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1.
2.
We describe multiple human cardiac and skeletal muscle spectrin isoforms. Cardiac muscle expresses five erythroid alpha,beta spectrin-reactive isoforms with estimated MR's of 280, 274, 270, 255, and 246 kD, respectively. At least one nonerythroid alpha-spectrin of MR 284 kD is expressed in heart. While skeletal muscle shares the 280, 270, and 246 kD erythroid spectrins, it expresses an immunologically distinct 284 kD nonerythroid alpha-spectrin isoform. The 255 kD erythroid beta-spectrin isoform is specific for cardiac tissue. By immunocytochemistry, both erythroid beta- and nonerythroid alpha-spectrins are localized to costameres, the plasma membrane, and the neuromuscular junctional region.  相似文献   

3.
The spectrins are a family of widely distributed filamentous proteins. In association with actin, spectrins form a supporting and organizing scaffold for cell membranes. Using antibodies specific for human brain alpha-spectrin (alpha-fodrin), we have cloned a rat brain alpha-spectrin cDNA from an expression library. Several closely related human clones were also isolated by hybridization. Comparison of sequences of these and other overlapping nonerythroid and erythroid alpha-spectrin genes demonstrated that the nonerythroid genes are strictly conserved across species, while the mammalian erythroid genes have diverged rapidly. Peptide sequences deduced from these cDNAs revealed that the nonerythroid alpha-spectrin chain, like the erythroid spectrin, is composed of multiple 106-amino-acid repeating units, with the characteristic invariant tryptophan as well as other charged and hydrophobic residues in conserved locations. However, the carboxy-terminal sequence varies markedly from this internal repeat pattern and may represent a specialized functional site. The nonerythroid alpha-spectrin gene was mapped to human chromosome 9, in contrast to the erythroid alpha-spectrin gene, which has previously been assigned to a locus on chromosome 1.  相似文献   

4.
The spectrin super-family   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The review is focused on recent data on the primary sequences of erythroid and non-erythroid spectrins. As in other fields, the techniques of molecular genetics have allowed great advances in our knowledge of the structure and the genetic story of these molecules. Comparison of alpha-chains sequences of the non-erythroid (fodrin) and erythroid spectrin demonstrated that the fodrin alpha-genes are strictly conserved across species, while the mammalian spectrin genes have diverged rapidly. Spectrin and fodrin alpha-chains are largely composed of homologous 106-amino-acid repeat units. Spectrin alpha-chain is lacking a 37 amino-acid sequence which bears the calmodulin-binding site of the fodrin alpha-chain. The highest degree of homology between the spectrin alpha-chain and the fodrin alpha-chain lies in a central atypical segment unrelated to the canonical repeat sequence. This region is closely related to the N-terminal segment of several src-tyrosine kinases and to a domain of phospholipase C. Like the spectrin alpha-chain, the major central part of the spectrin beta-chain is made up of repeat units of 106 amino-acids. The N-terminal domain of the beta-chain, and especially the actin binding site, is the region of greatest homology among members of the spectrin super-family, including Drosophila spectrin beta-chain, dystrophin and alpha-actinin. The C-terminal extremity of the erythroid beta-chain is also of great interest, since tissue-specific differential processing of 3'beta-spectrin gene pre-mRNA generates a beta spectrin-isoform with a unique C-terminus in human skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

