Correspondence to: Marieke van Ham, Division of Tumor Biology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Tel:31-20-512-2023 Fax:31-20-512-2029 E-mail:vanham{at}nki.nl.
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Abstract |
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Antigen presentation by major histocompatibility complex class II molecules is essential for antibody production and T cell activation. For most class II alleles, peptide binding depends on the catalytic action of human histocompatibility leukocyte antigens (HLA)-DM. HLA-DO is selectively expressed in B cells and impedes the activity of DM, yet its physiological role remains unclear. Cell surface iodination assays and mass spectrometry of major histocompatibility complex class IIeluted peptides show that DO affects the antigenic peptide repertoire of class II. DO generates both quantitative and qualitative differences, and inhibits presentation of large-sized peptides. DO function was investigated under various pH conditions in in vitro peptide exchange assays and in antigen presentation assays using DO- and DO+ transfectant cell lines as antigen-presenting cells, in which effective acidification of the endocytic pathway was prevented with bafilomycin A1, an inhibitor of vacuolar ATPases. DO effectively inhibits antigen presentation of peptides that are loaded onto class II in endosomal compartments that are not very acidic. Thus, DO appears to be a unique, cell typespecific modulator mastering the class IImediated immune response induced by B cells. DO may serve to increase the threshold for nonspecific B cell activation, restricting class IIpeptide binding to late endosomal compartments, thereby affecting the peptide repertoire.
Key Words: antigen presentation, immune response, selection, HLA-DM, autoimmunity
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Introduction |
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The immune response against exogenous antigens requires presentation of antigenic fragments by MHC class II molecules at the cell surface of APCs (1). As these peptides are predominantly generated in the endosomal and lysosomal pathway, MHC class II molecules are directed into this pathway after synthesis. For this, they associate in the endoplasmic reticulum to the invariant chain (Ii),1 containing the targeting signal for endosomal sorting (2). During transport to lysosomal-like compartments, where the majority of antigen loading occurs (termed MHC class II peptide-loading compartment [MIIC]), the Ii is proteolytically removed, leaving only a small fragment (class IIassociated invariant chain peptides [CLIP]) in the class II peptide binding groove (3) (4).
Release of CLIP is needed to allow antigen binding to class II (5). It requires the action of HLA-DM, another MHC-like molecule (6) (7) that predominantly localizes to the MIICs (8). In mutant cells or mice lacking functional DM, CLIP remains associated to class II, which severely hampers antigen presentation (9) (10) (11) (12). In addition, DM catalyzes dissociation of other nonstably bound peptides from class II, thus acting as a peptide editor that favors presentation of stably bound peptides (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18). During peptide loading, some class II molecules escape the editing action of DM, as demonstrated by the presence of a low, but detectable amount of class II/CLIP at the cell surface (5).
Recently, another MHC-encoded heterodimer, HLA-DO (19) (20), was found in tight association with DM in B cells (21). This association is a prerequisite for exit of DO from the endoplasmic reticulum and subsequent targeting into the endosomal pathway. Like DM, the predominant localization of the DMDO complex is in the MIICs. The function of DO is still controversial. DO inhibits the catalytic action of DM, impeding class IICLIP dissociation and reducing, but not abolishing, presentation of specific antigenic peptides (22) (23). Moreover, B cells of H2-Odeficient mice (H2-O is the murine equivalent of DO) have a changed capacity to present particular antigens (24). Since DO appears to be best expressed in resting B cells (our unpublished results), these findings suggest that DO may be involved in controlling B celldriven immune responses. Still, the physiological function and purpose of DO remain elusive.
We here report that DO forms a modulator of the antigenic peptide repertoire that is presented by MHC class II molecules. DO both limits antigen presentation as a whole, and simultaneously alters the actual composition of the set of class IIassociated peptides. Mechanistically, DO is demonstrated to inhibit DM-mediated class IIpeptide loading best at the pH of the early endocytic compartments. As a consequence, DO skews the peptide repertoire to those peptides that are loaded onto class II in acidic compartments, like the MIICs, while impeding peptide loading in earlier, less acidic compartments of the endosomal/lysosomal pathway.
