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1.
From the spectrin gene to the assembly of the membrane skeleton   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The complete nucleotide sequence coding for the chicken brain alpha-spectrin was determined. It comprises the entire coding frame, 5'- and 3'-untranslated sequences terminating in a poly(A)-tail. The deduced amino acid sequence shows that the alpha-chain contains 22 segments, 20 of which correspond to the typical 106 residue repeat of the human erythrocyte spectrin. Some segments non-homologous to the repeat structure reside in the middle and COOH-terminal regions. Sequence comparisons with other proteins show that these segments evidently harbour some structural and functional features such as: homology to alpha-actinin and dystrophin, two typical EF-hand structures (calcium-binding) and a putative calmodulin-binding site in the COOH-terminus and a sequence homologous to various src-tyrosine kinases and to phospholipase C in the middle of the molecule. Comparison of our sequence with other partial alpha-spectrin sequences shows that alpha-spectrin is well conserved in different species and that the human erythrocyte alpha-spectrin is divergent.  相似文献   

2.
We have determined the nucleotide sequence coding for the chicken brain alpha-spectrin. It is derived both from the cDNA and genomic sequences, comprises the entire coding frame, 5' and 3' untranslated sequences, and terminates in the poly(A)-tail. The deduced amino acid sequence was used to map the domain structure of the protein. The alpha-chain of brain spectrin contains 22 segments of which 20 correspond to the repeat of the human erythrocyte spectrin (Speicher, D. W., and V. T. Marchesi. 1984. Nature (Lond.). 311:177-180.), typically made of 106 residues. These homologous segments probably account for the flexible, rod-like structure of spectrin. Secondary structure prediction suggests predominantly alpha-helical structure for the entire chain. Parts of the primary structure are excluded from the repetitive pattern and they reside in the middle part of the sequence and in its COOH terminus. Search for homology in other proteins showed the presence of the following distinct structures in these nonrepetitive regions: (a) the COOH-terminal part of the molecule that shows homology with alpha-actinin, (b) two typical EF-hand (i.e., Ca2+-binding) structures in this region, (c) a sequence close to the EF-hand that fulfills the criteria for a calmodulin-binding site, and (d) a domain in the middle of the sequence that is homologous to a NH2-terminal segment of several src-tyrosine kinases and to a domain of phospholipase C. These regions are good candidates to carry some established as well as some yet unestablished functions of spectrin. Comparative analysis showed that alpha-spectrin is well conserved across the species boundaries from Xenopus to man, and that the human erythrocyte alpha-spectrin is divergent from the other spectrins.  相似文献   

3.
We report the complete sequence of Drosophila alpha-spectrin and show that it is similar to vertebrate nonerythroid spectrins. As in vertebrates, the alpha subunit consists of two large domains of repetitive sequence (segments 1-9 and 11-19) separated by a short nonrepetitive sequence (segment 10). The 106-residue repetitive segments are defined by a consensus sequence of 54 residues. Chicken alpha-spectrin (Wasenius, V.-M., M. Saraste, P. Salven, M. Eramaa, L. Holm, V.-P. Lehto. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 108:79-93) shares 50 of these consensus positions. Through comparison of spectrin and alpha-actinin sequences, we describe a second lineage of spectrin segments (20 and 21) that differs from the 106-residue segments by an 8-residue insertion and by lack of many of the consensus residues. We present a model of spectrin evolution in which the repetitive lineage of spectrin segments and the nonrepetitive lineage of segments found in spectrin and alpha-actinin arose by separate multiplication events.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The complete sequence of 595 amino acids of the alpha-I domain of human erythrocyte spectrin has been determined. Peptides derived from three different protease cleavages were purified using high performance liquid chromatography and subjected to automated amino acid sequence analysis. These data along with sequences of the cyanogen bromide and large tryptic peptides (Speicher, D.W., Davis, G., Yurchenco, P.D., and Marchesi, V.T. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14931-14937) represent most or all of the sequence of spectrin alpha-I. The single remaining ambiguity is the precise termination of the COOH terminus of the alpha-I domain. The sequence data suggest that the 595 residues presented here represent the complete sequence of the alpha-I domain, but the apparent size of the COOH-terminal CNBr fragment suggests the existence of an additional 38 residues at the end of the domain. The sequence of the alpha-I domain contains a single type of internal homology composed of multiple 106-amino acid repeats consistent with the occurrence of multiple gene duplications during the course of spectrin evolution. The only portion of the alpha-I sequence which does not appear to contain this sequence repeat is the segment containing the NH2-terminal 17 residues. This unique segment may be part of the oligomer binding site. No disulfide bonds appear to be involved in the structure of alpha-I and cysteine is not highly conserved. Calculations of secondary structure suggest the presence of short helices which fold into triple helical segments approximately 50 A in length. There is little beta sheet structure. A model of spectrin structure incorporating the repeat unit and proposed secondary structure is presented. A computer search of alpha-I sequence with the National Biomedical Research Foundation database of 2145 protein sequences did not detect any significant relationships. Spectrin is apparently the first member of a new class of proteins to be structurally characterized.  相似文献   

