首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Binding of F-actin to spectrin-actin-depleted erythrocyte membrane inside-out vesicles was measured using [3H]F-actin. F-actin binding to vesicles at 25 degrees C was stimulated 5-10 fold by addition of spectrin dimers or tetramers to vesicles. Spectrin tetramer was twice as effective as dimer in stimulating actin binding, but neither tetramer nor dimer stimulated binding at 4 degrees C. The addition of purified erythrocyte membrane protein band 4.1 to spectrin- reconstituted vesicles doubled their actin-binding capacity. Trypsinization of unreconstituted vesicles that contain < 10% of the spectrin but nearly all of the band 4.1, relative to ghosts, decreased their F-actin-binding capacity by 70%. Whereas little or none of the residual spectrin was affected by trypsinization, band 4.1 was significantly degraded. Our results show that spectrin can anchor actin filaments to the cytoplasmic surface of erythrocyte membranes and suggest that band 4.1 may be importantly involved in the association.  相似文献   

2.
Chemically tritiated actin from rabbit skeletal muscle was used to investigate the association of G-actin with the red cell membrane. The tritiated actin was shown to be identical to unmodified actin in its ability to polymerize and to activate heavy meromyosin ATPase. Using sealed and unsealed red cell ghosts we have shown that G-actin binds to the cytoplasmic but not the extracellular membrane surface of ghosts. Inside-out vesicles which have been stripped of endogenous actin and spectrin by low-ionic-strength incubation bind little G-actin. However, when a crude spectrin extract containing primarily spectrin, actin, and band 4.1 is added back to stripped vesicles, subsequent binding of G-actin can be increased up to 40-fold. Further, this crude spectrin extract can compete for and abolish G-actin binding to unsealed ghosts. Actin binding to ghosts increases linearly with added G-actin and requires the presence of magnesium. In addition, actin binding is inhibited by cytochalasin B and DNAase I. Negative staining reveals an abundance of actin filaments formed when G-actin is added to reconstituted inside-out vesicles but none when it is added to unreconstituted vesicles. These observations indicate that added G-actin binds to the red cell membrane via filament formation nucleated by some membrane component at the cytoplasmic surface.  相似文献   

3.
The role of band 4.1 in the association of actin with erythrocyte membranes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Spectrin stimulates the association of F-actin with erythrocyte inside-out vesicles. Although inside-out vesicles are nearly devoid of two of the three major cytoskeletal proteins, spectrin and actin, they retain nearly all of the cytoskeletal protein designated band 4.1. Inside-out vesicles which have been substantially depleted of band 4.1 by extraction in 1 M KCl, 0.4 M urea and then reconstituted with spectrin show a markedly diminished ability to bind actin by comparison with vesicles containing normal amounts of band 4.1. This diminution is not due to an impaired ability of the vesicles to bind spectrin. Addition of purified band 4.1 to vesicles either before or after they have been reconstituted with spectrin restores their actin binding capacity to near normal levels as does addition of a spectrin-band 4.1 complex prepared by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Band 4.1 bound to vesicles in the absence of added spectrin has no effect on actin binding. Our results suggest that a spectrin band 4.1 complex is responsible for binding actin to erythrocyte membranes.  相似文献   