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Materials and Methods |
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Cell Lines, Transfectants, and Antibodies.
Stable transfectants of the melanoma cell line Mel JuSo (HLA-A1, HLA-B8, HLA-Cw7, HLA-DR3, and HLA-DQ2 by DNA typing) either transfected with HLA-DO (19), HLA-DOßgreen fluorescent protein (GFP), or vector only (20) (23), were grown in Iscove's medium with 10% FCS, 2,000 µg/ml G418, and/or 600 µg/ml hygromycin (GIBCO BRL). Continuous and homogenous expression of the GFP-tagged proteins was ensured by regular selection of the GFP+ cells by FACS®. B lymphocytes, derived from peripheral blood from healthy donors, were purified with anti-CD19 Dynabeads® and detached with the corresponding DETACHaBEAD®, according to the manufacturer's instructions (Dynal). The HLA-DRspecific mAbs L243 (25) and 1B5 (26), the CLIP-specific antibody CerCLIP.1 (27), the DR3antigenic peptide specific mAb 16.23 (28) (29), the DM
-specific mAb 5C1 (30), the rabbit anti-DOß serum (23), and the Ii-specific polyclonal sera ICN2 and ICC5 (31) have been described (8). The antiactin mAb Ab-1 was obtained from Oncogene Research Products and the Texas redconjugated secondary antibodies from Molecular Probes.
DNA Constructs.
The cDNAs encoding HLA-DO (19) and HLA-DOß (20) were respectively cloned into pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) and a variant of pCEP4 (Invitrogen) disabled for episomal replication. The generation of a fusion construct between GFP and the COOH terminus of DOß (DOßGFP) has been described (23). Other DNA manipulations were carried out using standard procedures (32).
Biochemical and Western Blot Analyses.
Cell surface labeling of proteins was performed by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination with 1 mCi Na125I on cells grown to subconfluency in a 75-cm2 tissue culture flask. Cells were washed four times with cold PBS, lysed in Tris lysis buffer (pH 7.4) containing 0.5% NP-40 and 2 µM PMSF (Sigma Chemical Co.), and used for immunoprecipitations with normal rabbit serum, mAb 1B5, and the polyclonal sera ICN2 and ICC5. Samples were loaded such that they were related to equal amounts of recovered radioactive class II molecules and separated by 12.5% SDS-PAGE. For pulsechase analysis, cells (grown to subconfluency in 6 Ø cm dishes) were pulsed for 30 min with 0.1 mCi L-[35S]methionine and L-[35S]cysteine (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in methionine- and cysteine-free RPMI 1640 medium after deprivation of the cells of methionine and cysteine for 30 min and chased upon addition of cold methionine/cysteine to a final concentration of 1 µM. Cells were either lysed in NP-40containing lysis buffer immediately or after chase periods for up to 8 h in complete medium at 37°C. Class II molecules were recovered from equal amounts of TCA-precipitable radioactivity using the 1B5 antibody. Immunoprecipitates were analyzed by 12.5% SDS-PAGE. To determine the relative expression levels of DM and DO, equal amounts of total protein were Western blotted using the anti-DM mAb 5C1 (30), the antiactin mAb Ab-1 (Oncogene), or the anti-DOß serum, and specific protein amounts were quantified using the FluorChemTM imaging system and analyzed with AlphaEaseTM FluorChemTM software (Alpha Innotech Corp.).
FACS® Analysis.
106 cells were stained with saturating amounts of unlabeled primary antibody and PE-conjugated F(ab')2 rabbit antimouse IgG (heavy and light chains; Zymed) and analyzed on a FACScanTM flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson).
MHC Class II Peptide Isolation, Reversed Phase HPLC, Mass Spectrometry, and Peptide Sequencing.
