Sequence-independent interactions involving the free peptidic NH2 terminus are thought to be an essential feature of peptide binding to classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I proteins. Challenging this paradigm, a natural Nα-acetylated ligand of human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B39 was identified in this study. It matched the NH2-terminal sequence of two human helicases, was resistant to aminopeptidase M, and was produced with high yield from a synthetic 30 mer with the sequence of the putative parental protein by the 20S proteasome. This is the first reported natural ligand of classical MHC class I antigens that has a blocked NH2 terminus.
Introduction
Classical MHC class I molecules (HLA-A,B,C in humans) constitutively bind peptides from endogenously synthesized cell proteins and from intracellular pathogens, and present them at the cell surface for recognition by CD8+ CTLs. Peptides bind the class I molecule in its peptide binding site. This is a groove formed by the α1 and α2 domains of the heavy chain, consisting of two long α-helical segments on top of an eight-strand antiparallel β-pleated sheet 1,2. The fine structure of this groove can be described as a series of subsites (pockets A–F) formed by side chains of residues from the MHC molecule 3,4. Peptides bind to class I molecules in extended conformation, with the NH2 and COOH termini interacting in pockets A and F, respectively, and various peptidic anchor residues interacting in the other pockets 5. MHC polymorphism occurs mainly in the peptide binding groove and, by affecting the size, shape, and polarity of the pockets, modulates the peptide binding specificity of class I molecules.
A major feature of the peptide binding groove of classical class I antigens, which distinguishes it from class II molecules, is that the two α-helical segments come close to each other at both ends. In addition, the ends of the groove become blocked by bulky side chains including Tyr84 (pocket F) and Trp167 (pocket A), which are highly conserved among class I proteins. This imposes strong restrictions on the size of class I–bound peptides, so that these have a size range of 8–12 residues, with a majority of nonamers 6. Size variations are usually accommodated by differential bulging or other conformational changes in the middle part of the peptide 7,8,9. The peptidic NH2 and COOH termini bind the class I molecule through hydrogen bonds to conserved residues in pockets A and F, respectively, essentially in a peptide sequence–independent mode. These interactions have a significant contribution to the total binding energy of the peptide 10,11. Nevertheless, class I ligands can also bind with the COOH-terminal residue positioned outside the peptide binding groove, and this noncanonical binding mode is stable at physiological temperature 12.
In contrast, it is currently assumed that there is a universal binding mode for peptidic NH2 termini. All known natural ligands of classical class I antigens have a free NH2 terminus. This interacts in the A pocket through a set of hydrogen bonds established directly with Tyr7 and Tyr171, and with Tyr59 through a water molecule 5,13. Suppression of these hydrogen bonds by NH2-terminal methylation of a peptide ligand of HLA-A2 decreased the thermal stability of the peptide–MHC complex by 22°C, indicating that the NH2 terminus is an energetically important site for class I binding 10. Nα-acetylation has been shown to significantly decrease binding of peptide ligands to classical MHC class I proteins 14,15. In contrast, the nonclassical murine antigen H2-M3 specifically binds N-formylated peptides 16,17,18. This is made possible through various amino acid changes in the protein molecule, including some that dramatically affect the structure of pocket A 19,20.
The apparent inability of class I antigens to bind Nα-acetylated ligands is in contrast with the relatively frequent occurrence of Nα-acetylated proteins in eucariotic cells 21,22. We report here that an Nα-acetylated peptide is a natural ligand of HLA-B39. This is, to our knowledge, the first known N-acetylated ligand of any class I molecule, and the first natural ligand with a blocked NH2 terminus reported from a classical MHC class I protein. In addition, we show that this peptide is directly generated by the 20S proteasome as a major breakdown product of a precursor substrate with the sequence of the corresponding parental protein.
Materials And Methods
HLA-B39 Transfectant Cell Lines.
HMy2.C1R (C1R) is a human lymphoid cell line with low expression of its endogenous class I antigens. C1R transfectants expressing B*3901 or B*3909 have been described previously 23. The B*3905-C1R transfectant was obtained with the same electroporation and selection procedures as the previous transfectants, using a full-length cDNA clone with the coding B*3905 sequence (a gift from Dr. Peter Parham, Stanford University, Stanford, CA) subcloned into the RSV5neo vector. HLA-B39–C1R transfectant cells were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 7.5% heat-inactivated FCS (both from GIBCO BRL). RMA-S is a transporter associated with antigen processing–deficient murine cell line 24,25. The B*3909–RMA-S 23 and B*2705–RMA-S 26 cells used in this study, which also express human β2-microglobulin, have been described elsewhere. These cells were grown in RPMI 1640 medium containing 25 mM Hepes buffer and 5% heat-inactivated FCS (GIBCO BRL).