5.
Comparison of spectrin isolated from erythroid and non-erythroid sources   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Spectrin from erythrocytes and two other tissues (brain and intestine) were isolated from two distant species, pig and chicken; some structural and functional properties were compared. A quantitative antibody inhibition assay was used to determine that antibodies to mammalian red cell spectrin cross-react very poorly, if at all, with their non-erythroid (brain) counterpart and similarly antibodies to pig brain spectrin (fodrin) cross-react very weakly with erythroid spectrin. By contrast, antibodies which were directed against the 240000-Mr subunit of avian fodrin were completely inhibited with avian spectrin and vice versa. To analyze the structural relatedness of these molecules further we compared the chymotryptic iodinated peptide maps generated from each individual subunit. Consistent with the antibody results, we find little (less than 10%) homology between peptides derived from mammalian fodrin and spectrin, but complete homology (100%) of the peptides derived from the 240000-Mr subunits of chicken fodrin, spectrin and another related molecule from intestine, TW260/240. Whereas the peptide maps of fodrin (brain spectrin) revealed striking similarity between divergent species, suggesting a high degree of structural conservation, the peptide maps of erythrocyte spectrin was highly variable between species, indicating that it has diverged considerably in mammalian evolution. In addition we have compared a functional activity of mammalian spectrins, the ability to bind calmodulin, using two different assays. Both results show that, whereas fodrin-calmodulin interaction can be readily demonstrated, the binding to mammalian erythroid spectrin is negligible. This suggests that the high-affinity calmodulin site present on fodrin has been lost from spectrin in mammalian evolution.  相似文献   

6.
Immunocytochemical studies of spectrin in hamster cardiac tissue   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The spectrins are a family of cytoskeletal-membrane proteins that have a wide tissue distribution. In the present study, we employed polyclonal antibodies made against mammalian and avian erythroid spectrins as well as mammalian brain spectrin to assess their presence and distributions in the mammalian heart. Western blot analyses revealed that all three antibodies were specific for a 240,000 molecular weight alpha-spectrin subunit found in hamster erythrocyte ghost homogenates, whole hamster heart, and isolated hamster cardiac myofibril homogenates. Spectrin staining was absent from the Triton X-100-extracted supernatant fraction of myofibril preparations, suggesting that the protein is linked to the myofibril precipitate after exposure to the detergent. Frozen, unfixed, 2-microns-thick; sections of adult. Syrian golden hamster cardiac tissue exhibited strong immunofluorescent staining of intercalated discs and Z-bands using all three antibodies. In addition, the mammalian erythroid spectrin antibodies showed staining of the sarcolemma, and in cross section, revealed a delicate internal network of staining that appears to surround individual myofibrils. This may be T-tubule-associated staining. Myofibrils isolated from cardiac myocytes using Triton X-100 show positive Z-band staining using all three antibodies. Double staining with Texas Red-labeled monoclonal desmin and FITC-labeled polyclonal spectrin antibodies revealed that both stained the myofibrillar Z-line regions. These results demonstrate that spectrin is closely associated with the membranes, myofibrils, and intermediate filaments in the mammalian heart.  相似文献   

7.
Ankyrin is an extrinsic membrane protein in human erythrocytes that links the alpha beta-spectrin-based extrinsic membrane skeleton to the membrane by binding simultaneously to the beta-spectrin subunit and to the transmembrane anion transporter. To analyse the temporal and spatial regulation of assembly of this membrane skeleton, we investigated the kinetics of synthesis and assembly of ankyrin ( goblin ) with respect to those of spectrin in chicken embryo erythroid cells. Electrophoretic analysis of Triton X-100 soluble and cytoskeletal fractions show that at steady state both ankyrin and spectrin are detected exclusively in the cytoskeleton. In contrast, continuous labeling of erythroid cells with [35S]methionine, and immunoprecipitation of ankyrin and alpha- and beta-spectrin, reveals that newly synthesized ankyrin and spectrin are partitioned into both the cytoskeletal and Triton X-100 soluble fractions. The soluble pools of ankyrin and beta-spectrin reach a plateau of labeling within 1 h, whereas the soluble pool of alpha-spectrin is substantially larger and reaches a plateau more slowly, reflecting an approximately 3:1 ratio of synthesis of alpha- to beta-spectrin. Ankyrin and beta-spectrin enter the cytoskeletal fraction within 10 min of labeling, and the amount assembled into the cytoskeletal fraction exceeds the amount present in their respective soluble pools within 1 h of labeling. Although alpha-spectrin enters the cytoskeletal fraction with similar kinetics to beta-spectrin and ankyrin, and in amounts equimolar to beta-spectrin, the amount of cytoskeletal alpha-spectrin does not exceed the amount of soluble alpha-spectrin even after 3 h of labeling. Pulse-chase labeling experiments reveal that ankyrin and alpha- and beta-spectrin assembled into the cytoskeleton exhibit no detectable turnover, whereas the Triton X-100 soluble polypeptides are rapidly catabolized, suggesting that stable assembly of the three polypeptides is dependent upon their association with their respective membrane receptor(s). The existence in the detergent-soluble compartment of newly synthesized ankyrin and alpha- and beta-spectrin that are catabolized, rather than assembled, suggests that ankyrin and spectrin are synthesized in excess of available respective membrane binding sites, and that the assembly of these polypeptides, while rapid, is not tightly coupled to their synthesis. We hypothesize that the availability of the high affinity receptor(s) localized on the membrane mediates posttranslationally the extent of assembly of the three cytoskeletal proteins in the correct stoichiometry, their stability, and their spatial localization.  相似文献   