4.
A low-salt extract prepared from human erythrocyte membranes forms a solid gel when purified rabbit muscle G- or F-actin is added to it to give a concentration of approximately 1 mg/ml. This extract contains spectrin, actin, band 4.1, band 4.9, hemoglobin, and several minor components. Pellets obtained by centrifugation of the gelled material at 43,000 g for 10 min contain spectrin, actin, band 4.1, and band 4.9. Although extracts that are diluted severalfold do not gel when actin is added to them, the viscosity of the mixtures increases dramatically over that of G-actin alone, extract alone, or F-actin alone at equivalent concentrations. Heat-denatured extract is completely inactive. Under conditions of physiological ionic strength and pH, information of this supramolecular structure is inhibited by raising the free calcium ion concentration to micromolar levels. Low-salt extracts prepared by initial extraction at 37 degrees C (and stored at 0 degree C) gel after actin is added to them only when warmed, whereas extracts prepared by extraction at 0 degree C are active on ice as well as after warming. Preincubation of the 37 degrees C low-salt extract under conditions that favor conversion of spectrin dimer to tetramer greatly enhances gelation activity at 0 degree C. Conversely, preincubation of the 0 degree C low-salt extract under conditions that favor conversion of spectrin tetramer to dimer greatly diminishes gelation activity at 0 degree C. Spectrin dimers or tetramers are purified from the 37 dgrees or 0 degree C low-salt extract by gel filtration at 4 degrees C over Sepharose 4B. The addition of actin to either purified spectrin dimer (at 32 degrees C) or tetramer (at 0 degree C or 32 degrees C) results in relatively small increases in viscosity, whereas the addition of actin to a high-molecular-weight complex (HMW complex) containing spectrin, actin, band 4.1, and band 4.9 results in dramatic, calcium-sensitive increases in viscosity. These viscosities are comparable to those obtained with the 37 degrees or 0 degree C low-salt extracts. The addition of purified band 4.1 to either purified spectrin dimer (at 32 degrees C) or purified spectrin tetramer (at 0 degree C) plus actin results in large increases in viscosity similar to those observed for the HMW complex and the crude extract, which is in agreement with a recent report by E. Ungewickell, P. M. Bennett, R. Calvert, V. Ohanian, and W. B. Gratzer. 1979 Nature (Lond.) 280:811-814. We suggest that this spectrin-actin-band 4.1 gel represents a major structural component of the erythrocyte cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

5.
The binding of human erythrocyte ankyrin (band 2.1) to the erythrocyte membrane has been characterized by reassociating purified ankyrin with ankyrin-depleted inside-out vesicles. Ankyrin reassociates at high affinity with a limited number of protease-sensitive sites located only on the cytoplasmic side of the erythrocyte membrane. Depleting the vesicles of band 4.2 does not affect their binding capacity. A 45,000-dalton polypeptide derived from the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 competitively inhibits the binding of ankyrin to inside-out vesicles. Although the bulk of band 3 molecules appear to have the potential for binding ankyrin, nly a fraction of the band 3 molecules in native membranes or in reconstituted liposomes actually provides accessible high affinity ankyrin binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
Hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is an inherited abnormality of red cell shape and results from defective interactions amongst the components of the cytoskeleton. It is known that spectrin/actin dissociates in low ionic strength media from ghosts and cytoskeletons at a rate which is slower for HS than normal preparations. Hybridization experiments have established that this behaviour is not due to a defective spectrin or actin but resides in a spectrin-binding component of the membrane [Hill, Sawyer, Howlett & Wiley (1981) Biochem. J. 201, 259-266]. In the present study erythrocyte shells have been examined in low ionic strength media and a similar difference in the rate of solubilization has been revealed. Since band 4.1 (but not band 2.1) is a common component of cytoskeletons and shells it is possible that 4.1 may be abnormal in the HS condition. The interaction of band 4.1 with spectrin/actin was examined by low shear falling ball viscometry. The addition of a mixture of band 2.1 and 4.1 to a solution of actin and spectrin tetramer increased the viscosity due to cross-linking of the cytoskeletal elements by band 4.1. When band 2.1/4.1 mixtures were derived from five HS families the viscosity was increased to a greater extent than in the normal controls. This difference was not a result of alterations in the calcium dependence of the spectrin/actin-band 4.1 interaction. The results imply that band 4.1 may be defective in the HS condition.  相似文献   