Isolation of HLA-B39–bound Peptides.
This was carried out as described previously 27. In brief, ∼1010 cells were grown at 37°C in DMEM, pH 7.4 containing 7.5% heat-inactivated FCS, 100 μg/ml streptomycin sulfate, and 100 U/ml penicillin G (all from GIBCO BRL). Cells were lysed in 1% NP-40 in the presence of a cocktail of protease inhibitors, and B*3901, B*3905, or B*3909 were purified by affinity chromatography from the cell lysates using the W6/32 mAb (IgG2a, specific for a monomorphic HLA-A,B,C determinant; reference 28). HLA-B39–bound peptide pools were obtained by acid extraction with 0.1% TFA, and were fractionated by HPLC.
Mass Spectrometry Analysis and Sequencing.
The peptide composition of HPLC fractions or other samples was analyzed by matrix-assisted desorption ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) using a calibrated Kompact Probe instrument (Kratos-Schimadzu) operating in the positive linear mode, as described previously 27. Peptide composition analysis, zoomscan, and sequencing by electrospray ion trap MS was carried out with an LCQ instrument (Finnigan ThermoQuest) and using the “nanospray” interface, as detailed elsewhere 23,29. Zoomscan is a high-resolution method for determining accurate peptide mass and charge of ionic species, in which a precursor ion window is selected to incorporate several isotopomers. The charge states of individual product ions were determined at enhanced resolution by scanning across a limited m/z range.
Synthetic Peptides.
Peptides were synthesized using the standard solid-phase Fmoc chemistry, and were purified by HPLC. In the case of N-acetyl (NAc) peptides, acetylation was carried out manually as follows: some of the peptide resin was treated to remove the Fmoc group without removing the side chain protecting groups, then was incubated with an excess of an acetylation cocktail containing 10% acetic anhydride in N-methyl-pyrrolidone-2 (SDS; Peypin) and shaken for 10 min. The filtered peptide resin was then washed eight times with dichloromethane (SDS; Peypin) before removing the protecting groups of the peptide side chains. The correct composition and molecular mass of purified peptides were confirmed by amino acid analysis using a 6300 amino acid analyzer (Beckman Coulter), which also allowed their quantification, and by electrospray ion trap MS, respectively.
Digestions with Aminopeptidase M.
Approximately 70% of the HPLC fraction containing the NAc-SHVAVENAL peptide from the B*3905-bound peptide pool was dried down, resuspended in 5 μl of methanol/water (1:1 vol/vol) containing 0.1% formic acid, and sonicated for 5 min. A 2-μl aliquot of this mixture (28% of the fraction) was used for MALDI-TOF MS analysis. Another 2-μl aliquot of the same mixture was digested as follows: 0.5 μl of a suspension containing 10−2 U of aminopeptidase M from pig kidney (Boehringer), 0.5 μl 100 mM Tris, and 2 μl H2O was added in an eppendorf tube and incubated for 10 min at 37°C. The digestion was stopped by adding 0.2 μl of TFA. This whole mixture was then subjected to MALDI-TOF MS analysis.
Epitope Stabilization Assay and Flow Microfluorometry Analysis.
The epitope stabilization assay used to measure peptide binding was performed as described 23. In brief, B*3909–RMA-S or B*2705–RMA-S transfectants were incubated at 26°C for 24 h. They were then incubated for 1 h at 26°C with 10−4 –10−9 M peptide without FCS, transferred to 37°C, and collected for flow microfluorometry after 4 h. B*3909 or B*2705 expression was measured using 50 μl of hybridoma culture supernatant containing the mAb W6/32 (28; for B*3909) or ME1 (30; for B*2705), as described previously 31. Binding was expressed as the C50, which is the molar concentration of any given peptide at 50% of the maximum fluorescence obtained at the concentration range used. Binding of acetylated peptides was assessed as the concentration of the acetylated peptide required to obtain the fluorescence value at C50 of the corresponding unblocked peptide. This was designated as EC50. Relative binding was calculated as the ratio between the C50 of the unblocked peptide and the EC50 of the corresponding Nα-acetylated analogue.
