Immunity
Volume 18, Issue 3, March 2003, Pages 343-354
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Article
Quantitating Protein Synthesis, Degradation, and Endogenous Antigen Processing

https://doi.org/10.1016/S1074-7613(03)00051-7Get rights and content
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Abstract

Using L929 cells, we quantitated the macroeconomics of protein synthesis and degradation and the microeconomics of producing MHC class I associated peptides from viral translation products. To maintain a content of 2.6 × 109 proteins, each cell's 6 × 106 ribosomes produce 4 × 106 proteins min−1. Each of the cell's 8 × 105 proteasomes degrades 2.5 substrates min−1, creating one MHC class I-peptide complex for each 500–3000 viral translation products degraded. The efficiency of complex formation is similar in dendritic cells and macrophages, which play a critical role in activating T cells in vivo. Proteasomes create antigenic peptides at different efficiencies from two distinct substrate pools: rapidly degraded newly synthesized proteins that clearly represent defective ribosomal products (DRiPs) and a less rapidly degraded pool in which DRiPs may also predominate.

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