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Dive into the research topics where Ralf M. Leonhardt is active.

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Featured researches published by Ralf M. Leonhardt.


Infection and Immunity | 2007

Severe Tryptophan Starvation Blocks Onset of Conventional Persistence and Reduces Reactivation of Chlamydia trachomatis

Ralf M. Leonhardt; Seung-Joon Lee; Paula B. Kavathas; Peter Cresswell

ABSTRACT The intracellular survival of the bacterial pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis depends on protein synthesis by the microbe soon after internalization. Pharmacologic inhibition of bacterial translation inhibits early trafficking of the parasitophorous vacuole (inclusion) to the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) and promotes its fusion with lysosomes, which is normally blocked by Chlamydia. Depletion of cellular tryptophan pools by gamma interferon-inducible indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) is believed to be the major innate immune mechanism controlling C. trachomatis infection in human cells, an action to which the bacteria can respond by converting into a nonreplicating but highly reactivatable persistent state. However, whether severe IDO-mediated tryptophan starvation can be sufficient to fully arrest the chlamydial life cycle and thereby counteract the onset of persistence is unknown. Here we demonstrate that at low exogenous tryptophan concentrations a substantial fraction of C. trachomatis bacteria fail to traffic to the MTOC or to switch into the conventional persistent state in gamma interferon-induced human cells. The organisms stay scattered in the cell periphery, do not retain infectivity, and display only low transcriptional activity. Importantly, the rate at which these aberrant Chlamydia bacteria become reactivated upon replenishment of cellular tryptophan pools is substantially lower. Thus, severe tryptophan depletion in cells with high IDO activity affects chlamydial development more rigorously than previously described.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Critical Role for the Tapasin-Docking Site of TAP2 in the Functional Integrity of the MHC Class I-Peptide-Loading Complex

Ralf M. Leonhardt; Kirstin Keusekotten; Cemalettin Bekpen; Michael R. Knittler

The transporter associated with Ag processing (TAP) translocates antigenic peptides into the endoplasmic reticulum for binding onto MHC class I (MHC I) molecules. Tapasin organizes a peptide-loading complex (PLC) by recruiting MHC I and accessory chaperones to the N-terminal regions (N domains) of the TAP subunits TAP1 and TAP2. To investigate the function of the tapasin-docking sites of TAP in MHC I processing, we expressed N-terminally truncated variants of TAP1 and TAP2 in combination with wild-type chains, as fusion proteins or as single subunits. Strikingly, TAP variants lacking the N domain in TAP2, but not in TAP1, build PLCs that fail to generate stable MHC I-peptide complexes. This correlates with a substantially reduced recruitment of accessory chaperones into the PLC demonstrating their important role in the quality control of MHC I loading. However, stable surface expression of MHC I can be rescued in post-endoplasmic reticulum compartments by a proprotein convertase-dependent mechanism.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Molecular Architecture of the TAP-Associated MHC Class I Peptide-Loading Complex

Elke Rufer; Ralf M. Leonhardt; Michael R. Knittler

Tapasin organizes the peptide-loading complex (PLC) by recruiting peptide-receptive MHC class I (MHC-I) and accessory chaperones to the N-terminal regions of the TAP subunits TAP1 and TAP2. Despite numerous studies have shown that the formation of the PLC is essential to facilitate proper MHC-I loading, the molecular architecture of this complex is still highly controversial. We studied the stoichiometry of the PLC by blue native-PAGE in combination with Ab-shift assays and found that TAP/tapasin complexes exist at steady state as a mixture of two distinct oligomers of 350 and 450 kDa. Only the higher m.w. complex contains MHC-I and disulfide-linked tapasin/ER60 conjugates. Moreover, we show for the first time to our knowledge that the fully assembled PLC comprises two tapasin, two ER60, but only one complex of MHC-I and calreticulin. Based hereon we postulate that the TAP subunits alternate in the recruitment and loading of a single MHC-I.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Post-Endoplasmic Reticulum Rescue of Unstable MHC Class I Requires Proprotein Convertase PC7

Ralf M. Leonhardt; Dorothee Fiegl; Elke Rufer; Axel Karger; Barbara Bettin; Michael R. Knittler

