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1.
The effects of variations in preparative procedures on the volume and content of resealed red cell ghosts have been investigated. Following hypotonic lysis at 0 degrees C, and after a variable delay time (td), concentrated buffer was added to restore isotonicity; resealing was then induced by incubation at 37 degrees C for one hour. Using this procedure, both the resealed ghost volume and the residual hemoglobin (Hb) content decreased for increasing td. If ghosts were maintained at 0 degree C (i.e., no 37 degrees C incubation), they remained nearly spherical until isotonicity was restored. Their volume then fell abruptly, but subsequently increased toward an intermediate level. The fall in volume was greater and the final level achieved was smaller for longer delay times. At 0 degree C, return to isotonicity also halted the otherwise gradual loss of residual Hb from unsealed ghosts. In addition, ghosts with internal osmolality of 40 to 300 mosmol/kg were prepared by adding different amounts of concentrated buffer before resealing for one hour at 37 degrees C. Under these conditions, the final ghost volume was inversely related to the resealing osmolality (i.e., lower osmolality yielded a larger volume). Ghost volume also increased, along with Hb content, if the quantity or concentration of the red cell suspension added to the lysing medium was increased. We conclude that resealed ghost volume is influenced by the ratio of lysate to resealing medium osmolality and by the colloid osmotic pressure of the residual ghost Hb. These data indicate methods by which ghosts with desired characteristics can be prepared, and have potential application for studies of ghost mechanical and biophysical behavior.  相似文献   

2.
Summary In accordance with former observations of Hoffman (1962a), ghost populations obtained by hypotonic hemolysis and subsequent restoration of isotonicity by the addition of alkali salts, were found to be composed of 3 types of ghosts. For our purposes it was useful to distinguish between: (1) ghosts which reseal immediately after hemolysis (type I); these ghosts are incapable of incorporating alkali ions which are added after hemolysis; (2) ghosts which reseal after the addition of alkali ions (type II); salt added to the hemolysate becomes trapped inside these ghosts in the course of the resealing process at temperatures above 0°C; and (3) ghosts which remain leaky regardless of the experimental condition (type III). The discrimination between the various types of ghosts was partly achieved by a kinetic method first devised by Hoffman (1962a), and partly by sucrose density gradient centrifugation.The relative sizes of the 3 fractions depend on the temperature at which hemolysis took place and on the time interval which elapsed between hemolysis and the addition of salt. At 37°C the resealing process is fast. Many of the ghosts reseal before salt can be added to the hemolysate. Hence, the fraction of type I ghosts is high after hemolysis at that temperature. At 0°C resealing is extremely slow. Hence, salt which has been added to the hemolysate at that temperature will enter the ghosts and become trapped during subsequent incubation at 37°C. There are no ghosts of type I and many ghosts of type II (about 60%). Regardless of the temperature at hemolysis, there are always ghosts which do not reseal even after prolonged incubation at 37°C. A method has been designed which permits the preparation of homogeneous populations of type II ghosts.Complexing agents (ATP, EDTA, 2,3-DPG) may prevent the resealing of the ghost membrane. However, they exert this effect only at elevated temperatures and when present in the medium at the instant of hemolysis. At 0°C, the presence of complexing agents in the medium at the instant of hemolysis has no effect on the subsequent resealing at 37°C. The recovery of the ghost membrane takes place in spite of the continued presence of the agents and eventually leads to trapping of these agents inside the resealed ghosts.The experiments support the contention that the complexing agents interact with a membrane constituent which is neither accessible from the inner nor from the outer surface of the cell membrane but becomes exposed during the hemolytic event when the complexing agents penetrate across the membrane. Apparently, at low tempertrures membrane ligands are more successful in competing with the added complexing agents for this constituent than at higher temperatures.Extending former observations of Hoffman, we found that not only Mg++ but also Ca++ facilitates the resealing process. Perhaps one or the other of the two alkaline earth ions is the membrane constituent which normally participates in the maintenance of the integrity of the red blood cell membrane.  相似文献   