8.
Spectrin, the major constituent protein of the erythrocyte membrane skeleton, exhibits chaperone activity by preventing the irreversible aggregation of insulin at 25 degrees C and that of alcohol dehydrogenase at 50 degrees C. The dimeric spectrin and the two subunits, alpha-spectrin and beta-spectrin prevent such aggregation appreciably better, 70% in presence of dimeric spectrin at an insulin:spectrin ratio of 1:1, than that in presence of the tetramer of 25%. Our results also show that spectrin binds to denatured enzymes alpha-glucosidase and alkaline phosphatase during refolding and the reactivation yields are increased in the presence of the spectrin derivatives when compared with those refolded in their absence. The unique hydrophobic binding site on spectrin for the fluorescence probe, 6-propionyl-2-(dimethylamino)naphthalene (Prodan) has been established to localize at the self-associating domain with the binding stoichiometry of one Prodan/both dimeric and tetrameric spectrin. The other fluorescence probe, 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid, does not show such specificity for spectrin, and the binding stoichiometry is between 3 and 5 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid/dimeric and tetrameric spectrin, respectively. Regions in alpha- and beta-spectrins have been found to have sequence homology with known chaperone proteins. More than 50% similarities in alpha-spectrin near the N terminus with human Hsp90 and in beta-spectrin near the C terminus with human Hsp90 and Escherichia coli DnaJ have been found, indicating a potential chaperone-like sequence to be present near the self-associating domain that is formed by portions of alpha-spectrin near the N terminus and the beta-spectrin near the C terminus. There are other patches of sequences also in both the spectrin polypeptides, at the other termini as well as in the middle of the rod domain having significant homology with well known chaperone proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Ankyrin mediates the attachment of spectrin to transmembrane integral proteins in both erythroid and nonerythroid cells by binding to the beta-subunit of spectrin. Previous studies using enzymatic digestion, 2-nitro-5-thiocyanobenzoic acid cleavage, and rotary shadowing techniques have placed the spectrin-ankyrin binding site in the COOH-terminal third of beta-spectrin, but the precise site is not known. We have used a glutathione S-transferase prokaryotic expression system to prepare recombinant erythroid and nonerythroid beta-spectrin from cDNA encoding approximately the carboxy-terminal half of these proteins. Recombinant spectrin competed on an equimolar basis with 125I-labeled native spectrin for binding to erythrocyte membrane vesicles (IOVs), and also bound ankyrin in vitro as measured by sedimentation velocity experiments. Although full length beta-spectrin could inhibit all spectrin binding to IOVs, recombinant beta-spectrin encompassing the complete ankyrin binding domain but lacking the amino-terminal half of the molecule failed to inhibit about 25% of the binding capacity of the IOVs, suggesting that the ankyrin-independent spectrin membrane binding site must lie in the amino-terminal half of beta-spectrin. A nested set of shortened recombinants was generated by nuclease digestion of beta-spectrin cDNAs from ankyrin binding constructs. These defined the ankyrin binding domain as encompassing the 15th repeat unit in both erythroid and nonerythroid beta-spectrin, amino acid residues 1,768-1,898 in erythroid beta-spectrin. The ankyrin binding repeat unit is atypical in that it lacks the conserved tryptophan at position 45 (1,811) within the repeat and contains a nonhomologous 43 residue segment in the terminal third of the repeat. It also appears that the first 30 residues of this repeat, which are highly conserved between the erythroid and nonerythroid beta-spectrins, are critical for ankyrin binding activity. We hypothesize that ankyrin binds directly to the nonhomologous segment in the 15th repeat unit of both erythroid and nonerythroid beta-spectrin, but that this sequence must be presented in the context of a properly folded spectrin "repeat unit" structure. Future studies will identify which residues within the repeat unit are essential for activity, and which residues determine the specificity of various spectrins for different forms of ankyrin.  相似文献   

