Abstract
PR1 (VLQELNVTV) is an HLA-A*0201-binding leukemia-associated peptide epitope within proteinase 3 (PRTN3) and neutrophil elastase (ELA2), and PR1-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (PR1-CTL) contribute to cytogenetic remission in some patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. It is not understood how immunity is induced to the PR1 self-antigen in leukemia patients. Normally, myeloid dendritic cells (mDC) take up exogenous antigen and peptides are cross-presented on MHC-I to induce CTL immunity. However, in myeloid leukemia patients, mDC do not function normally and they are reduced in number. On the other hand, B cells, and potentially plasmacytoid DC (pDC), are uninvolved in the malignant process but they have been implicated in tolerance induction. Indeed, PRTN3 and ELA2 are present in serum and cross-presentation of soluble antigens can lead to cross-tolerance. To investigate whether B cells can cross-present PRTN3 or ELA2, both genes were first cloned from normal bone marrow and individually cloned into the human B cell line HMy.CIR-A2 cell (previously transfected with HLA-A*0201), which doesn’t normally express the proteins. Transfectant-induced proliferation of 25-day old PR1-CTL cell lines, measured by BrDU incorporation, was used to assess sustained PR1 antigen presentation. PRTN3- and ELA2-transfected HMy.CIR-A2 cells induced HLA-A2-restricted PR1-specific CTL proliferation compared to control sham transfectants with/without HLA-A*0201. PR1 presentation was proteasome-dependent and involved transport from the ER to the cell surface since PR1-CL proliferation was abrogated by treating the transfectants with lactacystin and Brefeldin A, respectively. Western blotting (WB) of cell supernatants showed that transfected HMy.CIR-A2 cells also secreted PRTN3 and ELA2. Furthermore, endocytosis of ELA2 by HMy.CIR-A2 and normal CD19+ B cells occurred within 30 minutes, by intracellular FACS staining. Early endocytosis of ELA2 was partly mediated by binding to LOX-1, a class E scavenger receptor on B cells and DC, since poly (I) and anti-LOX-1 antibody blocked uptake, but did not involve the scavenger receptors SR-A, CD91, or CD36 (no expression by FACS analysis). Confocal microscopy demonstrated that soluble ELA2 co-localized primarily to LAMP-2+ vesicles and to a lesser extent to cytoplasm of CD19+ B cells after 2 hours co-incubation. In contrast, freshly isolated mDC (CD11c+ CD14-) expressed ELA2 exclusively in lysosomes, shown by LAMP-2 co-localization. Like B cells, freshly isolated pDC did not express ELA2 transcripts (by RT-PCR) or protein (by WB), and confocal microscopy confirmed endocytosis of soluble ELA2 with similar lysosome + cytoplasm localization. Finally, cross-presentation of soluble ELA2 by HMy.CIR-A2 cells to PR1-CTL could be blocked by pre-treating B cells with lactacystin. In summary, soluble ELA2 and PRTN3 are taken up by normal B cells and ELA2 by pDC, in part via the LOX-1 scavenger receptor, and are localized primarily to lysosomes and to cytoplasm to a lesser extent. We previously showed that both proteins bind to ubiquitin and to the chaperone protein gp96 in protein-pulsed B cells, and the proteasome is required for PR1 processing. Thus, this is the first evidence that soluble tumor antigens can be cross-presented by B cells using the “phagosome-to-lysosome” pathway, and it suggests how immunity to the PR1 antigen could occur in leukemia patients.
Author notes
Corresponding author
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal