| Literature DB >> 20665142 |
Leandro M Castro1, Denise A Berti, Lilian C Russo, Verônica Coelho, Fábio C Gozzo, Vitor Oliveira, Emer S Ferro.
Abstract
Cells produce and use peptides in distinctive ways. In the present report, using isotope labeling plus semi-quantitative mass spectrometry, we evaluated the intracellular peptide profile of TAP1/β2m⁻(/)⁻ (transporter associated with antigen-processing 1/ß2 microglobulin) double-knockout mice and compared it with that of C57BL/6 wild-type animals. Overall, 92 distinctive peptides were identified, and most were shown to have a similar concentration in both mouse strains. However, some peptides showed a modest increase or decrease (~2-fold), whereas a glycine-rich peptide derived from the C-terminal of neurogranin (KGPGPGGPGGAGGARGGAGGGPSGD) showed a substantial increase (6-fold) in TAP1/β2m⁻(/)⁻ mice. Thus, TAP1 and β2microglobulin have a small influence on the peptide profile of neuronal tissue, suggesting that the presence of peptides derived from intracellular proteins in neuronal tissue is not associated with antigens of the class I major histocompatibility complex. Therefore, it is possible that these intracellular peptides play a physiological role.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20665142 PMCID: PMC2977002 DOI: 10.1208/s12248-010-9224-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS J ISSN: 1550-7416 Impact factor: 4.009