Pathways for Lipid Antigen Presentation by CD1 Molecules: Nowhere for Intracellular Pathogens to Hide

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<jats:p>A crucial feature of peptide antigen presentation by major histocompatibilty complex (MHC) class I and II molecules is their differential ability to sample cytosolic and extracellular antigens. Intracellular viral infections and bacteria that are taken up in phagosomes, but then escape from the endocytic compartment efficiently, enter the class I pathway via the cytosol. In contrast, phagosome‐resident bacteria yield protein antigens that are sampled deep in the endocytic compartment and presented in a vacuolar acidification‐dependent pathway mediated by MHC class II molecules. Despite this potential for antigen sampling, microbes have evolved a variety of evasive mechanisms that affect peptide transport in the MHC class I pathway or blockade of endosomal acidification and inhibition of phagosome–lysosome fusion that may compromise the MHC class II pathway of antigen presentation. Thus, besides MHC class I and II, a third lineage of antigen‐presenting molecules that bind lipid and glycolipid antigens rather than peptides exists and is mediated by the family of CD1 proteins. CD1 isoforms (CD1a, b, c, and d) differentially sample both recycling endosomes of the early endocytic system and late endosomes and lysosomes to which lipid antigens are differentially delivered. These CD1 pathways include vacuolar acidification‐independent pathways for lipid antigen presentation. These features of presenting lipid antigens, independently monitoring various antigen‐containing intracellular compartments and avoiding certain evasive techniques employed by microbes, enable CD1 molecules to provide distinct opportunities to function in host defense against the microbial world.</jats:p>

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  • Traffic

    Traffic 1 (4), 295-300, 2000-04

    Wiley

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