| Literature DB >> 30666258 |
Sebastian Montealegre1,2,3, Peter M van Endert1,2,3.
Abstract
Major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) molecules are glycoproteins that display peptide epitopes at the cell surface of nucleated cells for recognition by CD8+ T cells. Like other cell surface receptors, MHC class I molecules are continuously removed from the surface followed by intracellular degradation or recycling to the cell surface, in a process likely involving active quality control the mechanism of which remains unknown. The molecular players and pathways involved in internalization and recycling have previously been studied in model cell lines such as HeLa. However, dendritic cells (DCs), which rely on a specialized endocytic machinery that confers them the unique ability to "cross"-present antigens acquired by internalization, may use distinct MHC I recycling pathways and quality control mechanisms. By providing MHC I molecules cross-presenting antigens, these pathways may play an important role in one of the key functions of DCs, priming of T cell responses against pathogens and tumors. In this review, we will focus on endocytic recycling of MHC I molecules in various experimental conditions and cell types. We discuss the organization of the recycling pathway in model cell lines compared to DCs, highlighting the differences in the recycling rates and pathways of MHC I molecules between various cell types, and their putative functional consequences. Reviewing the literature, we find that conclusive evidence for significant recycling of MHC I molecules in primary DCs has yet to be demonstrated. We conclude that endocytic trafficking of MHC class I in DCs remains poorly understood and should be further studied because of its likely role in antigen cross-presentation.Entities:
Keywords: Arf6; Rab11; antigen presentation; cross-presentation; dendritic cell; endosome; major histocompatibility; recycling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666258 PMCID: PMC6330327 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.03098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1MHC I recycling pathways in non-professional APCs. Fully conformed and sub-optimally loaded class I molecules partition in different domains at the cell surface. Fully conformed class I molecules are internalized by CIE in vesicles decorated by Arf6-GTP and reach EEA1+/Rab5+ sorting endosomes. From here, they can follow an early endosomal recycling route regulated by Rab35 or enter into the slow recycling pathway. Upon arrival to the ERC, fully conformed molecules are incorporated into tubular recycling endosomes, which are formed by the proteins MICAL-L1, EHD-1, Rab8, Rab22, and Arf6. Vesicles derived from the tubular recycling endosomes finally fuse with the plasma membrane with the help of Arf6, delivering fully conformed class I molecules to the cell surface. Upon internalization, sub-optimally loaded class I molecules reach sorting EEA-1+/Rab5+ endosomes; the role of Arf6 in this is not known. From there, sub-optimally loaded class I molecules travel to degradative compartments, in which peptides and β2m will dissociate from the heavy chain, promoting the degradation of most molecules. However, a fraction may be able to recycle to the cell surface using a late endosomal recycling pathway independent of Rab11. Lines with single arrowheads represent internalization steps, whereas lines with multiple arrowheads represent recycling steps. Note that the ER is not represented.
Published data on MHC-I recycling.
| HLA-A/B/C | EBV A46 B lymphoblastoid | Surface biotinylation | 100 | 16 min | ( | First demonstration that MHC I proteins to recycle upon internalization. |
| H-2Db | HeLa cells | CELISA | 50 | 15 min | ( | Recycling observed upon overexpression of EHD-1. |
| HLA-A/B/C | HeLa cells | mAb uptake- Microscopy | 30 | 60 min | ( | Rab22 overexpression decreases recycling to 50% relative to untransfected cells. Rab22 mutant overexpression reduces recycling to 15-25% relative to untransfected cells. |
| H-2Ld, folded | L-Ld cells | mAb uptake-FACS | 30 | 20 min | ( | Recycling of unfolded H-2Ld was not detected with this assay. However, the authors could detect it in Mahmutefendić et al. ( |
| H-2Ld, folded | L-Ld cells | mAb uptake-FACS | 25–30 | 20 min | ( | Recycling of several folded MHC I molecules was evaluated. The authors did not observe recycling of unfolded molecules. |
| H-2Ld, folded | HeLa-Ld | mAb uptake-FACS | ||||
| HLA-CW6 | J26Cw6 | mAb uptake-FACS | ||||
| HLA-B7 | J26B7 | mAb uptake-FACS | ||||
| HLA-A/B/C | HeLa cells | mAb uptake-microscopy | 40 | 3 h | ( | The absence of the enzyme diacylglycerol kinase alpha inhibits recycling of folded human class I molecules. |
| H-2Ld, unfolded | L-Ld cells | mAb uptake-FACS | 15–20 | 30 min | ( | To observe recycling of unfolded H-Ld from late endosomes, the authors accumulated antibody-antigen complexes for 3h in late endosomal compartments, and then proceeded to evaluate recycling. |
| H-2Kb, folded | JAWS DCs | mAb uptake-FACS | 40 | 40 min | ( | First quantitative demonstration of MHC I recycling in a DC-like cell line. Knocking down Rab22 reduces recycling efficiency to 10% of the internalized pool. |
The superscript letter indicates the allele of the gene indicated by the capital letter preceding it - no explanation required for any immunologist.
Figure 2MHC I recycling in pAPCs. Fully conformed and sub-optimally loaded class I molecules are internalized and reach sorting endosomes presumably by CIE. It is not known whether Arf6 is involved for internalization of one or both conformers. Under resting conditions, fully conformed class I molecules reside in a post-ER compartment positive for Rab11/Rab22/VAMP8. Class I molecules might be provided to this compartment from the sorting endosomes, from the secretory pathway using TGN-derived vesicles positive for Syntaxin-6/Rab14, or from lysosomes. Given that the origin of the MHC I molecules in this compartment remains to be clarified, we prefer the term “storage compartment” to “ERC.” Upon stimulation by TLR ligands, fully conformed class I molecules are recruited from the storage compartment to phagosomes positive for Rab3b/c, Rab27, and pSNAP23, and then travel to the cell surface via an uncharacterized mechanism. Peptide exchange may occur in the phagosome although formal proof is lacking. Tubular recycling endosomes bearing MICAL-L1 have been observed upon stimulation with LPS, but class I molecules have not been detected so far within the tubules. Lines with single arrowheads represent internalization and lines with multiple arrowheads recycling steps. Dashed lines represent hypothetical transport steps. Note that the ER is not represented.