Purification of 20S Proteasome.
Approximately 3 × 109 B*2705-C1R cells were potter lysed in 50 ml of 50 mM Tris/HCl and 25 mM KCl, pH 8. The homogenate was centrifuged at 1,500 g for 10 min. The supernatant was further centrifuged at 100,000 g for 1 h and fractionated on a 35-ml DEAE-cellulose DE52 column (Whatman) equilibrated in homogenization buffer. Proteins were eluted with 0.3 M KCl in 50 mM Tris/HCl buffer and concentrated in an 8-ml DEAE-cellulose DE52 column equilibrated in homogenization buffer. Bound proteins were eluted with 50 mM Tris/HCl and 0.3 M KCl, pH 8. Protein-containing fractions were scanned using the Bradford method (Bio-Rad) and further subjected to centrifugation at 200,000 g for 18 h in a gradient of 10–30% glycerol in 1 M urea, 50 mM Tris/HCl, and 50 mM KCl, pH 8. Proteasome-containing fractions were identified by 12% SDS-PAGE and further subjected to anion-exchange chromatography in a MonoQ SR5/5 column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min, as follows: isocratic conditions with buffer A (50 mM Tris/HCl, 50 mM KCl, pH 8) for 10 min, followed by a linear gradient of 0–30% buffer B (50 mM Tris/HCl, 0.5 M KCl, pH 8) for 5 min and a linear gradient of 30–100% buffer B for another 30 min. Purity of the fractions was assessed by denaturing SDS-PAGE as above. Aliquots of purified proteasome were stored at −70°C.
Proteasome Digestion.
This was performed at 37°C in 20 mM Hepes buffer, pH 7.4 at a ratio of 83.3 ng of peptide substrate to 8.3 ng of proteasome per μl. Approximately 10 μg of peptide was digested at 4, 8, and 24 h. 1 vol of 0.1% aqueous TFA was added to stop the enzyme reaction. Digestion mixtures were fractionated by HPLC using a 2.1 × 250 mm C18 (5 μm) column (Vydac) at a flow rate of 100 μl/min with the following chromatographic gradient: isocratic conditions with buffer A (0.08% TFA in water) for 15 min followed by a linear gradient of 0–44% buffer B (80% acetonitrile, 0.075% TFA in water) for 90 min, and a linear gradient of 44–100% buffer B for 35 min. Peptide fractionation was simultaneously monitored at 210 nm and 280 nm using a Waters 991 photodiode array detector. Fractions of 50 μl were collected and stored at −20°C.
The yield of individual digestion products was estimated as follows. For those peptides eluting as the single molecular species in an HPLC peak, their yield was expressed as the percentage of the absorbance peak area at 210 nm, relative to the total area of the peaks corresponding to digested material. For peptides coeluting in a same HPLC peak, the proportion of each peptide in the mixture was estimated on the basis of their respective intensity signals in the MALDI-TOF spectra. This method provides only an approximate estimation of peptide yields, as peptides with different length have different absorbance at 210 nm, and the MALDI-TOF signals of coeluting peptides may not correlate strictly with peptide concentration. However, it allows the distinguishing of major from minor digestion products.
Results
MS Analysis of HLA-B39–bound Peptides Reveals a Putative Nα-acetylated Ligand.
B*3901-, B*3909-, and B*3905-bound peptides were extracted from the corresponding immunopurified HLA molecules expressed on C1R transfectants and fractionated by HPLC. Full-scan analysis by nanoelectrospray ion trap MS of HPLC fraction number (N.) 155 from B*3901 (Fig. 1 A) revealed various ion peaks. Among these, those at m/z 848.4 and 870.4 were compatible with a peptide (M′+H+) and its Na+ adduct, respectively. MS/MS fragmentation analysis of the former ion allowed us to determine its amino acid sequence as THGPPVQL 23. A second peptide was revealed by ion peaks at m/z 981.4 (M+H+), 502.4 (presumably M+H++ Na+), and 510.5 (presumably M+H++K+). A peptide with the same mass was also detected in the corresponding HPLC fractions from B*3909 and B*3905 (Fig. 1B and Fig. C).
