Ml. Hedley et al., ASSEMBLY AND PEPTIDE BINDING OF MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY COMPLEX CLASS-II HETERODIMERS IN AN IN-VITRO TRANSLATION SYSTEM, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 91(22), 1994, pp. 10479-10483
In vitro transcription/translation of HLA-DR1 cDNAs in the presence of
microsomal membranes was used to study the association of major histo
compatibility complex class II molecules with peptide and invariant ch
ain (Ii) in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). HLA-DR alpha and HLA-DR be
ta submits assembled into SDS-unstable heterodimers in the absence of
exogenous peptide. The inclusion of synthetic peptides during the alph
a/beta assembly process promoted their conversion to SDS-resistant het
erodimers. Addition of Ii RNA during the translation of HLA-DR alpha a
nd HLA-DR beta RNAs resulted in the formation of alpha/beta/Ii complex
es. Peptide binding by class II molecules was detected even when exces
s Ii was present during alpha/beta assembly. These findings indicate t
hat peptides can bind alpha/beta heterodimers in the ER microenvironme
nt and suggest that peptides derived from cytosolic proteins that are
presented by class II molecules at the cell surface may have bound to
HLA-DR in the ER.