3.
Hemoglobin and the low molecular weight proteins 8 and 9 are extracted from ghosts during low ionic washing after the hypotonic hemolysis of erythrocytes. Furthermore, a loss of the proteins 4.5 and 7 was observed. The protein patterns of ghosts after isotonic hemolysis by freezing and thawing resemble the ghost protein patterns after hypotonic hemolysis and incomplete deprivation of Hb. Many if not all membrane proteins are eluted by repeated incubations of the ghosts in solutions of low ionic strength in the presence of EDTA. The spectrins, the proteins 5, 4.5, 7 and residual Hb are extracted preferentially. A selective extraction of the spectrins and the protein 5 is not detectable under these conditions. Often the spectrin bands are subdivided following low ionic incubation.  相似文献   

4.
1. Erythrocyte ghosts from human blood were produced by gentle water hemolysis. The ghost-containing hemolysate (about 20 mN) was added to media of different composition (KCl, NaCl, glucose, sucrose, etc.) and varying concentration ranging from 8 to 840 mN. The volume changes of the ghost cells were followed by a light absorption method. The potassium and sodium concentrations were also analyzed in some representative cases. 2. The ghosts shrank, or swelled, in two stages. An initial phase with a momentary expulsion, or uptake, of water leading to an osmotic equilibrium, was followed by a second phase in which a slow swelling or shrinking proceeded toward a final constant volume. 3. The ghosts were semipermeable in the sense that water always passed rapidly in either direction so as to maintain isotonicity with the external medium. The relation between ghost cell volumes (V) and the total concentration (C(e)) of the suspension medium can be expressed by a modified van't Hoff-Mariotte law: (C(e) + a)(V - b) = constant. Here a is a term correcting for an internal pressure and b is the non-solvent volume of the ghost cells. This means that the ghosts behave as perfect osmometers. 4. On the other hand appreciable concentration differences of the K and Na ions could be maintained across the intact ghost cell membranes for long periods. Whether this phenomenon is due simply to very low cation permeability or to active transport processes cannot be decided, although the first assumption appears more probable. 5. When the ghosts were treated with small concentrations of a lytic substance like Na oleate, the alkali ion transfer was greatly increased. This seems to be a simple exchange diffusion process with simultaneous, continued maintenance of osmotic equilibrium (= the second phase). A simplified theory is also given for the kinetics of the volume variations and ion exchange during the second phase (cf. the Appendix). 6. Miscellaneous observations on the effects of pH, and of some other substances are discussed. Some shape transformations of the ghost cells are also described.  相似文献   

5.
The changes of volume distribution curves of erythrocytes during and after lysis by complement or nystatin or in hypotonic buffers were measured by flow cytometry. Biconcave and spheroidal ghosts were observed after complement lysis and spheroidal ghosts were seen only after nystatin and hypotonic lysis. The spheroidal ghosts derived from red cells lysed by complement or nystatin were permeable to sucrose; those from hypotonic lysis were sucrose-impermeable. Spheroidal ghosts after complement lysis remained permeable for sucrose whereas spheroidal ghosts after nystatin lysis resealed after removal of the drug by washing. Biconcave ghosts produced by complement lysis were almost impermeable to sucrose initially and therefore responded to osmotic changes, but they became sucrose-permeable upon prolonged incubation at 37 degrees C. The rate of sucrose equilibration increased as the stability of the biconcave shape diminished with increasing numbers of C5b-9 complexes. At 850 C5b-9 complexes/ghost, the biconcave shape and impermeability for sucrose were completely lost. The results support the hypothesis that complement C5b-9 complexes, in addition to the interaction with the lipid bilayer, may interact with the cytoskeleton of the erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Human red blood cell ghosts were prepared by electrical haemolysis at 0 degrees C in isotonic solutions using a discharge chamber which was part of a high voltage circuit. The size distribution of the ghosts was normally distributed, the modal (=mean) volume was approx. 115 mum3, performing the electrical haemolysis in the following solution: 105 mM KCI, 20 mM NaCL, 4mM MgCl2, 7.6 mM Na2HPO4, 2.94 mM NaH2PO4, 10 mM glucose, pH 7.2. Resealing was carried out at o degrees C for 10 min (after the haemolytic step) and then for further 20 min at 37 degrees C. The mean volume of the ghost preparation could be changed by variation of the phosphate concentration in the above solution replacing a part of NaCl by phosphate (5 mM phosphate: 94 mum3, 15 mM phosphate: 135 mum3). The breakdown voltage of the ghost cell membranes measured with a hydrodynamic focusing Coulter Counter depends on the mean volume (94 mum3 = 1.04 V, 134 mum3 = 1.36 V). On the other hand, the breakdown voltage is constant throughout each size distribution pointing to an "electrically homogeneous" ghost preparation. The sensitiviity of the Coulter Counter to detect electrical inhomogeneities in the membranes of a ghost population is demonstrated by dielectric breakdown measurements of an apparently normally distributed ghost preparation containing two different "electrically homogeneous" ghost population i.e. with two different breakdown voltages. The ghost cells obtained by electrical haemolysis in the above solution containing 10mM phosphate were fairly impermeable to sucrose and behave like an ideal osometer. It is further demonstrated that ghost cells can be loaded with enzymes (e.g. urease) and drugs using this technique and that these loaded ghost cells can be used as bioactive capsules for clinical application.  相似文献   