HLA-DR3peptide complexes were purified from >1010 Mel JuSo cells transfected with DOßGFP (FACS®-sorted for homogenous DO
ßGFP expression) or with vector only. Peptides were eluted and separated by RP-HPLC on a SMART system equipped with a µRPC C2/C18 SC2.1/10 column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) using an acetonitrile gradient in 0.1% TFA as described (23).The RP-HPLC profiles obtained from independent separations were reproducible and equivalent for the respective class II eluates of DO- or DO+ cells. 0.5 µl aliquots were sampled from each HPLC fraction and analyzed by matrix-assisted laser-desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry using a TofSpec 2E mass spectrometer (Micromass) fitted with a time-lag focusing source (33) (34).
Peptide Association Assay.
HLA-DR3CLIP complexes were affinity purified from T2.DR3 cells using L243-coupled CNBr-activated Sepharose as described previously (17). Mel JuSo cells either transfected with DOßGFP or with vector only were lysed in 50 µM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, containing 0.5% NP-40, 5 µM EDTA, and protease inhibitors, followed by removal of nuclei and debris by centrifugation. Protein concentrations of the different lysates were determined by BCA (Pierce Chemical Co.) measurements using BSA (Sigma Chemical Co.) as standard and adjusted to equal values. Exchange of CLIP from DR3CLIP complexes for biotinylated apolipoprotein B (ApoB[28772894]) was determined by adding 2 µM of biotinylated peptide to 30 nM DR3CLIP in buffer containing 50 µM Tris-HCl, 25 µM Na2CO3, 2 µM EDTA, 0.1% NP-40, and 0.1 µM PMSF titrated to the desired pH with 1 M citrate (35). Lysates from ~5 x 105 cells or lysis buffer only were added when appropriate. Western blot analysis, using the DM
-specific mAb 5C1 (30) or the antiactin mAb Ab-1 (Oncogene) followed by quantification using the FluorChemTM imaging system and AlphaEaseTM FC software (Alpha Innotech Corp.), confirmed that the lysates contained identical amounts of DM and DM/DO. The time course of ApoB(28772894) association at 37°C was followed until saturation of peptide binding (24 h for pH 4.56.0 and 50 h for pH 7.0). MHCpeptide complexes were immunoprecipitated with immobilized L243 antibody and peptides were detected via peroxidase-conjugated streptavidin (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The absorbance at 405 nm was measured by an ELISA reader (Multiskan Plus; Titertek) and nonspecific signals (quadruplicates, typically 15% of maximal absorbance) were subtracted from the data (17) (35).
T Cell Proliferation Assay.
Antigen presentation experiments were performed essentially as described (23). In brief, Mel JuSo cells were incubated for 4 h with 100 nM bafilomycin A1 (Biomol) when appropriate, and subsequently pulsed with varying amounts of sonicate of Mycobacterium tuberculosis either in the presence or not of 40 nM bafilomycin A1. Subsequently, the cells were irradiated at 8,000 rads and seeded in 96-well flat-bottomed microtiter plates at cell concentrations triggering optimal T cell proliferation (36), together with 104 T cells from the HLA-DR3restricted, p3-13specific T cell clone Rp15 1-1. As a control, the HLA-DR3restricted epitope, the p56-65 peptide of the 3031-kD protein of M. tuberculosis, was added to nontreated, irradiated cells. To check for toxicity due to the Bafilomycin A1 treatment, T cell proliferation was measured in the presence of APCs and 10% IL-2 (Lymphocult-T; Biotest). After 66 h in culture, 1 µCi [3H]thymidine was added, cells were collected 18 h later on glass fiber filter strips, and the radioactivity incorporated in the DNA was assessed by liquid scintillation counting (36).
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Results and Discussion |
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DO Interferes with CLIP Release from Class II Molecules and Reduces Antigenic Peptide Presentation.
