@inbook{beba21eb31794518826387f36d810363,
title = "The show and tell of cross-presentation",
abstract = "Cross-presentation is the culmination of complex subcellular processes that allow the processing of exogenous proteins and the presentation of resultant peptides on major histocompatibility class I (MHC-I) molecules to CD8 T cells. Dendritic cells (DCs) are a cell type that uniquely specializes in cross-presentation, mainly in the context of viral or non-viral infection and cancer. DCs have an extensive network of endovesicular pathways that orchestrate the biogenesis of an ideal cross-presentation compartment where processed antigen, MHC-I molecules, and the MHC-I peptide loading machinery all meet. As a central conveyor of information to CD8 T cells, cross-presentation allows cross-priming of T cells which carry out robust adaptive immune responses for tumor and viral clearance. Cross-presentation can be canonical or noncanonical depending on the functional status of the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP), which in turn influences the vesicular route of MHC-I delivery to internalized antigen and the cross-presented repertoire of peptides. Because TAP is a central node in MHC-I presentation, it is targeted by immune evasive viruses and cancers. Thus, understanding the differences between canonical and noncanonical cross-presentation may inform new therapeutic avenues against cancer and infectious disease. Defects in cross-presentation on a cellular and genetic level lead to immune-related disease progression, recurrent infection, and cancer progression. In this chapter, we review the process of cross-presentation beginning with the DC subsets that conduct cross-presentation, the signals that regulate cross-presentation, the vesicular trafficking pathways that orchestrate cross-presentation, the modes of cross-presentation, and ending with disease contexts where cross-presentation plays a role.",
keywords = "Bacteria, CDC1, CDC2, Cancer, Chlamydia, Cross-presentation, Dendritic cells, Endosomal recycling compartment, Immune evasion, MHC-I, Mycobacteria, SNARE, Toll-like receptor, Transporter associated with antigen processing, Vesicular traffic, Virus",
author = "Blander, {J. Magarian} and {Yee Mon}, {Kristel Joy} and Atimukta Jha and Dylan Roycroft",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023",
year = "2023",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/bs.ai.2023.08.002",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780443193323",
series = "Advances in Immunology",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
pages = "33--114",
editor = "Alt, {Frederick W.} and Murphy, {Kenneth M.}",
booktitle = "Advances in Immunology",
address = "United States",
}