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The pathway of cross-presentation is influenced by the particle size of phagocytosed antigen

The pathway of cross-presentation is influenced by the particle size of phagocytosed antigen
The pathway of cross-presentation is influenced by the particle size of phagocytosed antigen
Cross-presentation is the presentation by MHC class I of antigenic peptides from exogenous proteins that have been internalised and processed by professional antigen presenting cells, eg. dendritic cells (DC). We have investigated the influence of particle size and antigen load on cross-presentation following antigen delivery on microspheres (MS). Cross-presentation from small particles (0.8 ?m) is sensitive to proteasome inhibition and the blockade of ER-resident MHC class I complex export, whereas cross-presentation from larger particles (aggregated clumps of 0.8 ?m MS) is resistant to these antagonists. This observation may have been overlooked previously, due to the heterogeneity of particle size and MS uptake in unsorted DC populations. Whilst larger particles carry more antigen, we show that antigen load does not influence the cross-presentation pathway utilised. Whereas early endosome autoantigen 1 (EEA1) could be observed in all phagosomes, we observed endoplasmic reticulum SNARE of 24 kDa (ERS24) and cathepsin S in association with 3.0 ?m and aggregated 0.8 ?m MS, but not individual 0.8 ?m MS. A potential mechanism underlying our observations may be the activation of ?-catenin by disruption of E-cadherin-mediated adhesion. Activated ?-catenin was detected in the cytoplasm of cells after phagocytosis of MS (highest levels for the largest particles). We propose that particle size can direct the use of different pathways for the cross-presentation of an identical antigen. Furthermore, these pathways have differing yields of MHC class I-peptide complexes, which is an important variable in designing vaccination strategies for maximal antigen expression and CD8(+) T cell priming.
antigen cross-presentation, dendritic cell, mhc class I, microspheres, phagocytosis
0019-2805
163-175
Mant, Alexandra
63319e45-deeb-45ad-a30d-e05b42052a0d
Chinnery, Fay
57bc237a-8d07-4af1-b469-e801dff5715b
Elliott, Tim
16670fa8-c2f9-477a-91df-7c9e5b453e0e
Williams, Anthony P.
973ff46f-46f1-4d7c-b27d-0f53221e4c44
Mant, Alexandra
63319e45-deeb-45ad-a30d-e05b42052a0d
Chinnery, Fay
57bc237a-8d07-4af1-b469-e801dff5715b
Elliott, Tim
16670fa8-c2f9-477a-91df-7c9e5b453e0e
Williams, Anthony P.
973ff46f-46f1-4d7c-b27d-0f53221e4c44

Mant, Alexandra, Chinnery, Fay, Elliott, Tim and Williams, Anthony P. (2012) The pathway of cross-presentation is influenced by the particle size of phagocytosed antigen. Immunology, 136 (2), 163-175. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2567.2012.03558.x). (PMID:22260486)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cross-presentation is the presentation by MHC class I of antigenic peptides from exogenous proteins that have been internalised and processed by professional antigen presenting cells, eg. dendritic cells (DC). We have investigated the influence of particle size and antigen load on cross-presentation following antigen delivery on microspheres (MS). Cross-presentation from small particles (0.8 ?m) is sensitive to proteasome inhibition and the blockade of ER-resident MHC class I complex export, whereas cross-presentation from larger particles (aggregated clumps of 0.8 ?m MS) is resistant to these antagonists. This observation may have been overlooked previously, due to the heterogeneity of particle size and MS uptake in unsorted DC populations. Whilst larger particles carry more antigen, we show that antigen load does not influence the cross-presentation pathway utilised. Whereas early endosome autoantigen 1 (EEA1) could be observed in all phagosomes, we observed endoplasmic reticulum SNARE of 24 kDa (ERS24) and cathepsin S in association with 3.0 ?m and aggregated 0.8 ?m MS, but not individual 0.8 ?m MS. A potential mechanism underlying our observations may be the activation of ?-catenin by disruption of E-cadherin-mediated adhesion. Activated ?-catenin was detected in the cytoplasm of cells after phagocytosis of MS (highest levels for the largest particles). We propose that particle size can direct the use of different pathways for the cross-presentation of an identical antigen. Furthermore, these pathways have differing yields of MHC class I-peptide complexes, which is an important variable in designing vaccination strategies for maximal antigen expression and CD8(+) T cell priming.

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More information

Published date: 23 April 2012
Keywords: antigen cross-presentation, dendritic cell, mhc class I, microspheres, phagocytosis
Organisations: Cancer Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 337327
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/337327
ISSN: 0019-2805
PURE UUID: 27277b6a-0c42-4511-92db-b10983077f7c
ORCID for Alexandra Mant: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7169-209X
ORCID for Fay Chinnery: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8082-9016
ORCID for Tim Elliott: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1097-0222

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Date deposited: 24 Apr 2012 12:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:20

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Contributors

Author: Alexandra Mant ORCID iD
Author: Fay Chinnery ORCID iD
Author: Tim Elliott ORCID iD

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