The function of DO was studied using the human cell line Mel JuSo (DO-, DM+, and HLADR3+; 23) and stable transfectants expressing DOßGFP with GFP (37) linked to the cytoplasmic tail of DOß without affecting DO function (23). Although DO hampers the release of CLIP from MHC class II molecules, it affects presentation of some particular antigenic peptides, but not of others (22) (23) (24). To get insight in the effect of DO on the overall efficiency of antigenic peptide presentation by class II, FACS® analysis was performed on both DO- and DO+ cells. The amount of DO
ßGFP in the DO+ cells was such that the whole DM pool was quantitatively associated to DO (23). DO
ßGFP expression caused an ~50% reduction in staining with the antibody 16.23 that recognizes HLA-DR3antigenic peptide complexes (28) (29), concomitant with an increase in the relative amount of class II/CLIP (Fig 1 A). The total level of cell-surface expressed class II remained unchanged (Fig 1 A), nor did the level of DM vary significantly (23). Thus, in cells with DM quantitatively associated to DO, the pool of class II presenting antigenic peptides is reduced, but not eliminated. Since it was recently suggested (38) that the inhibitory effect of DO on CLIP release only occurred at high DO expression levels, FACS® analysis on a population of transfectants with various DO
ßGFP levels was performed. This demonstrated an almost linear correlation between DO
ßGFP expression and cell surfaceexpressed class II/CLIP, ranging from a low, but detectable, amount of class II/CLIP in DO- cells to an almost two-log increase in cells with relatively high DO
ßGFP levels (Fig 1 B). Additional augmentation of DO
ßGFP expression did not increase the relative CLIP expression any further, suggesting that from this point on DO expression was saturating for quantitative association of DM to DO (Fig 1 B). Identical results were obtained when GFP and DOß were expressed as separate proteins from one bicistronic transcript (data not shown). FACS® sorting of different DO
ßGFP transfectant populations (populations 25, Fig 1 B) was performed to quantify DM and DO expression (Table 1). Comparison of the relative DO/DM levels with that observed in primary B cells showed that the relative DO/DM level in primary B cells falls within the range of values obtained from the transfectants studied (Table 1). Thus, DO invariably and quantitatively impedes CLIP removal from newly synthesised class II molecules, also when expressed at levels that are comparable to the physiological B cell levels.
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DO Abolishes Presentation of a Set of Long Peptides Associated to Class II.
The effect of DO on the composition of surface class IIpeptide complexes was investigated more closely using surface iodinated class II complexes from DO+ and DO- cells. Strikingly, MHC class II immunoprecipitation using the HLA-DRspecific mAb 1B5 led to the coprecipitation of a set of iodinated peptides with apparent molecular sizes <18 kD in the DO- cells, but not in the DO+ cells (Fig 2 A). These fragments were not recovered upon immunoprecipitation using mAbs specific for the N or COOH terminus of the Ii, indicating that they were not derived from the class IIassociated Ii fragments (Fig 2 A). Moreover, when class IIIi maturation was compared between both DO+ and DO- in pulsechase analysis, DO did not affect the intracellular transport of class II (Fig 2 B, top), nor the rate of breakdown of the associated Ii. Ii breakdown intermediates (39) were recovered at the same time points in both DO+ and DO- cells, apart from the expected recovery of CLIP at late time points in DO+ cells only (Fig 2 B, bottom). Notably, the set of large peptides associated with class II at the cell surface in DO- cells did not correspond to the Ii fragments observed in pulsechase analysis (compare Fig 2a and Fig b). Together, these data show that DO generates both quantitative differences in the pool of class IIassociated peptides at the cell surface of APCs (as demonstrated by a 50% reduction of 16.23 staining; Fig 1 A), as well as qualitative differences in that class IImediated presentation of long, iodinable fragments is abrogated.
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DO Generates Qualitative Differences in the Class IIassociated Antigenic Peptide Repertoire.