Zoomscan analysis of the ion peak at m/z 981.4 from B*3901 and the corresponding ones from B*3909 and B*3905 yielded a monoisotopic peptide mass of 980.4–980.5 (Fig. 1 C). MS/MS fragmentation analysis of this ion peak from B*3901 yielded a daughter spectrum (Fig. 2 A) that was consistent with the sequence XHVAVENAL. Although residue X had a molecular mass corresponding to that of glutamic acid (E), no match with any peptide was found when the MS/MS spectrum was used to search against the nr.fasta protein database. In addition, no peptide with the sequence EHVAVENAL was found upon scanning of multiple protein or nucleotide databases. However, a sequence SHVAVENAL was found, which was identical except for the NH2-terminal residue. It corresponded to the NH2-terminal sequence of the human protein RNA helicases of the DEAD box family DBX 32 and CAP-Rf 33. The mass difference between the E and S residues (42 Da) was consistent with an acetyl group. Because NH2-terminal acetylation is a common posttranslational modification, our results raised the possibility that XHVAVENAL was an Nα-acetylated ligand of B*3901. Identical results were obtained from the MS/MS analyses of the corresponding ion peaks from B*3909 and B*3905 (data not shown), indicating that the same peptide was present in the three HLA-B39 subtypes.
To confirm the sequence assignment, synthetic EHVAVENAL and NAc-SHVAVENAL peptides were separately subjected to MS/MS fragmentation analysis. Whereas the daughter spectrum of NAc-SHVAVENAL (Fig. 2 B) was identical to that of XHVAVENAL, the MS/MS spectrum of EHVAVENAL yielded an additional set of ion peaks corresponding to the b0 series, generated from neutral loss of water from ions of the b series (Fig. 2 C). This difference between the two peptides was consistently found at various peptide concentrations, ionization conditions, or collision energies (data not shown). Taken together, these results strongly suggest that B*3901, B*3909, and B*3905 bind a natural Nα-acetylated ligand derived from the NH2-terminal region of human proteins.
The Natural HLA-B39 Ligand Has the Same Retention Time as NAc-SHVAVENAL in HPLC.
In a further analysis, we compared the HPLC retention times of the natural B*3901 ligand XHVAVENAL and the synthetic peptides NAc-SHVAVENAL and EHVAVENAL. The THGPPVQL peptide, which coeluted with XHVAVENAL in the HPLC fractionation of B*3901-bound peptides (Fig. 1 A), was used as a marker for the retention time of XHVAVENAL. Thus, similar amounts of the synthetic EHVAVENAL, NAc-SHVAVENAL, and THGPPVQL peptides were separately subjected to HPLC under identical conditions in consecutive runs (Fig. 2 D). The two latter peptides showed almost identical retention times, whereas EHVAVENAL eluted significantly earlier. The same result was obtained when the three peptides were mixed together and fractionated in a single HPLC run (data not shown). This result confirms that the natural ligand with M+H+ 981.4 coeluting with THGPPVQL in the HPLC fractionation of the B*3901-bound peptide pool is NAc-SHVAVENAL.
The Natural HLA-B39 Ligand Is Resistant to Digestion by Aminopeptidase M.
The HPLC fraction from B*3905-bound peptides containing the putatively Nα-acetylated ligand showed a complex composition when analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS (Fig. 3 A). Among the peptides present, those at m/z 848.3 and 981.4 were shown by MS/MS fragmentation analysis to be THGPPVQL and XHVAVENAL, respectively. An aliquot of this HPLC fraction identical to that used for MALDI-TOF analysis (∼30% of the total) was digested with aminopeptidase M, an enzyme known to hydrolyze peptide bonds from small peptides with free, but not blocked, NH2 termini 34,35. When the digestion mixture was analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS, most peak signals in the undigested aliquot were reduced to background levels, whereas the peaks corresponding to XHVAVENAL (m/z: 982.0) and its Na+ adduct (m/z: 1004.2) remained as the only significant signals above background. As a control for this digestion, an approximately equimolar mixture of the synthetic peptides THGPPVQL and NAc-SHVAVENAL was treated with aminopeptidase M under the same conditions, and the mixture was analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS before and after digestion (Fig. 3C and Fig. D). Whereas the peak signal of the former peptide (m/z: 849.1) was reduced almost to background levels after digestion, the signals corresponding to NAc-SHVAVENAL (m/z: 982.2 and 1004.1) remained strongly significant. These results indicate that XHVAVENAL has a blocked NH2 terminus, further confirming the assigned NAc-SHVAVENAL sequence.