7.
Isolated human erythrocyte membranes crenate when suspended in isotonic medium, but can use MgATP to reduce their net positive curvature, yielding smooth discs and cup forms that eventually undergo endocytosis. An earlier report from this laboratory (Patel, V.P. and Fairbanks, G. (1981) J. Cell Biol. 88, 430-440), has described a phenomenon of ATP-independent shape change in which ghosts prepared by hemolysis and washing in synthetic zwitterionic buffers crenated at 0 degree C, but underwent conversion to smooth discs and cups when warmed in the absence of MgATP. We have further explored the effect of the hemolysis condition on the requirement for ATP in ghost shape change. 25 hemolysis buffers were applied at 10 mM (pH 7.4, 0 degree C). Eight anionic buffers with relatively high ionic strength (e.g., phosphate and diethylmalonic acid (DMA] yielded ghosts requiring ATP for shape change, while two cationic buffers (Bistris and imidazole) and ten synthetic zwitterionic buffers (e.g., Tricine and Hepes) with lower ionic strength produced ghosts that smoothed spontaneously at 30 degrees C. Hemolysis at intermediate ionic strength yielded mixed populations in which spontaneous smoothing was expressed in all-or-none fashion. Maximal ATP-independent shape change was induced by hemolysis at pH 7.3-7.7, while ATP was required after hemolysis at pH less than or equal to 7.1 even when the ionic strength at hemolysis was low. Ghosts requiring ATP could be converted to ATP independence by washing at low ionic strength, but ATP independence could not be reversed readily by washing at high ionic strength. Exposure to low ionic strength at pH greater than 7.1 presumably changes membrane organization in a way that alters the temperature dependence of tensions within the bilayer or skeleton of the composite membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The Active Transport of Sodium by Ghosts of Human Red Blood Cells   总被引:9,自引:9,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
The outflux of Na24 from prelabeled ghosts was measured under various conditions. Prelabeling was accomplished by hypotonic hemolysis of intact human cells in the presence of tracer Na24. The resultant ghosts when subsequently washed were found to retain 10 to 20 per cent of the initial Na24. Separate experiments indicated that this trapped amount resides in only a portion of ghosts comprising the total population. The characteristics of the outflux of this residual Na24 indicated that the ghost system closely resembles intact red cells. The outflux of Na from ghosts could be divided into three components: active and passive transport and exchange diffusion. The active transport system, necessarily driven by metabolism, required the presence of K in the extracellular phase and was blocked by strophanthidin. The concentration dependence of the Na pump flux on the external K and internal Na appeared the same in ghosts as in intact cells. Certain other features of this ghost system are also discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Role of the bilayer in the shape of the isolated erythrocyte membrane   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary The determinants of cell shape were explored in a study of the crenation (spiculation) of the isolated erythrocyte membrane. Standard ghosts prepared in 5mm NaPi (pH 8) were plump, dimpled disks even when prepared from echinocytic (spiculated) red cells. These ghosts became crenated in the presence of isotonic saline, millimolar levels of divalent cations, 1mm 2,4-dinitrophenol or 0.1mm lysolecithin. Crenation was suppressed in ghosts generated under conditions of minimal osmotic stress, in ghosts from red cells partially depleted of cholesterol, and, paradoxically, in ghosts from red cells crenated by lysolecithin. The susceptibility of ghosts to crenation was lost with time; this process was potentiated by elevated temperature, low ionic strength, and traces of detergents or chlorpromazine.In that ghost shape was influenced by a variety of amphipaths, our results favor the premise that the bilayer and not the subjacent protein reticulum drives ghost crenation. The data also suggest that vigorous osmotic hemolysis induces a redistribution of lipids between the two leaflets of the bilayer which affects membrane contour through a bilayer couple mechanism. Subsequent relaxation of that metastable distribution could account for the observed loss of crenatability.  相似文献   