To identify the nature of the differences in the class II peptide repertoire generated by DO, HLA-DR3 molecules were purified from both DO+ and DO- cells. The associated peptides were eluted, separated into >100 different fractions by RP-HPLC and analyzed by matrix-assisted laser-desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry (33) (34). Analysis of the fractions showed that the DO+ cells were highly enriched in peptides with masses corresponding to various CLIP variants in the late eluting fractions of the RP-HPLC, as observed presiously (23). Both for DO- and for DO+, >500 individual mass species in antigenic peptide size (Mr range of 1321 amino acid residues) were identified in the RP-HPLC fractions eluting before CLIP. Analysis of all of these masses upon calibration showed that ~90% of the peptides were identical for both eluates (Fig 3), with masses being regarded as identical when (1) differing <0.5 daltons and (2) eluting in equivalent fractions from the RP-HPLC. Strikingly, ~10% of the peptides were unique either for the DO+ or DO- cells (Fig 3). These unique peptides were found in several subsequent fractions of either DO- or DO+ eluate, but not in any of the fractions of the other eluate. The average size of the unique peptides did not vary significantly between both eluates. Thus, apart from abrogating association of long peptide fragments to class II, DO also alters the set of class IIassociated antigenic peptides by suppressing presentation of certain peptides, while inducing presentation of others. Therefore, DO has the unique property of modulating the class IImediated peptide repertoire, both by positive and negative discrimination. This level of fastidiousness in selecting peptides for loading onto presenting class II molecules points to an unprecedented function for the DO molecule in the immune system.
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DO Modulates DM-mediated Class IIpeptide Loading in a pH-dependent Manner.
By which mechanism does DO generate qualitative differences in the class IIassociated peptide repertoire? Different class IIpeptide complexes can be generated in distinct compartments of the endosomal/lysosomal pathway in different pH environments (40) (41) (42) (43) (44) (45). The DMDO complex constitutively recycles between the MIICs and the plasma membrane (data not shown), implying that en route to the MIIC, both DM and DO traverse all endocytic compartments where they may support and modulate peptide loading. Recently, recombinant DO was reported to affect DM function in a pH-sensitive manner in vitro (24). If true, this may illustrate how DO modulates the peptide repertoire. To determine if DO modulates DM activity in a pH-dependent fashion in our transfectants, in vitro peptide loading experiments were performed using DM and DMDO complexes obtained from either DO- or DO+ cells in which the whole DM pool was quantitatively associated to DO (23) (30) (35). Equal amounts of DM and DMDO were applied in the experiments as quantified using the FluorChemTM imaging system and AlphaEaseTM FC software (data not shown). Exchange of CLIP from purified HLA-DR3CLIP for the antigenic peptide ApoB(28772894) was indeed increasingly catalyzed by DM on acidification with an optimum pH ~5 (Fig 4 A). DO-mediated inhibition of DM was strongest at the pH normally observed in early lysosomes (pH ~6), conditions in which the catalytic capacity of DM is almost abrogated. DO still inhibited DM at the pH described for the MIICs (pH 4.55), but only by half (Fig 4 A). Thus, these in vitro data suggests that DO inhibits DM preferentially at the pH of earlier endosomal compartments, while allowing substantial DM-mediated peptide loading at the pH present in MIICs.