NAc-SHVAVENAL Is Generated with High Yield by the 20S Proteasome.
An Nα-acetylated synthetic 30 mer with the NH2-terminal sequence of the putative parental proteins of NAc-SHVAVENAL and the DBX and CAP-Rf helicases 32,33 was digested in vitro with purified 20S proteasome for 4, 8, and 24 h, and the digestion mixtures were separately fractionated by HPLC. Approximately 26, 39, and 63% of the 30 mer, respectively, was digested at each of the three time points.
All HPLC fractions from the 24-h digest eluting between 50 and 120 min, which encompasses virtually all eluted peptides (Fig. 4 A), were analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS. In addition, those HPLC fractions corresponding to peptide peaks were also analyzed by electrospray ion trap MS to detect possible additional peptides not seen by MALDI-TOF and to unambiguously characterize some of the digestion products through MS/MS sequencing. This analysis allowed us to determine the digestion pattern of the 30 mer, and revealed the presence of NAc-SHVAVENAL 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 as the main component of one of the major peptide peaks (Fig. 4 A).
As shown in Fig. 4 B, the NAc-SHVAVENAL peptide was directly generated by the 20S proteasome with high yield, accounting for ∼16% of the total digest. This was due to a highly efficient cleavage at the L9-G10 peptide bond of the Nα-acetylated precursor and to absence of any significant cleavage at peptide bonds between amino acids S1 to L9.
NAc-SHVAVENAL Binds HLA-B39 In Vitro with Decreased Efficiency.
Because the peptidic NH2 terminus plays a significant role in peptide anchoring to the class I molecule 10, we analyzed the effect of Nα-acetylation on binding to B*3909 in vitro using an epitope stabilization assay. The synthetic peptides SHVAVENAL and NAc-SHVAVENAL, as well as two unrelated natural ligands of B*3909 (ARDETEFYL and YRPGTVAL; reference 23), were tested (Fig. 5 A). Although SHVAVENAL bound to B*3909 similarly as the two natural ligands with free NH2 terminus, NAc-SHVAVENAL bound ∼10-fold less efficiently than the nonacetylated analogue (relative binding 1:11). These results indicate that Nα-acetylation of a Ser residue decreases but does not abrogate binding to B*3909 in vitro.
Limited Influence of P1 Variability on Binding of Nα-acetylated Peptides. Molecular modeling suggested a binding mode for NAc-SHVAVENAL in which the Ser1 side chain was switched towards the A pocket in order to locate the acetyl group towards the solvent (data not shown). In this model, hydrogen bonding through the β-hydroxyl group of Ser1 would partially compensate for loss of the canonic interactions involving the peptidic NH2 terminus.
To test this model, we reasoned that variations in the size and/or polarity of the P1 side chain should significantly affect binding of the corresponding N-acetylated analogues. In contrast, if the binding mode of the N-acetylated ligand does not involve reorientation of the P1 side chain towards pocket A, the effect of N-acetylation should be less dependent on the P1 residue.
Thus, synthetic THVAVENAL, AHVAVENAL, and their Nα-acetylated analogues were tested for binding to B*3909 in vitro (Fig. 5B and Fig. C). The Nα-acetylated peptides bound B*3909 with similarly decreased efficiency relative to their nonacetylated counterparts (relative binding 1:6 in both cases) as NAc-SHVAVENAL. These results indicate that neither a moderately increased size (Thr) nor removal of the hydroxyl group (Ala) had a significant effect on binding of the corresponding Nα-acetylated peptides.
However, it could be argued that Nα-acetylation of small P1 residues might still be compatible with binding of the P1 side chain in the A pocket. Thus, we tested the effect of Nα-acetylation on binding of a peptide analogue with the bulky and apolar Phe1, whose size precludes its side chain from entering into the A pocket (Fig. 5 D). Binding of NAc-FHVAVENAL relative to its unblocked counterpart was somewhat lower than for other P1 residues (1:19). However, its binding efficiency (EC50: 38 μM) was similar to the other N-acetylated peptides tested (Fig. 5).
These results indicate that the size and polarity of the P1 residue have a limited influence on binding of Nα-acetylated peptides in our epitope stabilization assay, and suggest that their binding mode may not involve interaction of the N-acetylated P1 side chain in the A pocket.
Similar Effect of Nα-acetylation on Peptide Binding to HLA-B27.
