Annual Reviews home
0
Skip to content
  • For Librarians & Agents
  • For Authors
  • Knowable Magazine
  • Institutional Login
  • Login
  • Register
  • Activate
  • 0 Cart
  • Help
Annual Reviews home
  • JOURNALS A-Z
    • Analytical Chemistry
    • Animal Biosciences
    • Anthropology
    • Astronomy and Astrophysics
    • Biochemistry
    • Biomedical Data Science
    • Biomedical Engineering
    • Biophysics
    • Cancer Biology
    • Cell and Developmental Biology
    • Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Computer Science
    • Condensed Matter Physics
    • Control, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems
    • Criminology
    • Developmental Psychology
    • Earth and Planetary Sciences
    • Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics
    • Economics
    • Entomology
    • Environment and Resources
    • Financial Economics
    • Fluid Mechanics
    • Food Science and Technology
    • Genetics
    • Genomics and Human Genetics
    • Immunology
    • Law and Social Science
    • Linguistics
    • Marine Science
    • Materials Research
    • Medicine
    • Microbiology
    • Neuroscience
    • Nuclear and Particle Science
    • Nutrition
    • Organizational Psychology and Organizational Behavior
    • Pathology: Mechanisms of Disease
    • Pharmacology and Toxicology
    • Physical Chemistry
    • Physiology
    • Phytopathology
    • Plant Biology
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Public Health
    • Resource Economics
    • Sociology
    • Statistics and Its Application
    • Virology
    • Vision Science
    • Article Collections
    • Events
    • Shot of Science
  • JOURNAL INFO
    • Copyright & Permissions
    • Add To Your Course Reader
    • Expected Publication Dates
    • Impact Factor Rankings
    • Access Metadata
    • RSS Feeds
  • PRICING & SUBSCRIPTIONS
    • General Ordering Info
    • Online Activation Instructions
    • Personal Pricing
    • Institutional Pricing
    • Society Partnerships
  •     S2O    
  •     GIVE    
  • ABOUT
    • What We Do
    • Founder & History
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Press Center
    • Events
    • News
    • Global Access
    • DEI
    • Directory
    • Help/FAQs
    • Contact Us
  • Home >
  • Annual Review of Cell Biology >
  • Volume 9, 1993 >
  • Barber, pp 163-206
  • Save
  • Email
  • Share

Peptide Binding to Major Histocompatibility Complex Molecules

Annual Review of Cell Biology

Vol. 9:163-206 (Volume publication date November 1993)
https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.cb.09.110193.001115

Linda D. Barber and Peter Parham

Departments of Cell Biology and Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305

Download PDF Article Metrics
  • Permissions
  • Reprints

  • Download Citation
  • Citation Alerts
Free first page

Keywords

MHC class I class II peptide generation assembly

    Previous Article Next Article
    • Related Articles
    • Journal Most Downloaded
      STRUCTURE, FUNCTION, AND DIVERSITY OF CLASS I MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY COMPLEX MOLECULES
      Pamela J. Bjorkman and Peter Parham
      Annual Review of Biochemistry
      The Adaptable Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) Fold: Structure and Function of Nonclassical and MHC Class I–Like Molecules
      Erin J. Adams and Adrienne M. Luoma
      Annual Review of Immunology
      The Three-Dimensional Structure of Peptide-MHC Complexes
      Dean R. Madden
      Annual Review of Immunology
      collapse

    Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation in Biology

    Anthony A. Hyman, Christoph A. Weber, Frank Jülicher
    Vol. 30, 2014

    Abstract - FiguresPreview

    Abstract

    Cells organize many of their biochemical reactions in non-membrane compartments. Recent evidence has shown that many of these compartments are liquids that form by phase separation from the cytoplasm. Here we discuss the basic physical concepts necessary ...Read More

    • Full Text HTML
    • Download PDF
    • Figures
    image

    Figure 1: Schematic representation of important characteristics of ideal liquids (left) and ideal solids (right). Order: For a liquid, there is only short-range positional order. This means that one c...

    image

    Figure 2: Mixing and demixing. (a) Schematic representation of a demixed state where two regions of different compositions are separated by a partition (yellow). (b) A mixed state, which emerges owing...

    image

    Figure 3: P granules exhibit characteristics of liquid droplets. (a) P granules (green; GFP tagged) in the cytoplasm of a one cell–stage Caenorhabditis elegans embryo. (b) Two P granules (white) fuse ...

    image

    Figure 4: Thermodynamics of mixing and demixing. (a) The free energy F as a function of volume fraction of the red molecules ϕ (the volume fraction of blue molecules is 1 − ϕ). Both molecular species ...

    image

    Figure 5: Coexistence of two phases of different composition. In equilibrium, there are two cases in which the chemical potential is constant in space: (a) a single droplet embedded in a homogeneous p...


