Endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1) trims antigenic peptide precursors to generate mature antigenic peptides for presentation by major histocompatibility complex class I (MHCI) molecules and regulates adaptive immune responses. ERAP1 has been proposed to trim peptide precursors both in solution and in pre-formed MHCI-peptide complexes, but which mode is more relevant to its biological function remains controversial. Here, we compared ERAP1-mediated trimming of antigenic peptide precursors in solution or when bound to three MHCI alleles, HLA-B*58, HLA-B*08 and HLA-A*02. For all MHCIpeptide combinations, peptide binding onto MHCI protected against ERAP1-mediated trimming. In only a single MHCI-peptide combination, trimming of an HLA-B*08-bound 12mer progressed at a considerable rate, albeit still slower than in solution. Results from thermodynamic, kinetic and computational analyses suggested that this 12mer is highly labile and that apparent on-MHC trimming rates are always slower than that of MHCI-peptide dissociation. Both ERAP2 and leucine aminopeptidase, an enzyme unrelated to antigen processing, could trim this labile peptide from pre-formed MHCI complexes as efficiently as ERAP1. A pseudopeptide analogue with high affinity for both HLA-B*08 and the ERAP1 active site could not promote the formation of a ternary ERAP1-MHCI-peptide complex. Similarly, no interactions between ERAP1 and purified peptide loading complex (PLC) were detected in the absence or presence of a pseudopeptide trap. We conclude that MHCI binding protects peptides from ERAP1 degradation and that trimming in solution, along with the dynamic nature of peptide binding to MHCI, are sufficient to explain ERAP1 processing of antigenic peptide precursors.
Processing of N-terminally elongated antigenic peptide precursors by Endoplasmic Reticulum Aminopeptidase 1 (ERAP1) is a key step in antigen presentation and the adaptive immune response. Although ERAP1 can efficiently process long peptides in solution, it has been proposed that it can also process peptides bound onto Major Histocompatibility Complex I molecules (MHCI). In a previous study, we suggested that the occasionally observed “ontο MHCI” trimming by ERAP1 is likely due to fast peptide dissociation followed by solution trimming, rather than direct action of ERAP1 onto the MHCI complex. However, other groups have proposed that ERAP1 can trim peptides covalently bound onto MHCI, which would preclude peptide dissociation. To explore this interaction, we constructed disulfide-linked MHCI-peptide complexes using HLA-B*08 and a 12mer kinetically labile peptide, or a 16mer carrying a phosphinic transition-state analogue N-terminus with high-affinity for ERAP1. Kinetic and biochemical analyses suggested that while both peptides could access the ERAP1 active site when free in solution, they were unable to do so when tethered in the MHCI binding groove. Our results suggest that MHCI binding protects, rather than promotes, antigenic peptide precursor trimming by ERAP1 and thus solution trimming is the more likely model of antigenic peptide processing.
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