10.
A selective potassium leak is observed in resealed, human red blood cell ghosts when hemolysis is performed with distilled water at pH 6.5, 0 degrees C. The leak, which has a maximum near pH 6.7, is suppressed when either magnesium or a chelating agent is present in the hemolysing medium. The potassium leak has the additional property that it can be suppressed after resealing by washing the ghost membranes in a medium containing a low concentration of ATP or EDTA. The data suggest that through the dilution of endogenous chelating agents at hemolysis a potassium leak may be unmasked.  相似文献   

11.
A selective potassium leak is observed in resealed, human red blood cell ghosts when hemolysis is performed with distilled water at pH 6.5, 0° C. The leak, which has a maximum near pH 6.7, is suppressed when either magnesium or a chelating agent is present in the hemolysing medium. The potassium leak has the additional property that it can be suppressed after resealing by washing the ghost membranes in a medium containing a low concentration of ATP or EDTA. The data suggest that through the dilution of endogenous chelating agents at hemolysis a potassium leak may be unmasked.  相似文献   

12.
The palmitate (PA) binding and transport capacity of human and bovine red cell membranes enables us to establish, in a biological system, the existence of a well-defined monomer concentration in equilibrium with PA bound to bovine serum albumin (BSA, 30 microM) inside the resealed red cell ghosts. Supernatants of suspensions of the [3H]PA-labeled ghosts contain a tiny quantity of dissolved binding capacities besides the monomer PA. This is demonstrated by linear regression of supernatant tracer concentrations versus ghost concentrations in a dilution series. The extrapolated value, corresponding to zero ghost concentration, is the monomer PA concentration in equilibrium with PA bound to BSA within the ghosts in molar ratio (nu). Measurements have been carried out for nu between 0.1 and 1.5 and at 0 degrees C, 10 degrees C, 23 degrees C and 38 degrees C. The important nu-dependent binding of PA to the ghost membrane itself enables us to use preparations of BSA-free ghosts in the same way, whereas this is impossible in the case of arachidonic acid. Within the physiological range of nu the PA monomer concentrations are accounted for by an apparent dissociation equilibrium constant (Kd) 3.4 10(-8) M at 38 degrees C calculated on basis of three equivalent binding sites per mol BSA. Kd depends on temperature with a well-defined enthalpy of 38.4 kJ/mol.  相似文献   

13.
M Nakamura  S Ohnishi  H Kitamura  S Inai 《Biochemistry》1976,15(22):4838-4843
The structural change in erythrocyte membranes induced by antibody and complement was studied using phospholipid spin-labels. Sheep erythrocytes were labeled with phosphatidylcholine spin-label and various intermediate cells (erythrocyte-antibody complex (EA), EA bound with complement components from C1 to C7 (EAC1-7), EAC1-8, and EAC1-9) were prepared. Electron spin resonance spectra of EA, EAC1-7, and EAC1-8 were very similar to that of the erythrocytes, while that of EAC1-9 was markedly different. The overall splitting value for the lysed EAC1-9 (53 G) was much smaller than that for the erythrocytes (57 G), indicating a marked fluidization around the phosphatidylcholine label. The unlysed EAC1-9 membranes contained a limited fraction of the fluidized area. When EA was reacted with complement in the presence of 36% bovine serum albumin, the membranes were fluidized similarly to the lysed EAC1-9, although the hemolysis was largely blocked. The membranes of unlysed EAC1-9 prepared in isotonic (ethylenedinitrilo)tetraacetic acid were also fluidized, but to somewhat smaller extent. The role of C9 in the modification of erythrocyte membranes was also demonstrated using Mg2+ ghosts, which were prepared by hypotonic hemolysis in the presence of Mg2+. The membranes of Mg2+ ghost of EAC1-7 were markedly fluidized when bound with C8 and C9, but not affected by binding of C8 only. The component C8 was found to give a latent effect on the membranes that caused irreversible fluidization upon osmotic shock. The terminal component thus creates a fluidized area in the erythrocyte membranes through which small ions and molecules may diffuse more easily and the resulting osmotic unbalance may finally cause hemolysis.  相似文献   