To test whether the effect of Nα-acetylation observed in HLA-B39 could be generalized to other class I molecules, a natural B*2705 ligand with Ser1, the influenza nucleoprotein epitope SRYWAIRTR 36, and its Nα-acetylated analogue were tested in an epitope estabilization assay using B*2705–RMA-S cells. As shown in Fig. 6, the relative binding of the N-acetylated peptide (1:5) was similar as for the HLA-B39 ligand. This result indicates that the effect of Nα-acetylation on peptide binding is similar for at least two HLA-B allotypes.
Discussion
This study provides the first demonstration that an Nα-acetylated peptide from an endogenous cell protein is a natural HLA class I ligand. This finding challenges the current paradigm that a free NH2 terminus is an essential feature for natural ligands of classical class I–bound peptides.
Various posttranslational modifications have been reported among natural MHC class I ligands, including deamidation 37, cysteine modification 38, and glycosylation 39. However, these modifications do not affect the NH2 terminus of the peptide or otherwise alter sequence-independent MHC–peptide interactions. Other naturally occurring modifications also not affecting the peptidic NH2 terminus, such as phosphorylation, are compatible with class I binding 40, but to our knowledge, no natural phosphorylated class I ligands have been reported. The possibility that Nα-acetylation might have occurred during peptide purification is ruled out because it requires different and more drastic chemical treatments than those used for isolation of class I ligands. Moreover, multiple peptides with unblocked NH2-terminal Ser or other residues have been sequenced in our laboratory after using the same isolation procedure 23,41.
Three issues are raised by our results: (a) the mode of interaction of N-acetylated ligands with the class I molecule; (b) the mechanism by which such ligands might be processed in vivo; and (c) the biological significance of class I–mediated presentation of Nα-acetylated peptides.
The first issue can be definitively addressed only by x-ray crystallography. However, an attempt was made here to distinguish between two alternative possibilities. In the first one, predicted by molecular modeling (data not shown), the P1 side chain would be accommodated in the A pocket with the acetyl group directed outwards. This binding mode would be expected to be strongly influenced by the size and polarity of the P1 side chain. A second alternative would be that the acetyl moiety is located inside the A pocket whereas the P1 side chain points towards solvent. Presumably, this binding mode should be less sensitive to the nature of the P1 side chain. Our results showing that even a significant increase in the size and hydrophobicity of the P1 residue had only a limited influence on binding of the N-acetylated analogue do not support the first alternative and are more compatible with the second one. However, other possibilities cannot be ruled out. For instance, if the acetylated P1 residue is Ser or another small one, the side chain might bind in the A pocket, and alternative binding modes might only be adopted if the side chain is too big. Finally, neither the P1 side chain nor the acetyl moiety might bind in the A pocket. The cavity created in pocket A might then be filled by a water molecule hydrogen bonded to Tyr7 and Tyr171, as seen in the x-ray structure of HLA-A*0201 in complex with a peptide for which the free amino group was replaced by a methyl moiety 11.
In spite of its presence in vivo, NAc-SHVAVENAL bound in vitro ∼10-fold less efficiently than other natural ligands. This might be due to the fact that the epitope stabilization assay used in this study is significantly influenced by the association rate of the peptide, whereas binding in vivo depends on the stability of the MHC–peptide complex. Thus, although the Nα-acetylated ligand is sufficiently stable for binding in vivo, its association rate at the cell surface might be lower than for its counterpart with free NH2 terminus. In vitro assays, including our epitope stabilization assay, do not reflect peptide binding as it occurs in vivo. In particular, the kinetics of MHC–class I peptide association may be strongly influenced in vivo by the mechanisms of assisted loading involving transporter associated with antigen processing–tapasin–MHC protein complexes.