10.
The Mr 245,000 calmodulin-binding protein of the dogfish erythrocyte cytoskeleton (D245) has been compared with human erythrocyte spectrin and mammalian brain fodrin [J. Levine and M. Willard (1981) J. Cell Biol. 90, 631-643]. Mammalian erythrocyte alpha-spectrin, brain alpha-fodrin, and D245 are all localized in the cell surface-associated cytoskeleton, and have similar molecular weights. Like mammalian erythrocyte spectrin, D245 was extracted from erythrocyte ghosts under low-ionic-strength conditions. However, D245 failed to bind an antibody which reacted strongly with both subunits of human erythrocyte spectrin. Unlike mammalian erythrocyte alpha- and beta-spectrin, D245 bound calmodulin in the absence of urea both in a "gel-binding" assay and in situ using azidocalmodulin [D.C. Bartelt, R.K. Carlin, G.A. Scheele, and W.D. Cohen (1982) J. Cell Biol. 95, 278-284]. Striking similarities were noted between D245 and alpha-fodrin in that both exhibited (a) comparable calcium-dependent calmodulin binding properties, (b) strong reactivity with two different anti-fodrin antibody preparations, (c) similar reactivity with antibody to brain CBP-I, now believed to be fodrin, (d) proteolytic degradation yielding an Mr 150,000 calmodulin-binding fragment, and (e) lack of reactivity with an anti-spectrin antibody. A protein with calmodulin-binding and anti-fodrin-binding properties similar to D245 was detected in cytoskeletal preparations of chicken erythrocytes. Moderate and consistent cross-reactivity of anti-fodrin with human erythrocyte alpha-spectrin was also observed. The data indicate that D245 is functionally and immunologically more closely related to alpha-fodrin than to alpha-spectrin of the mammalian erythrocyte.  相似文献   