14.
Human erythrocyte ghosts prepared by hypotonic hemolysis can be fused by Sendai virus, provided that certain macromolecules (bovine serum albumin, dextran and others) are sequestered in the ghosts. Since fusion of the ghosts is dependent on intactness of the F(fusion)-glycoprotein of the virion, and since the other requirements for this reaction are also similar to those for the Sendai virus-induced fusion of intact erythrocytes, this system can be used as a model for the Sendai virus-induced cell fusion reaction. Sequestered macromolecules seem to be required for rounding of locally fused ghosts. Under low osmotic swelling conditions, such as use of ghosts sealed without macromolecules or using bovine serum albumin-loaded ghosts sealed in the presence of external macromolecules, no apparently complete cell fusion (large spherical polyghost formation) could be observed. Even under these conditions, however, occurence of local cell fusion could be demonstrated either by transfer of fluorescent-labeled albumin from one ghost to an other, or by observation of polyghost formation after osmotic swelling in the cold. Thus, final stages of the fusion reaction can be divided into local cell-cell fusion which could not be observed by phase-contrast microscopy, and rounding (i.e. formation of spherical polyghost). For the observation of fusion of ghosts, the last step seems to be important.  相似文献   

15.
White, stable erythrocyte ghosts can recover their impermeability to small solutes after storage for several days in low-ionic-strength phosphate buffers at 0 °C. The accessibility, to their substrates, of the inner surface enzymes, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, (G3PD), and NADH cytochrome c oxidoreductase, was used to assess resealing. The data from the two enzymes were confirmatory. None of the conditions used to investigate resealing altered the activity of the outer surface enzyme, acetylcholinesterase. Using G3PD activity, ghosts (freshly prepared by gentle stepwise hemolysis in hypotonic phosphate buffers and stored in 11 mm phosphate buffer, pH 7.4) were shown to be slightly sealed (33%). Incubation at 37 °C in the storage buffer with or without EDTA did not alter their permeability. Ionic strength rather than osmotic pressure appears to influence the sealing process since salt (286 mosm) elicited 91% sealing whereas sucrose (278 mosm) had little effect. Calcium in trace amounts caused resealing to 80%. Phospholipase C (C. welchii) completely abolished Ca2+-induced resealing. The data were highly reproducible although these ghosts were found to contain only 10 to 20% of the G3PD activity of the leaky ghosts prepared by shock hemolysis in 5 mm phosphate buffer, pH 8.0. The response to the resealing agents was similar regardless of the level of G3PD present. Neither calcium nor ETDA altered the chemical composition (sialic acid, cholesterol, phospholipid) of the membranes. The small amount (5%) of nonspecific loosely bound protein lost during incubation, could not be attributed to any of the test agents. The results suggest that calcium induced the recovery of impermeability by altering the association, distribution, and/or conformation of the proteins and phospholipids within the membrane.  相似文献   

16.
A new quantitative approach to study cell membrane electrofusion has been developed. Erythrocyte ghosts were brought into close contact using dielectrophoresis and then treated with one square or even exponentially decaying fusogenic pulse. Individual fusion events were followed by lateral diffusion of the fluorescent lipid analogue 1,1'-dihexadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (Dil) from originally labeled to unlabeled adjacent ghosts. It was found that ghost fusion can be described as a first-order rate process with corresponding rate constants; a true fusion rate constant, k(f), for the square waveform pulse and an effective fusion rate constant, k(ef), for the exponential pulse. Compared with the fusion yield, the fusion rate constants are more fundamental characteristics of the fusion process and have implications for its mechanisms. Values of k(f) for rabbit and human erythrocyte ghosts were obtained at different electric field strength and temperatures. Arrhenius k(f) plots revealed that the activation energy of ghost electrofusion is in the range of 6-10 kT. Measurements were also made with the rabbit erythrocyte ghosts exposed to 42 degrees C for 10 min (to disrupt the spectrin network) or 0.1-1.0 mM uranyl acetate (to stabilize the bilayer lipid matrix of membranes). A correlation between the dependence of the fusion and previously published pore-formation rate constants for all experimental conditions suggests that the cell membrane electrofusion process involve pores formed during reversible electrical breakdown. A statistical analysis of fusion products (a) further supports the idea that electrofusion is a stochastic process and (b) shows that the probability of ghost electrofusion is independent of the presence of Dil as a label as well as the number of fused ghosts.  相似文献   

