MR1B, a natural spliced isoform of the MHC-related 1 protein, is expressed as homodimers at the cell surface and activates MAIT cells.

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Citation

Lion J, Debuysscher V, Wlodarczyk A, Hodroge A, Serriari NE, Choteau L, Ouled-haddou H, Plistat M, Lassoued K, Lantz O, Treiner E

MR1B, a natural spliced isoform of the MHC-related 1 protein, is expressed as homodimers at the cell surface and activates MAIT cells.

Eur J Immunol. 2013 May;43(5):1363-73. doi: 10.1002/eji.201242461.

PubMed ID
23457030 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The MHC-related 1 (MR1) protein is a monomorphic, evolutionarily conserved MHC class I-like molecule, which is necessary for the development and functions of mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, a new subset of innate-like lymphocytes. Multiple isoforms of the MR1 gene are naturally transcribed, but only the full-length MR1A has been analyzed so far. Using transfected cell lines expressing an alternative spliced transcript, MR1B, characterized by the absence of the alpha3 extracellular domain, we show that MR1B is transcribed and glycosylated but remains in an immature (endoglycosidase H-sensitive) state. MR1B mostly accumulates in the ER, without interacting with proteins of the peptide-loading complex such as tapasin. Interestingly, it is nevertheless found expressed at the cell surface, independently of beta2-microglobulin, in a homodimeric form. MR1B is functional as its overexpression induces MAIT cell activation in vitro in the presence of bacteria. Altogether, these data show that MR1B displays several remarkable features, and probably plays a physiological role complementary to MR1A with respect to MAIT cell development and/or function.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Major histocompatibility complex class I-related gene proteinQ95460Details