The function of the peptide-loading complex (PLC) is to facilitate loading of MHC class I (MHC I) molecules with antigenic peptides in the endoplasmic reticulum and to drive the selection of these ligands toward a set of high-affinity binders. When the PLC fails to perform properly, as frequently observed in virus-infected or tumor cells, structurally unstable MHC I peptide complexes are generated, which are prone to disintegrate instead of presenting Ags to cytotoxic T cells. In this study we show that a second quality control checkpoint dependent on the serine protease proprotein convertase 7 (PC7) can rescue unstable MHC I, whereas the related convertase furin is completely dispensable. Cells with a malfunctioning PLC and silenced for PC7 have substantially reduced MHC I surface levels caused by high instability and significantly delayed surface accumulation of these molecules. Instead of acquiring stability along the secretory route, MHC I appears to get largely routed to lysosomes for degradation in these cells. Moreover, mass spectrometry analysis provides evidence that lack of PLC quality control and/or loss of PC7 expression alters the MHC I-presented peptide profile. Finally, using exogenously applied peptide precursors, we show that liberation of MHC I epitopes may directly require PC7. We demonstrate for the first time an important function for PC7 in MHC I-mediated Ag presentation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

A role for UDP-glucose glycoprotein glucosyltransferase in expression and quality control of MHC class I molecules

Wei Zhang; Pamela A. Wearsch; Yajuan Zhu; Ralf M. Leonhardt; Peter Cresswell

UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase 1 (UGT1) serves as a folding sensor in the calnexin/calreticulin glycoprotein quality control cycle. UGT1 recognizes disordered or hydrophobic patches near asparagine-linked nonglucosylated glycans in partially misfolded glycoproteins and reglucosylates them, returning folding intermediates to the cycle. In this study, we examine the contribution of the UGT1-regulated quality control mechanism to MHC I antigen presentation. Using UGT1-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts reconstituted or not with UGT1, we show that, although formation of the peptide loading complex is unaffected by the absence of UGT1, the surface level of MHC class I molecules is reduced, MHC class I maturation and assembly are delayed, and peptide selection is impaired. Most strikingly, we show using purified soluble components that UGT1 preferentially recognizes and reglucosylates MHC class I molecules associated with a suboptimal peptide. Our data suggest that, in addition to the extensively studied tapasin-mediated quality control mechanism, UGT1 adds a new level of control in the MHC class I antigen presentation pathway.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Dynamics of major histocompatibility complex class I association with the human peptide-loading complex

Michaela S. Panter; Ankur Jain; Ralf M. Leonhardt; Taekjip Ha; Peter Cresswell

Background: The composition of the human peptide-loading complex, required for an effective adaptive immune response, is unresolved. Results: One peptide transporter, two tapasins, and up to two MHC I molecules are present in the complex, depending on peptide supply. Conclusion: MHC I association with the human peptide-loading complex is dynamic. Significance: These findings may facilitate structural and functional modeling of the complex. Although the human peptide-loading complex (PLC) is required for optimal major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) antigen presentation, its composition is still incompletely understood. The ratio of the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) and MHC I to tapasin, which is responsible for MHC I recruitment and peptide binding optimization, is particularly critical for modeling of the PLC. Here, we characterized the stoichiometry of the human PLC using both biophysical and biochemical approaches. By means of single-molecule pulldown (SiMPull), we determined a TAP/tapasin ratio of 1:2, consistent with previous studies of insect-cell microsomes, rat-human chimeric cells, and HeLa cells expressing truncated TAP subunits. We also report that the tapasin/MHC I ratio varies, with the PLC population comprising both 2:1 and 2:2 complexes, based on mutational and co-precipitation studies. The MHC I-saturated PLC may be particularly prevalent among peptide-selective alleles, such as HLA-C4. Additionally, MHC I association with the PLC increases when its peptide supply is reduced by inhibiting the proteasome or by blocking TAP-mediated peptide transport using viral inhibitors. Taken together, our results indicate that the composition of the human PLC varies under normal conditions and dynamically adapts to alterations in peptide supply that may arise during viral infection. These findings improve our understanding of the quality control of MHC I peptide loading and may aid the structural and functional modeling of the human PLC.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Proprotein convertases process Pmel17 during secretion.