11.
Spectrin is an ubiquitous protein in metazoan cells, and its flexibility is one of the keys to maintaining cellular structure and organization. Both alpha-spectrin and beta-spectrin polypeptides consist primarily of triple coiled-coil modular repeat units, and two important factors that determine spectrin flexibility are the bending flexibility between two consecutive repeat units and the conformational flexibility of individual repeat units. Atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are used here to study double spectrin repeat units (DSRUs) from the human erythrocyte beta-spectrin (HEbeta89) and the chicken brain alpha-spectrin (CBalpha1617). From the results of MD simulations, a highly conserved Trp residue in the A-helix of most repeat units that has been suggested to be important in conferring stability to the coiled-coil structures is found not to have a significant effect on the conformational flexibility of individual repeat units. Characterization of the bending flexibility for two consecutive repeats of spectrin via atomistic simulations and coarse-grained (CG) modeling indicate that the bending flexibility is governed by the interactions between the AB-loop of the first repeat unit, the BC-loop of the second repeat unit and the linker region. Specifically, interactions between residues in these regions can lead to a strong directionality in the bending behavior of two repeat units. The biological implications of these finding are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Spectrin-like proteins are found in a wide variety of non-erythroid cells where they generally occur in the cell cortex near the plasma membrane. To determine the intracellular distribution of alpha-spectrin (alpha-fodrin) in lymphocytes, we have developed an immunoperoxidase method to localize this protein at the ultrastructural level. Of considerable interest, particularly with regard to our efforts to determine the function of spectrin in this cell type, was the finding that its subcellular localization and its relationship with the plasma membrane can vary dramatically. Based on its position in the cell, alpha-spectrin can occur in two forms in lymphocytes: one that associates closely with the plasma membrane and another that occurs at some distance from the cell periphery, either as a single large aggregate or as several smaller ones. The single large aggregate of spectrin is a stable feature in a number of lymphocyte cell lines and hybrids which were used to examine its ultrastructural characteristics. A previously undescribed cellular structure, consisting of a meshwork of spectrin filaments and membranous vesicles, was identified in these cells. This structure could be induced to dissipate in response to membrane perturbants (e.g., hyperthermia and phorbol esters, known effectors of lymphocyte function and differentiation) and the patterns resulting from the redistribution of spectrin were a reflection of those observed routinely in lymphocytes in situ. The correlation between naturally occurring spectrin localization patterns and those seen after membrane perturbation suggested the possibility that spectrin distribution is indicative of particular maturation stages or functional states in lymphocytes. The implications of these findings with regard to the role of spectrin in lymphocyte function are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
It is known that erythroid and non-erythroid spectrins binding of vesicles and monolayers containing PE proved sensitive to inhibition by red blood cell ankyrin. We now show that the bacterially-expressed recombinant peptides representing betaII(brain)-spectrin's ankyrin-binding domain and its truncated mutants showed lipid-binding activity, although only those containing a full-length amino terminal fragment showed high to moderate affinity towards phospholipid mono- and bilayers and a substantial sensitivity of this binding to inhibition by ankyrin. These results are in accordance with our published data on betaI-spectrin's ankyrin-binding domain [Hryniewicz-Jankowska A, et al. Mapping of ankyrin-sensitive, PE/PC mono- and bilayer binding site in erythroid beta-spectrin. Biochem J 2004;382:677-85]. Moreover, we tested also the effect of transient transfection of living cells of several cell-lines with vectors coding for GFP-conjugates including betaII and also betaI full-length ankyrin-binding domain and their truncated fragments on the membrane skeleton organization. The transfection with constructs encoding full-length ankyrin-binding domain of betaII and betaI spectrin resulted in increased aggregation of membrane skeleton and its punctate appearance in contrast to near normal appearance of membrane skeleton of cells transiently transfected with GFP control or construct encoding ankyrin-binding domain truncated at their N-terminal region. Our results therefore indicate the importance of N-terminal region for lipid-binding activity of the beta-spectrin ankyrin-binding domain and its substantial role in maintaining the spectrin-based skeleton distribution.  相似文献   

14.
An X  Guo X  Sum H  Morrow J  Gratzer W  Mohandas N 《Biochemistry》2004,43(2):310-315
The erythrocyte membrane is a composite structure consisting of a lipid bilayer tethered to the spectrin-based membrane skeleton. Two complexes of spectrin with other proteins are known to participate in the attachment. Spectrin has also been shown to interact with phosphatidylserine (PS), a component of the lipid bilayer, which is confined to its inner leaflet. That there may be multiple sites of interaction with PS in the spectrin sequence has been inferred, but they have not hitherto been identified. Here we have explored the interaction of PS-containing liposomes with native alpha- and beta-spectrin chains and with recombinant spectrin fragments encompassing the entire sequences of both chains. We show that both alpha-spectrin and beta-spectrin bind PS and that sites of high affinity are located within 8 of the 38 triple-helical structural repeats which make up the bulk of both chains; these are alpha8, alpha9-10, beta2, beta3, beta4, beta12, beta13, and beta14, and PS affinity was also found in the nonhomologous N-terminal domain of the beta-chain. No other fragments of either chain showed appreciable binding. Binding of spectrin and its constituent chains to mixed liposomes of PS and phosphatidylcholine (PC) depended on the proportion of PS. Binding of spectrin dimers to PS liposomes was inhibited by single repeats containing PS binding sites. It is noteworthy that the PS binding sites in beta-spectrin are grouped in close proximity to the sites of attachment both of ankyrin and of 4.1R, the proteins engaged in attachment of spectrin to the membrane. We conjecture that direct interaction of spectrin with PS in the membrane may modulate its interactions with the proteins and that (considering also the known affinity of 4.1R for PS) the formation of PS-rich lipid domains, which have been observed in the red cell membrane, may be a result.  相似文献   

