1. Academic Validation
  2. An essential function of tapasin in quality control of HLA-G molecules

An essential function of tapasin in quality control of HLA-G molecules

  • J Biol Chem. 2003 Apr 18;278(16):14337-45. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M212882200.
Boyoun Park 1 Kwangseog Ahn
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Graduate School of Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul 136-701, Korea.
Abstract

Tapasin plays an important role in the quality control of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I assembly, but its precise function in this process remains controversial. Whether tapasin participates in the assembly of HLA-G has not been studied. HLA-G, an MHC class Ib molecule that binds a more restricted set of Peptides than class Ia molecules, is a particularly interesting molecule, because during assembly, it recycles between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the cis-Golgi until it is loaded with a high affinity peptide. We have taken advantage of this unusual trafficking property of HLA-G and its requirement for high affinity Peptides to demonstrate that a critical function of tapasin is to transform class I molecules into a high affinity, peptide-receptive form. In the absence of tapasin, HLA-G molecules cannot bind high affinity Peptides, and an abundant supply of Peptides cannot overcome the tapasin requirement for high affinity peptide loading. The addition of tapasin renders HLA-G molecules capable of loading high affinity Peptides and of transporting to the surface, suggesting that tapasin is a prerequisite for the binding of high-affinity ligands. Interestingly, the "tapasin-dependent" HLA-G molecules are not empty in the absence of tapasin but are in fact associated with suboptimal Peptides and continue to recycle between the ER and the cis-Golgi. Together with the finding that empty HLA-G heterodimers are strictly retained in the ER and degraded, our data suggest that MHC class I molecules bind any available Peptides to avoid ER-mediated degradation and that the Peptides are in turn replaced by higher affinity Peptides with the aid of tapasin.

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