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Transient Surface Delivery of Invariant Chain‐MHC II Complexes Via Endosomes: a Quantitative Study
Author(s) -
Lindner Robert
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
traffic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.677
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1600-0854
pISSN - 1398-9219
DOI - 10.1034/j.1600-0854.2002.030206.x
Subject(s) - endosome , golgi apparatus , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , biotinylation , endocytic cycle , cd74 , transport protein , vesicle , major histocompatibility complex , biophysics , mhc class ii , membrane , endocytosis , biochemistry , antigen , cell , intracellular , endoplasmic reticulum , immunology
Newly synthesized major histocompatibility complex class II needs to be directed to late endocytic compartments to combine with peptide antigens. Efficient transport requires complexes of major histocompatibility complex class II and invariant chain (αβIi). Since such complexes have been detected on the plasma membrane in human cells, this compartment was proposed as the primary destination for αβIi exiting the trans‐Golgi network. Here, I have used density gradient electrophoresis and selective biotinylation to investigate the trafficking route of αβIi quantitatively. Density gradient electrophoresis analysis showed that αβIi was transported from the trans‐Golgi network to endosomes at ∼ 1.7% min −1 . Surface delivery of αβIi was delayed relative to endosome transport by ∼ 10 min and showed slower kinetics (∼ 0.4% min −1 ), suggesting that αβIi reached the plasma membrane only after arrival in endosomes. A biotinylation assay revealed that 20–40% of endosomal αβIi was delivered to the plasma membrane at steady state, suggesting that surface αβIi was entirely derived from endosomes. Surface αβIi was rapidly re‐internalized and either returned to the cell surface or accessed degradative compartments. Peptide loading commenced ∼ 30 min after delivery to endosomes. Thus αβIi directly traffics from trans‐Golgi network to endosomes and enters an endosome–plasma membrane ‘carousel’ until transport to peptide‐loading compartments ensues .