Abstract
Cysteine-containing peptides represent an important class of T cell epitopes, yet their prevalence remains underestimated. We have established and interrogated a database of around 70,000 naturally processed MHC-bound peptides and demonstrate that cysteine-containing peptides are presented on the surface of cells in an MHC allomorph-dependent manner and comprise on average 5-10% of the immunopeptidome. A significant proportion of these peptides are oxidatively modified, most commonly through covalent linkage with the antioxidant glutathione. Unlike some of the previously reported cysteine-based modifications, this represents a true physiological alteration of cysteine residues. Furthermore, our results suggest that alterations in the cellular redox state induced by viral infection arecommunicatedto theimmunesystemthroughthe presentation of S-glutathionylated viral peptides, resulting in altered T cell recognition. Our data provide a structural basis for how the glutathione modification alters recognition by virus-specific T cells. Collectively, these results suggest that oxidative stress represents a mechanism for modulating the virus-specific T cell response.
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CITATION STYLE
Trujillo, J. A., Croft, N. P., Dudek, N. L., Channappanavar, R., Theodossis, A., Webb, A. I., … Purcell, A. W. (2014). The cellular redox environment alters antigen presentation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 289(40), 27979–27991. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.573402
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