7.
We have characterized the association of the intermediate filament protein, vimentin, with the plasma membrane, using radioiodinated lens vimentin and various preparations of human erythrocyte membrane vesicles. Inside-out membrane vesicles (IOVs), depleted of spectrin and actin, bind I125-vimentin in a saturable manner unlike resealed, right-side-out membranes which bind negligible amounts of vimentin in an unsaturable fashion. The binding of vimentin to IOVs is abolished by trypsin or acid treatment of the vesicles. Extraction of protein 4.1 or reconstitution of the membranes with purified spectrin do not basically affect the association. However, removal of ankyrin (band 2.1) significantly lowers the binding. Upon reconstitution of depleted vesicles with purified ankyrin, the vimentin binding function is restored. If ankyrin is added in excess the binding of vimentin to IOVs is quantitatively inhibited, whereas protein 4.1, the cytoplasmic fragment of band 3, band 6, band 4.5 (catalase), or bovine serum albumin do not influence it. Preincubation of the IOVs with a polyclonal anti-ankyrin antibody blocks 90% of the binding. Preimmune sera and antibodies against spectrin, protein 4.1, glycophorin A, and band 3 exhibit no effect. On the basis of these data, we propose that vimentin is able to associate specifically with the erythrocyte membrane skeleton and that ankyrin constitutes its major attachment site.  相似文献   

8.
Human erythrocyte ankyrin was cleaved by restricted proteolysis at 0 degrees C into two distinct chemical domains. The site on ankyrin that binds spectrin was found to be within a 55,000-dalton domain by spectrin affinity chromatography and co-sedimentation with spectrin in a sucrose gradient. A 32,000-dalton fragment of this domain was prepared (tryptic digest, 0 degrees C, 24 h), separated by gel filtration, and shown to inhibit spectrin binding to the membrane. By comparison with previous two-dimensional peptide maps, the spectrin-binding site was located within this 32,000-dalton fragment near the end of the molecule. The band 3-binding site was identified within an 82,000-dalton domain by binding to a band 3 affinity column. Gel electrophoresis in the absence of detergents confirmed these results and demonstrated that a peptide from the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 retained the capacity to bind the 82,000-dalton domain. The binding properties of the structural domains of ankyrin were correlated with a determination of the affinity constant of the intact molecule. Ankyrin bound with a high affinity to the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 (KD = 8 X 10(-8) M) and to spectrin tetramer (KD = 1 X 10(-7) M) but less so to spectrin dimer (KD = 1 X 10(-6) M). These findings are summarized in a preliminary structural and functional model of ankyrin's role in linking spectrin to the membrane.  相似文献   

9.
ATP-induced endocytosis in human erythrocyte ghosts has been studied, and a procedure for the isolation of the endocytotic vesicles is described. Under isotonic conditions and 37 degrees C, optimal endocytosis occurs with concentrations of 4 to 10 mM MgATP. Within 30 min, up to 45% of the membrane is removed from the surface and converted into sealed inside-out vesicles. Local anesthetics, such as chlorpromazine, potentiate ATP-induced endocytosis in ghosts. Forcing cells containing endocytotic vesicles through a hypodermic needle leads to the exclusive fragmentation of the outermost plasma membrane. The endocytosed vesicles can then be separated from these fragments by centrifugation on a gradient of dextran T70. Biochemical analyses indicate that endocytotic vesicles contain full complements of the major membrane proteins (i.e. also spectrin and actin), common phospholipids, fatty acids, and cholesterol. Furthermore, they exhibit a fully intact spectrin component 2 phosphorylation machinery. In contrast, MgATPase activity is largely excluded from these vesicles. The novel inside-out vesicles described have properties different from those of previously analyzed fragments of the erythrocyte membrane. They will permit a detailed study of a native spectrin-actin network now exposed to the outside.  相似文献   

10.
A population of band 3 proteins in the human erythrocyte membrane is known to have restricted rotational mobility due to interaction with cytoskeletal proteins. We have further investigated the cause of this restriction by measuring the effects on band 3 rotational mobility of rebinding ankyrin and band 4.1 to ghosts stripped of these proteins as well as spectrin and actin. Rebinding either ankyrin or 4.1 alone has no detectable effect on band 3 mobility. Rebinding both these proteins together does, however, reimpose a restriction on band 3 rotation. The effect on band 3 rotational mobility of rebinding ankyrin and 4.1 are similar irrespective of whether or not band 4.2 is removed from the membrane. We suggest that ankyrin and 4.1 together promote the formation of slowly rotating clusters of band 3.  相似文献   