15.
An important function of the mammalian nonerythroid alpha-spectrin chain (alpha-fodrin) that distinguishes it from the closely related erythroid isoform is its ability to bind calmodulin. By analysis of a series of deleted recombinant spectrin fusion proteins, we have identified a region in the nonerythroid alpha chain involved in calcium-dependent binding of calmodulin. The region is distinctive in that the sequence is absent from the homologous domain of the erythroid alpha chain and diverges from the normal internal repeat structure observed throughout other spectrins. In order to determine limits of this functional site, a synthetic peptide as small as 24 residues was shown to compete with either recombinant or brain alpha-spectrin in binding to calmodulin. The active peptide, which was derived from a segment between repeats 11 and 12, was composed of the following sequence: Lys-Thr-Ala-Ser-Pro-Trp-Lys-Ser-Ala-Arg-Leu-Met-Val-His-Thr-Val-Ala-Thr-Phe-Asn - Ser-Ile-Lys-Glu. Comparison of this sequence with functional sites in other diverse calcium-dependent calmodulin-binding proteins has revealed a structural motif common to all of these proteins, namely clusters of hydrophobic residues interspersed with basic residues. When folded into alpha-helical conformations, these binding sites are predicted to form amphipathic structures.  相似文献   

16.
Spectrin tetramerization is important for the erythrocyte to maintain its unique shape, elasticity and deformability. We used recombinant model proteins to show the importance of one residue (G46) in the erythroid α-spectrin junction region that affects spectrin tetramer formation. The G46 residue in the erythroid spectrin N-terminal junction region is the only residue that differs from that in non-erythroid spectrin. The corresponding residue is R37. We believe that this difference may be, at least in part, responsible for the 15-fold difference in the equilibrium constants of erythroid and non-erythroid tetramer formation. In this study, we replaced the Gly residue with Ala, Arg or Glu residues in an erythroid α-spectrin model protein to give G46A, G46R or G46E, respectively. We found that their association affinities with a β-spectrin model protein were quite different from each other. G46R exhibited a 10-fold increase and G46E exhibited a 16-fold decrease, whereas G46A showed little difference, when compared with the wild type. The thermal and urea denaturation experiments showed insignificant structural change in G46R. Thus, the differences in affinity were due to differences in local, specific interactions, rather than conformational differences in these variants. An intra-helical salt bridge in G46R may stabilize the partial domain single helix in α-spectrin, Helix C’, to allow a more stable helical bundling in the αβ complex in spectrin tetramers. These results not only showed the importance of residue G46 in erythroid α-spectrin, but also provided insights toward the differences in association affinity between erythroid and non-erythroid spectrin to form spectrin tetramers.  相似文献   

17.
Full-length sequence of the cDNA for human erythroid beta-spectrin   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Spectrin is the major molecular consituent of the red cell membrane skeleton. We have isolated overlapping human erythroid beta-spectrin cDNA clones and determined 6773 base pairs of contiguous nucleotide sequence. This includes the entire coding sequence of beta-spectrin. The sequence translates into a 2137 amino acid, 246-kDa peptide. beta-Spectrin is found to consist of three distinct domains. Domain I, at the N terminus, is a 272-amino acid region lacking resemblance to the spectrin repetitive motif. Sequences in this region exhibit striking sequence homology, at both nucleotide and amino acid levels, to the N-terminal "actin-binding" domains of alpha-actinin and dystrophin. Between residues 51 and 270 there is 55% amino acid identity to human dystrophin, with only four single amino acid gaps in alignment. Domain II consists of 17 spectrin repeats. Several sequence variations are observed in typical repeat structure. Homology to alpha-actinin extends beyond domain I into the N-terminal portion of domain II. Domain III, 52 amino acid residues at the C terminus, does not adhere to the spectrin repeat motif. Combining knowledge of spectrin primary structure with previously reported functional studies, it is possible to make several inferences regarding structure/function relationships within the beta-spectrin molecule.  相似文献   