17.
Anion transport activity and thermotropic behavior of Band 3 are found to be altered after binding of concanavalin (Con A) to human erythrocyte ghosts and isolated Band 3. At lower Con A concentration, the rate coefficients of anion transport enhance with increasing Con A concentration, while noticeable changes of the largest calorimetric endotherm of human erythrocyte membranes termed the C transition (Band 3) can not be observed. With 50 micrograms/ml of Con A, the rate coefficient of Con A-modified ghosts increases 34.4% in comparison with that of normal ghosts. Binding of Con A in lower concentration to ghosts bring about increase of fluidity of lipid which maybe contribute to increase anion transport via Band 3. At higher Con A concentration, the C transition tend to lower temperature with increase in Con A concentration, the C transition is shifted from 69.25 degrees C to 66.25 degrees C with 2.5 mg/ml Con A. It is suggested that the Con A-modified Band 3 possess a looser structure than normal one.  相似文献   

18.
M Wasserman  N Zakal  A Loyter  R G Kulka 《Cell》1976,7(4):551-556
Improvements in the technique of ultramicroinjection of macromolecules into animal cells are described. The method is based on the Sendai virus-induced fusion of animal cells with erythrocyte ghosts containing trapped macromolecules. Fusion of hepatoma tissue culture (HTC) cells with ghosts prepared by hemolysis of erythrocytes in the presence of cytochrome C is much more efficient than fusion with ghosts prepared in the presence of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as in previous investigations. La+++ is more fficient in promoting fusion and less toxic to cells than Mn++, which was used previously. Thus in all subsequent experiments, erythrocytes were hemolyzed in the presence of cytochrome C plus other macromolecules to be trapped, and the resultant ghosts fused in the presence of La+++. The percentage of HTC cells which fused with ghosts reached 80% in many experiments. Ghosts containing 125I-BSA were used to measure the number of BSA molecules injected into HTC cells. About 10(6) BSA molecules were injected per fused cell. The overall efficiency of injection was low (about 0.02% of the starting material).  相似文献   

19.
The technique of reversible hemolysis represents one approach which may be used to study transport regulation in nucleated red cells. After 1 h of incubation at 37 degrees C, 88% of the ghosts regained their permeability barrier to L-glucose. In these ghosts, the carrier-mediated rate of entry of 3-O-methylglucose was more than 10-fold greater than the rate in intact cells. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase prevented ghosts from resealing when it was present at the time of hemolysis. Albumin, lactic dehydrogenase and peroxidase did not have this effect. Sugar transport rate could not be tested in the unsealed ghosts. Two possible mechanisms for the effect of hypotonic hemolysis on sugar transport rate were discussed: (1) altered membrane organization and (2) loss of intracellular compounds which bind to the membrane and inhibit transport in intact cells.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of affinity-purified antispectrin γ-globulins on the topographic distribution of anionic residues on human erythrocytes membranes was investigated using collo ida iron hydroxide labeling of mounted, fixed, ghost membranes. Antispectrin γ-globulins were sequestered inside ghosts by hemolysis and the ghosts were incubated for 30 min at 37°C and then fixed with glutaraldehyde. The topographic distribution of colloidal iron hydroxide clusters on ghosts incubated with low (<0.05 mg/ml) or high (>5–10 mg/ml concentrations of sequestered antispectrin was dispersed, but the distribution at intermediate concentrations (0.1–5 mg/ml) was highly aggregated. The aggregation of colloidal iron hydroxide binding sites was time and temperature dependent and required the sequestering of cross-linking antibodies (antispectrin Fab could not substitute for γ-globulin antibodies) inside the ghosts. Prior glutaraldehyde fixation or fixation at the time of hemolysis in antispectrin solutions prevented the antispectrin-induced colloidal iron site aggregation. The antispectrin reacted exclusively at the inner ghost membrane surface and the colloidal iron hydroxide bound to N-acetylneuraminic acid residues on the outer membrane surface which are overwhelming on the sialoglycoprotein glycophorin. These results were interpreted as evidence for a structural transmembrane linkage between the inner surface peripheral protein spectrin and the integral membrane component glycophorin.  相似文献   

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