovin, D A Roess.
Abstract
Antigen presentation by MHC class II molecules can be enhanced by paraformaldehyde fixation of antigen-presenting cells prior to assay. This treatment might be expected to aggregate membrane proteins and thus stabilize and strengthen transient protein-protein interactions involved in intercellular cooperation. Lateral and rotational dynamics of the MHC class II antigen I-Ad on A20 cells fixed with various concentrations of paraformaldehyde were examined by fluorescence photobleaching recovery and time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy, respectively. Probes were tetramethylrhodamine and erythrosin conjugates of MKD6 Fab fragments. Increasing concentrations of paraformaldehyde led to a progressive increase in the limiting anisotropy of I-Ad at 4 degrees C from the value of 0.042 for untreated cells, indicative of large aggregate formation, while leaving the rotational correlation time of 29 micros unchanged, a measure of the unperturbed molecule. On the other hand, the translational diffusion constants decreased from approximately 2x10(-10) cm2 s(-1), while the fractional recovery remained unchanged at about 40-50%. Taken together, these results suggest that fixation crosslinks class II molecules to each other or to other membrane proteins into structures large enough (>500,000 kDa) to diffuse translationally with perceptibly size-dependent rates. The fixation effects on both class II rotation and lateral diffusion were half-maximal at paraformaldehyde concentrations of approximately 0.2%. Possible relations between the biological effector functions of class II and the physical sizes of fixation-induced aggregates are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10593509 DOI: 10.1016/s0161-5890(99)00091-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Immunol ISSN: 0161-5890 Impact factor: 4.407