18.
Spectrin, an important component of the mammalian erythrocyte membrane skeleton, is a heterodimeric protein with alpha and beta subunits of 280 and 246 kDa, respectively. Spectrin-like proteins have also been demonstrated in a wide variety of nonerythroid cells. To examine the hypothesis that nonerythroid beta spectrins may be encoded by the "erythroid" beta spectrin gene, we have isolated cDNA clones from a human fetal skeletal muscle library by hybridization to a previously described red cell beta spectrin cDNA. Detailed comparison of muscle and erythroid beta spectrin cDNAs has revealed sequence identity over the majority of their lengths, confirming that they are the product of the same gene. However, there is a sharp divergence in sequence at their 3' ends. A consequence of this divergence is the replacement of the carboxyl terminus of erythroid beta spectrin with a different, longer carboxyl-terminal domain in skeletal muscle. We hypothesize that tissue-specific differential polyadenylation leads to the selective activation of a donor splice site within the beta spectrin coding sequence, splicing downstream nonerythroid exons into the mature muscle beta spectrin mRNA. We predict that replacement, in nonerythroid cells, of the beta spectrin carboxyl terminus, known to participate in spectrin self-association and phosphorylation, has significant functional consequences. These data may explain previously reported nonerythroid beta spectrin isoforms that resemble red cell beta spectrin by immunochemical analysis.  相似文献   

19.
Contributions of the beta-subunit to spectrin structure and function   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The three avian spectrins that have been characterized consist of a common alpha-subunit (240 kD) paired with an isoform-specific beta-subunit from either erythrocyte (220 or 230 kD), brain (235 kD), or intestinal brush border (260 kD). Analysis of avian spectrins, with their naturally occurring "subunit replacement" has proved useful in assessing the relative contribution of each subunit to spectrin function. In this study we have completed a survey of avian spectrin binding properties and present morphometric analysis of the relative flexibility and linearity of various avian and human spectrin isoforms. Evidence is presented that, like its mammalian counterpart, avian brain spectrin binds human erythroid ankyrin with low affinity. Cosedimentation analysis demonstrates that 1) avian erythroid protein 4.1 stimulates spectrin-actin binding of both mammalian and avian erythrocyte and brain spectrins, but not the TW 260/240 isoform, 2) calpactin I does not potentiate actin binding of either TW 260/240 or brain spectrin, and 3) erythrocyte adducin does not stimulate the interaction of TW 260/240 with actin. In addition, a morphometric analysis of rotary-shadow images of spectrin isoforms, individual subunits, and reconstituted complexes from isolated subunits was performed. This analysis revealed that the overall flexibility and linearity of a given spectrin heterodimer and tetramer is largely determined by the intrinsic rigidity and linearity of its beta-spectrin subunit. No additional rigidity appears to be imparted by noncovalent associations between the subunits. The scaled flexural rigidity of the most rigid spectrin analyzed (human brain) is similar to that reported for F-actin.  相似文献   

20.
The spectrin skeleton of non-erythroid cells is likely to interact with a variety of integral membrane proteins and participate both in stable linkages as well as dynamic structures capable of rapid disassembly and assembly. The basis for diversity of roles for spectrin includes multiple, functionally distinct isoforms of spectrin, ankyrin and other associated proteins, regulation of protein interactions through phosphorylation and calcium/calmodulin, as well as differential expression of accessory proteins that determine the organization and localization of spectrin in cells. Spectrin is highly conserved from Drosophila to man and is likely to be involved in fundamental aspects of membrane structure requiring long range order and organization. Spectrin is a candidate to interact with many integral membrane proteins in roles basic to metazoan cells which must associate into tissues. Organization of cells into tissues requires loss of cell motility, formation of specialized membrane domains and assembly of cell junctions, which are all activities potentially involving spectrin. Future challenges lie in devising direct experiments to evaluate the functions of spectrin in cells and tissues.  相似文献   

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