6.
Many structural, signaling, and adhesion molecules contain tandemly repeated amino acid motifs. The alpha-actinin/spectrin/dystrophin superfamily of F-actin-crosslinking proteins contains an array of triple alpha-helical motifs (spectrin repeats). We present here the complete sequence of the novel beta-spectrin isoform beta(Heavy)- spectrin (beta H). The sequence of beta H supports the origin of alpha- and beta-spectrins from a common ancestor, and we present a novel model for the origin of the spectrins from a homodimeric actin-crosslinking precursor. The pattern of similarity between the spectrin repeat units indicates that they have evolved by a series of nested, nonuniform duplications. Furthermore, the spectrins and dystrophins clearly have common ancestry, yet the repeat unit is of a different length in each family. Together, these observations suggest a dynamic period of increase in repeat number accompanied by homogenization within each array by concerted evolution. However, today, there is greater similarity of homologous repeats between species than there is across repeats within species, suggesting that concerted evolution ceased some time before the arthropod/vertebrate split. We propose a two-phase model for the evolution of the spectrin repeat arrays in which an initial phase of concerted evolution is subsequently retarded as each new protein becomes constrained to a specific length and the repeats diverge at the DNA level. This evolutionary model has general applicability to the origins of the many other proteins that have tandemly repeated motifs.   相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(4):1633-1641
We used chicken alpha spectrin as a ligand probe to isolate Drosophila beta spectrin cDNA sequences from a lambda gt11 expression library. Analysis of 800 residues of deduced amino acid sequence at the amino- terminal end revealed a strikingly conserved domain of integral of 230 residues that shows a high degree of sequence similarity to the amino- terminal domains of alpha actinin and dystrophin. This conserved domain constitutes a new diagnostic criterion for spectrin-related proteins and allows the known properties of one of these proteins to predict functional properties of the others. The conservation of the amino- terminal domain, and other regions in spectrin, alpha actinin, and dystrophin, demonstrates that a common set of domains were linked in different combinations through evolution to generate the distinctive members of the spectrin superfamily.  相似文献   

