| Literature DB >> 26636107 |
Hiroaki Kimura1, Patrizio Caturegli2, Masafumi Takahashi1, Koichi Suzuki3.
Abstract
The immunoproteasome is a highly efficient proteolytic machinery derived from the constitutive proteasome and is abundantly expressed in immune cells. The immunoproteasome plays a critical role in the immune system because it degrades intracellular proteins, for example, those of viral origin, into small proteins. They are further digested into short peptides to be presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. In addition, the immunoproteasome influences inflammatory disease pathogenesis through its ability to regulate T cell polarization. The immunoproteasome is also expressed in nonimmune cell types during inflammation or neoplastic transformation, supporting a role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases and neoplasms. Following the success of inhibitors of the constitutive proteasome, which is now an established treatment modality for multiple myeloma, compounds that selectively inhibit the immunoproteasome are currently under active investigation. This paper will review the functions of the immunoproteasome, highlighting areas where novel pharmacological treatments that regulate immunoproteasome activity could be developed.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26636107 PMCID: PMC4617869 DOI: 10.1155/2015/541984
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Structure of the constitutive proteasome and the immunoproteasome. The constitutive proteasome is composed of two pairs of inner β-rings, two pairs of outer α-rings, and two caps (19S regulatory complexes). Inflammatory cytokines induce the expression of the five subunits (iβ1 [LMP2], iβ2 [LMP10], iβ5 [LMP7], PA28α, and PA28β), which assemble on the proteasome core to create the immunoproteasome. When the induced subunits replace the β subunits and 19S regulatory complex, the resulting multiprotein complex is called the immunoproteasome.
Human immunoproteasome subunits.
| Subunit | Proteolytic activity | Molecular weight | Chromosome | Alternative name |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| i | Chymotrypsin-like | 23.3 kD | 6p21.3 | PSMB9, LMP2 |
| i | Undefined | 28.9 kD | 16q22.1 | PSMB10, LMP10, and MECL-1 |
| i | Chymotrypsin-like | 30.4 kD | 6p21.3 | PSMB8, LMP7 |
| PA28 | N/A | 28.7 kD | 14q11.2 | |
| PA28 | N/A | 27.4 kD | 14q11.2 |
Figure 2The immunoproteasome as a potential therapeutic target. The immunoproteasome plays an important role in immune responses, including processing viral proteins for antigen presentation, T cell differentiation, and macrophage activation. Recent studies have identified that the immunoproteasome is present in nonimmune cells, where it regulates cell differentiation and function.
Human PSMB8 (LMP7 gene) alleles.
| Mutation | Influenced cytokines | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Thr 75 Met | IL-6, IL-8, and IFN- | [ |
| Cys 135 termination | Unknown | [ |
| Gly 197 Val | IL-6 | [ |
| Gly 201 Val | IL-6, IL-10 | [ |