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The pH-sensing activity of DO was investigated under more physiological conditions in antigen presentation assays (36) using bafilomycin A1, an inhibitor of vacuolar ATPases (44). Confocal analyses showed that this strongly reduced the acidification of the endosomal/lysosomal compartments, with the majority of DMDO still locating to the MIICs (data not shown). Antigen presentation of the p3-13 peptide of the hsp65 protein from M. tuberculosis (36) was studied, as this peptide is loaded onto newly synthesized class II molecules in acidic MIICs (its presentation is abrogated upon brefeldin A incubation; data not shown). Incubation of both DO- and DO+ cells with varying amounts of M. tuberculosis sonicate showed that both transfectants presented the p3-13 peptide in a dose-dependent manner (Fig 4 B). DO expression reduced presentation (Fig 4 B), in line with the in vitro peptide loading abilities of DMDO and DM at acidic pH (Fig 4 A) and our previous results (23). bafilomycin A1 strongly affected p3-13 presentation upon incubation of DO- cells with M. tuberculosis sonicate, but still allowed presentation at higher antigen concentrations (Fig 4 B). However, bafilomycin A1 completely inhibited p3-13 peptide presentation in DO+ cells at all concentrations of M. tuberculosis sonicate (Fig 4 B). To exclude the possibility that bafilomycin A1 inhibited antigen presentation in DO+ cells due to the initial lower presentation capacities of nontreated cells, antigen presentation was studied using a very high amount of M. tuberculosis sonicate (100 µg/ml) with varying amounts of APC. In this way, the T cell proliferation values induced by 1,500 and 3,000 nontreated DO+ cells were higher than the proliferation values obtained with 6,000 nontreated DO- cells (Fig 4 C). Still, bafilomycin A1 again completely abrogated p3-13 peptide presentation at all DO+ concentrations, while only partially inhibiting presentation by DO- cells (even upon application of 6,000 DO- cells/assay well; Fig 4 C). Antigen presentation was not affected by bafilomycin A1 when IL-2 was added to the T cellAPC mixture, indicating that bafilomycin A1 was not toxic to the cells (Fig 4 C). Thus, DO completely inhibits DM-mediated class IIpeptide loading in intracellular compartments that are not effectively acidified. These data demonstrate that DO indeed acts in a pH-dependent fashion to regulate DM function. Translated to the physiological situation, DO will inhibit DM-mediated peptide loading in early endosomal compartments, while allowing peptide binding to class II molecules in more acidic compartments, like the MIICs. In concordance with this are descriptions of DM mediating class IIpeptide binding in MIICs, but not in early endosomes (42) (43) (45), considering that in those experiments DM was most likely complexed to DO. The skewing by DO to DM-mediated peptide loading in acidic compartments provides an explanation for how DO inhibits class IImediated presentation of certain epitopes, especially large ones, while favoring presentation of others.
DO May Serve to Control B Cell-driven Immune Responses.
DO is the first example of a physiological relevant protein that both limits and skews the class IIpresented antigenic peptide repertoire. Two distinct features of the action of DO on class IImediated antigen presentation are apparent, one quantitative, the other qualitative. First, DO downmodulates the levels of class IIantigen loading as a whole by impeding CLIP release from class II, resulting in a reduced, but not completely inhibited, presentation of antigens and thus a diminished CD4+ response. The observed linearity between DO and DRCLIP expression indicates that even relatively low DO expression modulates the class II response in this way. Second, DO results in the presentation of certain peptides while suppressing others, thus modulating the antigenic peptide repertoire. Presentation of long peptides is abrogated by DO, probably because these fragments have already been trimmed down in the later, acidic peptidasecontaining (46) compartments where DO allows peptide loading of class II. The finding that DO is mainly expressed in B cells, and thus forms a cell typespecific modulator, points to a B cellspecific need for skewing peptide loading to acidic compartments. Since in a B cell, specific antigens are taken up via the B cell receptor and targeted to acidic MIICs (47) (48), DO may favor presentation of these antigens, while repressing presentation of antigens continuously internalized via fluid phase endocytosis. These modulatory actions of DO may increase the threshold for nonspecific B cell activation, preventing nonspecific activation of the immune system and autoantibody production.
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Footnotes |
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M. van Lith and B. Lillemeier contributed equally to this work.
1 Abbreviations used in this paper: ApoB, apolipoprotein B; CLIP, class IIassociated invariant chain peptides; GFP, green fluorescent protein; Ii, invariant chain; MIIC, MHC class II compartment; RP-HPLC, reversed phase HPLC.
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Acknowledgements |
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We gratefully acknowledge G. Malcherek for the biotinylated ApoB(28772894) peptide and P. Cresswell for the T2.DR3 cells and the CerCLIP.1 antibody. We thank A. Griekspoor, L. de Bruin, and W. Haagmans for helpful assistance.
This work was supported by a Pioneer Grant from The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) (to M. van Ham and M. van Lith), by The Wellcome Trust (to J. Trowsdale), and by European Community grant CT960069 (to J. Neefjes and J. Trowsdale).
Submitted: 8 July 1999
Revised: 13 January 2000
Accepted: 21 January 2000
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References |
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