The interaction of Nα-acetylated peptides with a classical class I protein differs significantly from the nonclassical class I molecule H2-M3 associated to an N-formyl peptide 19. H2-M3 presents N-formylated peptides from prokaryotic and mitochondrial proteins to CD8+ T cells 18,20. It can also bind nonformylated peptides, but with a restricted specificity for Gly at P1 42. This unusual binding motif is explained by several amino acid changes (Trp167Leu, Tyr171Phe) that dramatically reduce the size of pocket A and shift the P1 side chain into pocket B 19. Another major difference of H2-M3 with classical class I molecules is the presence of a positively charged His at position 9 that interacts with the formyl oxygen atom. H2-M3 does not bind Nα-acetylated peptides 16. Consequently, binding of N-formylated peptides by H2-M3 is very strongly favored over unblocked peptides. In contrast, for the Nα-acetylated peptide bound to a classical class I protein described in this study, pocket A is composed of consensus amino acids, and binding is less efficient than for a counterpart with free NH2 terminus. The similar effect of Nα-acetylation on binding of peptide analogues with Thr1 or Ala1 suggests that acetylation of some P1 residues other than Ser might be tolerated among natural class I ligands. In addition, the fact that the effect of N-acetylation of Ser1 on binding to B*2705 was similar as in HLA-B39 suggests that other MHC class I molecules besides HLA-B39 might also bind Nα-acetylated peptides.
Processing of the NAc-SHVAVENAL ligand was approached in this study by analyzing its generation from a precursor substrate by the 20S proteasome. The high yield of the natural ligand in vitro demonstrates that in the sequence context of its parental protein, a blocked NH2 terminus does not impair cleavage at the precise COOH-terminal residue of the natural ligand by the 20S proteasome. This experiment does not necessarily reproduce the mechanism by which this ligand is processed in vivo, as much protein breakdown in the cytosol occurs through the action of the 26S proteasome on ubiquitinated proteins 43. Nα-acetylated proteins are degraded via the ubiquitin system without removal of the blocked NH2 terminus 44,45,46,47. Therefore, it is likely that NAc-SHVAVENAL is generated in vivo by an ubiquitin-dependent mechanism. However, the cleavage pattern and high yield of the natural ligand observed with the 20S proteasome in vitro strongly suggest that it is directly generated by the proteasome also in vivo.
What is the possible biological significance of class I–mediated presentation of N-acetylated peptides? Nα-acetylation is a common modification of eucariotic proteins, and also occurs in viral and bacterial proteins. Although many NH2-terminal residues can be acetylated in vivo, Ser is the most frequent one, occurring in ∼40% of the Nα-acetylated proteins 22. As shown in our study, an Nα-acetylated peptide with appropriate size for MHC class I binding can be generated by proteasomal cleavage with high yield. Thus, Nα-acetylated peptides with the size of class I ligands (8–11 amino acids) might be common breakdown products of eucariotic cell proteins.
It is generally assumed that a major mechanism of immunological tolerance against self-proteins is achieved through negative selection of autoreactive T cell precursors. Because MHC polymorphism modulates peptide specificity, a given MHC allelic product is able to bind a limited number of peptide ligands among those produced during the metabolic breakdown of a given endogenous protein. It is likely that not all of these peptides are equally immunogenic or tolerogenic. This is clear, for example, in self-restricted T cell responses against viral antigens. For a given restriction element, these responses are usually directed against one of very few immunodominant peptides from given viral protein 48. Because of the likely limitation in the number of immunogenic and/or tolerogenic self-peptides from an endogenous protein that can be presented by a particular class I allotype, the capacity of class I molecules to bind Nα-acetylated peptides might contribute to enlarge the spectrum of self-antigens for negative selection of autoreactive T cell repertoires.
On the basis of known MHC class I ligands, it may be argued that Nα-acetylated peptides are rare in class I–bound peptide pools. However, it should be noted that these ligands escape detection by classical Edman sequencing, and only a very small fraction of the natural class I–bound peptide repertoires have yet been sequenced by MS. For this reason, the presence of putative Nα-acetylated natural ligands of MHC class I proteins might have been underestimated.
Acknowledgments
We thank Anabel Marina, Samuel Ogueta, Fernando Barahona, Fernando Roncal (Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Madrid), José Gavilanes (Universidad Complutense, Madrid), and Juana Bustos for technical assistance in MS, peptide synthesis, amino acid analysis, and tissue culture. We also thank José G. Castaño (Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Madrid) for help in proteasome purification, and Peter Parham for the B*3905 cDNA.
This work was supported by grant SAF99/0055 from the Plan Nacional de I+D and grant 08.3/0022/1998 from the Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid (to J.A. López de Castro), and by grant 31-45504.95 from the Swiss National Science Foundation (to D. Rognan). We thank the Fundación Ramón Areces for an institutional grant to the Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa.
References
Abbreviations used in this paper: C1R, HMy2.C1R; MALDI-TOF, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight; MS, mass spectrometry; NAc, N-acetyl.