11.
Spectrin, the major cytoskeletal protein in erythrocytes, is localized on the inner membrane surface in association with membrane-spanning glycoproteins and with intramembrane particles. The presence of a specific, high-affinity protein binding site for spectrin on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane has been established by measurement of reassociation of spectrin with spectrin-depleted inside-out vesicles. A 72,000 Mr proteolytic fragment of this attachment protein has been purified, which bound to spectrin in solution and competed for reassociation of spectrin with vesicles. A 215,000 Mr polypeptide has been identified as the precursor of the spectrin-binding fragment. The membrane attachment protein for spectrin was named ankyrin, and has been purified and characterized. Ankyrin has been demonstrated to be tightly associated in detergent extracts of vesicles with band 3, a major membrane-spanning polypeptide, and to bind directly to a proteolytic fragment derived from the cytoplasmic domain of band 3. Ankyrin is thus an example of a protein that directly links a cytoplasmic structural protein to an integral membrane protein. The organization of the erythrocyte membrane has implications for more complex cell types since immunoreactive forms of ankyrin distinct from myosin or filamin have been detected by radioimmunoassay in a variety of cells and tissues. Indirect immunofluorescent staining of cultured cells reveals immunoreactive forms of ankyrin in a cytoplasmic meshwork and in a punctate distribution over nuclei. The staining changes dramatically during mitosis, with concentration of stain at the spindle poles in metaphase and intense staining of the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

12.
A Tsuji  S Ohnishi 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6133-6139
The effects of incubation of erythrocyte ghosts under various conditions (ionic strength or addition of ankyrin, diamines, or ATP) on the lateral motion of band 3 in the membranes were studied by using the fluorescence photobleaching recovery technique. Incubation of ghosts with exogenous ankyrin increased the immobile fraction of band 3, from 0.6 in intact ghosts to 0.8-0.9 when an average of 0.2 mol of extra ankyrin was bound per mole of band 3. Ankyrin-free band 3 proteins were mobile, but their mobility was governed by the spectrin association state in the cytoskeletal network. The diffusion constant was 5.3 X 10(-11) cm2 s-1 at a spectrin tetramer mole fraction of 0.3-0.4 in 10 mM NaCl/5 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.8, and decreased 1 order of magnitude when the tetramer fraction increased to 0.5 in higher NaCl concentration (150 mM NaCl). A similar decrease was observed when the spectrin tetramer fraction was increased by 0.2 mM spermine in 10 mM NaCl/10 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane hydrochloride, pH 7.6. On the other hand, the rotational motion of band 3 in the membranes was not affected by the spectrin association state. Trypsin treatment of ghosts cleaved off the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 and caused a marked (8-fold) increase in the lateral mobility, D = 4.0 X 10(-10) cm2 s-1. These results indicate that the lateral mobility of ankyrin-free band 3 protein is restricted by interactions of their cytoplasmic domain with the cytoskeletal network. A model is presented that band 3 can pass the network when spectrins are in dissociated dimers and cannot pass when they are tetramers. The lateral diffusion constant is thus determined by the spectrin dimer population in the network.  相似文献   

13.
T Forte  T L Leto  M Minetti  V T Marchesi 《Biochemistry》1985,24(27):7876-7880
Proteins involved in a structural transition in red blood cell membranes detected at 8 +/- 1.5 degrees C by a stearic acid spin-label have been investigated. Calcium loading of red blood cells with ionophore A23187 caused the disappearance of the 8 degrees C transition. Protein 4.1 appears to be the most susceptible protein to Ca2+ treatment. Antibodies specific for spectrin, band 3 (43K cytoplasmic domain), and protein 4.1 have been utilized as specific probes to modify membrane thermotropic properties. The 8 degrees C transition was eliminated by anti-4.1 protein antibodies but was not modified by the other antibodies. To further characterize the protein(s) involved in the transition, ghosts were subjected to sequential extraction of skeletal proteins. The extraction of band 6, spectrin, and actin did not modify the 8 degrees C transition. In contrast, high-salt extraction (1 M KCl) of spectrin-actin-depleted vesicles, a procedure that extracts proteins 2.1 and 4.1, was able to eliminate the 8 degrees C transition. Rebinding of purified protein 4.1 to the high salt extracted vesicles restored the 8 degrees C transition. These results indicate the involvement of protein 4.1 in the transition and suggest a functional membrane association of this protein. The binding of protein 4.1 to the membrane seems to contribute significantly to the thermotropic properties of red blood cells.  相似文献   