    The Heidelberg Screen for Pattern Mutants of Drosophila: A Personal Account

    Eric Wieschaus and Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard
    Vol. 32, 2016

    Abstract - FiguresPreview

    Abstract

    In large-scale mutagenesis screens performed in 1979–1980 at the EMBL in Heidelberg, we isolated mutations affecting the pattern or structure of the larval cuticle in Drosophila. The 600 mutants we characterized could be assigned to 120 genes and ...Read More

    • Full Text HTML
    • Download PDF
    • Figures
    image

    Figure 1: Cuticle preparation of a Drosophila first-instar larva. (a) Dark-field image of the ventral side. (b) Phase-contrast detail of the ventral (top) and the dorsal (bottom) aspect of the posteri...

    image

    Figure 2: Genetics of embryonic patterning. Maternal and zygotic genes can be distinguished by their genetic behavior. (Left panel) All embryos from females that are homozygous mutant for maternally a...

    image

    Figure 3: Replica plating egg collections from multiple mutant stocks. Flies from different mutagenized lines are transferred to tubes glued together in a block formation. Females lay eggs in defined ...

    image

    Figure 4: The relationship between the cuticle pattern of the hatching embryo and the fate map at the blastoderm stage. The primordium for the segmented epidermis represents a substantial fraction of ...

    image

    Figure 5: Crossing schemes to produce inbred lines to be tested for homozygous mutant embryos with altered patterns. The left panel provides a general schematic of the crosses, and the right panels gi...

    image

    Figure 6: The altered segmentation patterns of embryos homozygous for paired and for knirps, shown flanking a wild-type pattern in the cover illustration of the Nature paper describing the first mutan...

    image

    Figure 7: Saturation curve. The plot shows the number of pattern mutants isolated over the numbers of lines (chromosomes) scored (closed circles) as well as the numbers of new loci identified (open ci...

    image

    Figure 8: Mutants affected in AP patterning: 20 mutants of genes listed in Table 1 represent the following classes: gap genes [giant (gt) and Krüppel (Kr)], pair rule genes [runt (run), even-skipped (...

    image

    Figure 9: Gap and pair rule mutants: gap mutants Krüppel (Kr) (strong phenotype), hunchback (hb) (weak phenotype), odd-skipped (odd) (strong phenotype), and even-skipped (eve) [weak (eveID) and strong...

    image

    Figure 10: Pattern deletions in an embryo homozygous mutant for genes (a) in the segment polarity class (gooseberry and patched), (b) in the pair rule class (even-skipped, odd-skipped, paired, and run...

    image

    Figure 11: Schematic representation of deletion patterns in pair rule mutants. The shaded areas indicate the regions lost in the mutant patterns of strong alleles. Gene abbreviations (from top left to...

    image

    Figure 12: Segment polarity mutants: details from the ventral anterior abdomen of (a) wild-type (+), (b) gooseberry (gsb), and (c) patched (ptc) larvae (phase contrast).

    image

    Figure 13: Segment pattern and homeotic mutants: posterior thorax and anterior abdomen of orthodenticle (otd) (abdominal denticle belts reduced) and extradenticle (exd) (posterior transformations). Ot...

    image

    Figure 14: Mutants affected in dorsal-ventral patterning: 20 mutants of genes listed in Table 2 represent the following classes: gastrulation dorsalized group [twist (twi) and snail (sna)], gastrulati...

    image

    Figure 15: Gastrulation and ventral pattern mutants: gastrulation dorsalized twist (twi) and gastrulation ventralized decapentaplegic (dpp) (weak allele) and tolloid (tld); spitz group faint little ba...

    image

    Figure 16: Mutants affected in epidermal structure and integrity: 20 mutants of genes listed in Table 3 represent the following classes: cell polarity [bazooka (baz), stardust (sdt)], cell adhesion [m...

    image

    Figure 17: Denticle and hair mutants: (a) ventral and (b) dorsal aspects of anterior abdomen of crinkled (ck) (top) and shavenoid (sha) (bottom) (phase contrast). For wild type, see Figures 1 and

    image

    Figure 18: Eric Wieschaus and Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard in 1979, at the time of the mutagenesis screen.