Ralf M. Leonhardt; Nathalie Vigneron; Christoph Rahner; Peter Cresswell

Pmel17 is a melanocyte/melanoma-specific protein that traffics to melanosomes where it forms a fibrillar matrix on which melanin gets deposited. Before being cleaved into smaller fibrillogenic fragments the protein undergoes processing by proprotein convertases, a class of serine proteases that typically recognize the canonical motif RX(R/K)R↓. The current model of Pmel17 maturation states that this processing step occurs in melanosomes, but in light of recent reports this issue has become controversial. We therefore addressed this question by thoroughly assessing the processing kinetics of either wild-type Pmel17 or a secreted soluble Pmel17 derivative. Our results demonstrate clearly that processing of Pmel17 occurs during secretion and that it does not require entry of the protein into the endocytic system. Strikingly, processing proceeds even in the presence of the secretion inhibitor monensin, suggesting that Pmel17 is an exceptionally good substrate. In line with this, we find that newly synthesized surface Pmel17 is already quantitatively cleaved. Moreover, we demonstrate that Pmel17 function is independent of the sequence identity of its unconventional proprotein convertase-cleavage motif that lacks arginine in P4 position. The data alter the current view of Pmel17 maturation and suggest that the multistep processing of Pmel17 begins with an early cleavage during secretion that primes the protein for later functional processing.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Biogenesis of functional antigenic peptide transporter TAP requires assembly of pre-existing TAP1 with newly synthesized TAP2

Kirstin Keusekotten; Ralf M. Leonhardt; Sarah Ehses; Michael R. Knittler

The transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is essential for the delivery of antigenic peptides from the cytosol into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where they are loaded onto major histocompatibility complex class I molecules. TAP is a heterodimeric transmembrane protein that comprises the homologous subunits TAP1 and TAP2. As for many other oligomeric protein complexes, which are synthesized in the ER, the process of subunit assembly is essential for TAP to attain a native functional state. Here, we have analyzed the individual requirements of TAP1 and TAP2 for the formation of a functional TAP complex. Unlike TAP1, TAP2 is very unstable when expressed in isolation. We show that heterodimerization of TAP subunits is required for maintaining a stable level of TAP2. By using an in vitro expression system we demonstrate that the biogenesis of functional TAP depends on the assembly of preexisting TAP1 with newly synthesized TAP2, but not vice versa. The pore forming core transmembrane domain (core TMD) of in vitro expressed TAP2 is necessary and sufficient to allow functional complex formation with pre-existing TAP1. We propose that the observed assembly mechanism of TAP protects newly synthesized TAP2 from rapid degradation and controls the number of transport active transporter molecules. Our findings open up new possibilities to investigate functional and structural properties of TAP and provide a powerful model system to address the biosynthetic assembly of oligomeric transmembrane proteins in the ER.


European Journal of Immunology | 2009

Functional significance of tapasin membrane association and disulfide linkage to ERp57 in MHC class I presentation.

Nathalie Vigneron; David R. Peaper; Ralf M. Leonhardt; Peter Cresswell

Tapasin is disulfide linked to ERp57 within the peptide loading complex. In cell‐free assays, a soluble variant of the tapasin/ERp57 dimer recruits MHC class I molecules and promotes peptide binding to them, whereas soluble tapasin alone does not. Here we show that within cells, tapasin conjugation with ERp57 is as critical as its integration into the membrane for efficient MHC class I assembly, surface expression, and Ag presentation to CD8+ T cells. Elimination of both of these properties severely compromises tapasin function, in keeping with predictions from in vitro studies.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2013

Critical residues in the PMEL/Pmel17 N-terminus direct the hierarchical assembly of melanosomal fibrils

Ralf M. Leonhardt; Nathalie Vigneron; Jia Shee Hee; Morven Graham; Peter Cresswell

Asp-73, Pro-75, Trp-153, and Trp-160 are essential residues in the PMEL NTR that are required for functional fibril formation. The NTR is necessary in cis to drive the downstream PKD into an amyloid core matrix, which subsequently incorporates and stabilizes the RPT domain–containing, MαC fibril–associated fragment.

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Michael R. Knittler

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Benoît Van den Eynde

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Elke Rufer

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Alexandre Michaux

Université catholique de Louvain

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Aude Bonehill

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Nathalie Demotte

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Pierre van der Bruggen

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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Vincent Stroobant

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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