14.
Is an intact cytoskeleton required for red cell urea and water transport?   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In order to determine the membrane protein(s) responsible for urea and water transport across the human red cell membrane, we planned to reconstitute purified membrane proteins into phosphatidylcholine vesicles. In preparatory experiments, we reconstituted a mixture of all of the red cell integral membrane proteins into phosphatidylcholine vesicles, but found that p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonate (pCMBS), which normally inhibits osmotic water permeability by approximately 90%, has no effect on this preparation. The preparation was also unable to transport urea at the high rates found in red cells, though glucose transport was normal. White ghosts, washed free of hemoglobin and resealed, also did not preserve normal urea and pCMBS-inhibitable water transport. One-step ghosts, prepared in Hepes buffer in a single-step procedure, without washing, retained normal urea and pCMBS-inhibitable water transport. Perturbations of the cytoskeleton in one-step ghosts, by removal of tropomyosin, or by severing the ankyrin link which binds band 3 to spectrin, caused the loss of urea and pCMBS-inhibitable water transport. These experiments suggest that an unperturbed cytoskeleton may be required for normal urea and pCMBS-inhibitable water transport. They also show that the pCMBS inhibition of water transport is dissociable from the water transport process and suggest a linkage between the pCMBS water transport inhibition site and the urea transport protein.  相似文献   

15.
S C Liu  G Fairbanks  J Palek 《Biochemistry》1977,16(18):4066-4074
Changes in pH significantly affect the morphology and physical properties of red cell membranes. We have explored the molecular basis for these phenomena by characterizing the pattern of protein disulfide cross-linkages formed spontaneously in ghost exposed to acid pH or elevated temperature (37 degrees C). Protein aggregation was analyzed by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. incubation of ghosts at pH 4.0 to 5.5 (0-4 degrees C) yielded (i) complexes of spectrin and band 3, (ii) complexes of actin and band 3, (iii) band 3 complexes, i.e. dimer and trimer, and (iv) heterogeneous aggregates involving spectrin, band 3, band 4.2, and actin in varying proportions. Aggregation was maximal near the isoelectric points of the major membrane proteins, and appeared to reflect (i) the aggregation of intramembrane particles including band 3 and (ii) more intimate contact between spectrin-actin meshwork and band 3.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions between spectrin and the inner surface of the human erythrocyte membrane have been implicated in the control of lateral mobility of the integral membrane proteins. We report here that incubation of “leaky” erythrocytes with a water-soluble proteolytic fragment containing the membrane attachment site for spectrin achieves a selective and controlled dissociation of spectrin from the membrane, and increases the rate of lateral mobility of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled integral membrane proteins (> 70% of label in band 3 and PAS-1). Mobility of membrane proteins is measured as an increase in the percentage of uniformly fluorescent cells with time after fusion of fluorescent with nonfluorescent erythrocytes by Sendai virus. The cells are permeable to macromolecules since virus-fused erythrocytes lose most of their hemoglobin. The membrane attachment site for spectrin has been solubilized by limited proteolysis of inside-out erythrocyte vesicles and has been purified (V). Bennett, J Biol Chem 253:2292 (1978). This 72,000-dalton fragment binds to spectrin in solution, competitively inhibits association of 32P-spectrin with inside-out vesicles with a Ki of 10?7M, and causes rapid dissociation of 32P-spectrin from vesicles. Both acid-treated 72,000-dalton fragment and the 45,000 dalton-cytoplasmic portion of band 3, which also was isolated from the proteolytic digest, have no effect on spectrin binding, release, or membrane protein mobility. The enhancement of membrane protein lateral mobility by the same polypeptide that inhibits binding of spectrin to inverted vesicles and displaces spectrin from these vesicles provides direct evidence that the interaction of spectrin with protein components in the membrane restricts the lateral mobility of integral membrane proteins in the erythrocyte.  相似文献   