    Biogenesis, Secretion, and Intercellular Interactions of Exosomes and Other Extracellular Vesicles

    Marina Colombo, Graça Raposo, Clotilde Théry
    Vol. 30, 2014

    Abstract - FiguresPreview

    Abstract

    In the 1980s, exosomes were described as vesicles of endosomal origin secreted from reticulocytes. Interest increased around these extracellular vesicles, as they appeared to participate in several cellular processes. Exosomes bear proteins, lipids, and ...Read More

    • Full Text HTML
    • Download PDF
    • Figures
    image

    Figure 1: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) of different intracellular origins can be released by eukaryotic cells. (a) Schematic representation of the different types of membrane vesicles released by euka...

    image

    Figure 2: Overall composition of extracellular vesicles (EVs). Schematic representation of the composition (families of proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids) and membrane orientation of EVs. Examples o...

    image

    Figure 3: Molecular machineries of exosome/extracellular vesicle (EV) biogenesis. Multiple machineries are involved in biogenesis of intraluminal vesicles of multivesicular bodies (MVBs) and thus of e...

    image

    Figure 4: Molecular machineries of exosome/extracellular vesicle (EV) secretion. Multiple secretion machineries of EVs have been described. For multivesicular body (MVB)-dependent secretion, proteins ...


    Aerobic Glycolysis: Meeting the Metabolic Requirements of Cell Proliferation

    Sophia Y. Lunt and Matthew G. Vander Heiden
    Vol. 27, 2011

    Abstract - FiguresPreview

    Abstract

    Warburg's observation that cancer cells exhibit a high rate of glycolysis even in the presence of oxygen (aerobic glycolysis) sparked debate over the role of glycolysis in normal and cancer cells. Although it has been established that defects in ...Read More

    • Full Text HTML
    • Download PDF
    • Figures
    image

    Figure 1: Metabolic pathways active in proliferating cells. This schematic represents our current understanding of how glycolysis, oxidative phosphorylation, the pentose phosphate pathway, and glutami...

    image

    Figure 2: Schematic showing the approximate contributions of glucose carbons as well as glutamine carbons and nitrogens to biomass, lactate, and CO2 in a proliferating cell.


    Parkinson's: A Disease of Aberrant Vesicle Trafficking

    Pawan Kishor Singh and Miratul M.K. Muqit
    Vol. 36, 2020

    Abstract - FiguresPreview

    Abstract

    Parkinson's disease (PD) is a leading cause of neurodegeneration that is defined by the selective loss of dopaminergic neurons and the accumulation of protein aggregates called Lewy bodies (LBs). The unequivocal identification of Mendelian inherited ...Read More

    • Full Text HTML
    • Download PDF
    • Figures
    image

    Figure 1: Domain architecture of PD proteins linked to membrane trafficking. Protein domains of human (a) α-syn (140 aa), (b) PINK1 (581 aa), (c) Parkin (465 aa), (d) LRRK2 (2,527 aa), (e) VPS35 (796 ...

    image

    Figure 2: Vesicular trafficking mechanisms of α-syn aggregation–mediated neurotoxicity. (a) α-Syn aggregates can be transmitted to other neurons through endocytic mechanisms or exosomes, or they can b...

    image

    Figure 3: The regulation and downstream function of LRRK2. Pathogenic mutations of LRRK2 have been identified in PD that lead to various trafficking perturbations. Rab29 can activate LRRK2, which lead...

    image

    Figure 4: The PINK1-Parkin signaling pathway. Under healthy conditions, PINK1 is degraded in the cytosol after its cleavage following precursor import into mitochondria by the intramembrane protease P...


    See More
    • © Copyright 2022
    • Contact Us
    • Email Preferences
    • Annual Reviews Directory
    • Multimedia
    • Supplemental Materials
    • FAQs
    • Privacy Policy
    ×
    From Annual Reviews, Knowable Magazine & JSTOR Daily:
    Behind Bars: The Invention of Mass Incarceration

    Wednesday, March 23, 2022
    12 PM San Francisco PST /
    3 PM New York EST

    Register Now

    Please don't display again

    PRIVACY NOTICE

    Accept

    This site requires the use of cookies to function. It also uses cookies for the purposes of performance measurement. Please see our Privacy Policy.