Functional characterization of a lysosomal sorting motif in the cytoplasmic tail of HLA-DObeta.

2000 
Abstract HLA-DO is an intracellular non-classical class II major histocompatibility complex molecule expressed in the endocytic pathway of B lymphocytes, which regulates the loading of antigenic peptides onto classical class II molecules such as HLA-DR. The activity of HLA-DO is mediated through its interaction with the peptide editor HLA-DM. Here, our results demonstrate that although HLA-DO is absolutely dependent on its association with DM to egress the endoplasmic reticulum, the cytoplasmic portion of its β chain encodes a functional lysosomal sorting signal. By confocal microscopy and flow cytometry analysis, we show that reporter transmembrane molecules fused to the cytoplasmic tail of HLA-DOβ accumulated in Lamp-1+ vesicles of transfected HeLa cells. Mutagenesis of a leucine-leucine motif abrogated lysosomal accumulation and resulted in cell surface redistribution of reporter molecules. Finally, we show that mutation of the di-leucine sequence in DOβ did not alter its lysosomal sorting when associated with DM molecules. Taken together, these results demonstrate that lysosomal expression of the DO-DM complex is mediated primarily by the tyrosine-based motif of HLA-DM and suggest that the DOβ-encoded motif is involved in the fine-tuning of the intracellular sorting.
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