17.
1. In whole ghosts, ankyrin, protein 4.1, protein band 3 and spectrin are lysed by purified calpain I in the presence of calcium. 2. Limited calpain lysis of purified ankyrin results in several peptides, including a 85 kD peptide bearing the ankyrin interaction site for the protein band 3 internal fragment (43 kD), and a 55 kD peptide carrying the ankyrin-spectrin interaction site. 3. These peptides are differently phosphorylated: the 85 kD by cytosol casein kinase, and the 55 kD by membrane casein kinase. 4. Protein 4.1 lysis mainly produces a 30 kD peptide resistant to proteolysis. 5. The spectrin beta-chain is more sensitive to calpain cleavage than the alpha chain; both chains seem to be cleaved in a similar sequential manner. 6. Limited proteolysis of spectrin dimer does not impede tetramerization in vitro.  相似文献   

18.
By shadowing specimens dried onto mica sheets we have obtained clear images of actin crosslinked by spectrin, an actin-binding protein found in erythrocytes. We conclude that spectrin dimers possess a single binding site for F actin. Tetramers formed by head-to-head association of two dimers possess two actin binding sites, one at each tail. Polymerizing G actin in the presence of spectrin tetramers or mixing preformed F actin with spectrin tetramer plus band 4.1 results in an extensively crosslinked network of actin filaments. When G actin is polymerized in the presence of spectrin at spectrin:actin mole ratios close to that present on the erythrocyte membrane, large amorphous protein networks are formed. These networks are clusters of spectrin around 25 nm diameter structures which may be actin protofilaments. These networks are similar to the cytoskeletal network seen after erythrocyte membranes are extracted with detergent, and may represent the first in vitro assembly of a cytoskeletal complex resembling that of the native cell both biochemically and structurally.  相似文献   

19.
M Str?mqvist 《FEBS letters》1987,213(1):102-106
The effect of brain spectrin (fodrin) on actin has been studied using viscometry and fluorimetry. Brain spectrin resembles erythrocyte spectrin tetramer in its action on actin. Both proteins crosslink actin filaments giving rise to a large increase in the viscosity but fluorimetry shows that neither affects actin polymerization significantly. In addition, brain spectrin as well as erythrocyte spectrin fragments preformed actin filaments. Actin filaments incubated in the presence of either of the two proteins incorporate actin monomers at a much higher rate showing that more filament ends are generated.  相似文献   

20.
We have examined the associations of purified red cell band 4.2 with red cell membrane and membrane skeletal proteins using in vitro binding assays. Band 4.2 bound to the purified cytoplasmic domain of band 3 with a Kd between 2 and 8 X 10(-7) M. Binding was saturable and slow, requiring 2-4 h to reach equilibrium. This finding confirms previous work suggesting that the principal membrane-binding site for band 4.2 lies within the 43-kDa cytoplasmic domain of band 3 (Korsgren, C., and Cohen, C. M. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 5536-5543). Band 4.2 also bound to purified ankyrin in solution with a Kd between 1 and 3.5 X 10(-7) M. As with the cytoplasmic domain of band 3, binding was saturable and required 4-5 h to reach equilibrium. Reconstitution with ankyrin of inside-out vesicles stripped of all peripheral proteins had no effect upon band 4.2 binding to membranes; similarly, reconstitution with band 4.2 had no effect upon ankyrin binding. This shows that ankyrin and band 4.2 bind to distinct loci within the 43-kDa band 3 cytoplasmic domain. Coincubation of ankyrin and band 4.2 in solution partially blocked the binding of both proteins to the membrane. Similarly, coincubation of bands 4.1 and 4.2 in solution partially blocked binding of both to membranes. In all cases, the data suggest the possibility that domains on each of these proteins responsible for low affinity membrane binding are principally affected. The data also provide evidence for an association of band 4.2 with band 4.1. Our results show that band 4.2 can form multiple associations with red cell membrane proteins and may therefore play an as yet unrecognized structural role on the membrane.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号