8.
Four mammalian beta-spectrin genes are currently recognized, all encode proteins of approximately 240-280,000 M(r) and display 17 triple helical homologous approximately 106-residue repeat units. In Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans, a variant beta spectrin with unusual properties has been recognized. Termed beta heavy (beta(H)), this spectrin contains 30 spectrin repeats, has a molecular weight in excess of 400,000, and associates with the apical domain of polarized epithelia. We have cloned and characterized from a human retina cDNA library a mammalian ortholog of Drosophila beta(H) spectrin, and in accord with standard spectrin naming conventions we term this new mammalian spectrin beta 5 (betaV). The gene for human betaV spectrin (HUBSPECV) is on chromosome 15q21. The 11, 722-nucleotide cDNA of betaV spectrin is generated from 68 exons and is predicted to encode a protein with a molecular weight of 416,960. Like its fly counterpart, the derived amino acid sequence of this unusual mammalian spectrin displays 30 spectrin repeats, a modestly conserved actin-binding domain, a conserved membrane association domain 1, a conserved self-association domain, and a pleckstrin homology domain near its COOH terminus. Its putative ankyrin-binding domain is poorly conserved and may be inactive. These structural features suggest that betaV spectrin is likely to form heterodimers and oligomers with alpha spectrin and to interact directly with cellular membranes. Unlike its Drosophila ortholog, betaV spectrin does not contain an SH3 domain but displays in repeat 5 a 45-residue insertion that displays 42% identity to amino acids 85-115 of the E4 protein of type 75 human papilloma virus. Human betaV spectrin is expressed at low levels in many tissues. By indirect immunofluorescence, it is detected prominently in the outer segments of photoreceptor rods and cones and in the basolateral membrane and cytosol of gastric epithelial cells. Unlike its Drosophila ortholog, a distinct apical distribution of betaV spectrin is inapparent in the epithelial cell populations examined, although it is confined to the outer segments of photoreceptor cells. The complete cDNA sequence of human betaV spectrin is available from GenBank(TM) as accession number.  相似文献   

9.
Many proteins involved in intracellular signal transduction contain a small, 50-60 amino acid domain, termed the Src homology 3 (SH3) domain. This domain appears to mediate critical protein-protein interactions that are involved in responses to extracellular signals. Previous studies have shown that the SH3 domains from several proteins recognize short, contiguous amino acid sequences that are rich in proline residues. While all SH3 recognition sequences identified to date share a conserved P-X-X-P motif, the sequence recognition specificity of individual SH3 domains is poorly understood. We have employed a novel modification of phage display involving biased libraries to identify peptide ligands of the Src, Fyn, Lyn, PI3K and Abl SH3 domains. With biased libraries, we probed SH3 recognition over a 12 amino acid window. The Src SH3 domain prefers the sequence XXXRPLPPLPXP, Fyn prefers XXXRPLPP(I/L)PXX, Lyn prefers RXXRPLPPLPXP, PI3K prefers RXXRPLPPLPP while the Abl SH3 domain selects phage containing the sequence PPPYPPPP(I/V)PXX. We have also analysed the binding properties of Abl and Src SH3 ligands. We find that although the phage-displayed Abl and Src SH3 ligands are proline rich, they are distinct. In surface plasmon resonance binding assays, these SH3 domains displayed highly selective binding to their cognate ligands when the sequences were displayed on the surface of the phage or as synthetic peptides. The selection of these high affinity SH3 peptide ligands provides valuable information on the recognition motifs of SH3 domains, serve as new tools to interfere with the cellular functions of SH3 domain-mediated processes and form the basis for the design of SH3-specific inhibitors of disease pathways.  相似文献   

10.
Comparison of ARM and HEAT protein repeats   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
ARM and HEAT motifs are tandemly repeated sequences of approximately 50 amino acid residues that occur in a wide variety of eukaryotic proteins. An exhaustive search of sequence databases detected new family members and revealed that at least 1 in 500 eukaryotic protein sequences contain such repeats. It also rendered the similarity between ARM and HEAT repeats, believed to be evolutionarily related, readily apparent. All the proteins identified in the database searches could be clustered by sequence similarity into four groups: canonical ARM-repeat proteins and three groups of the more divergent HEAT-repeat proteins. This allowed us to build improved sequence profiles for the automatic detection of repeat motifs. Inspection of these profiles indicated that the individual repeat motifs of all four classes share a common set of seven highly conserved hydrophobic residues, which in proteins of known three-dimensional structure are buried within or between repeats. However, the motifs differ at several specific residue positions, suggesting important structural or functional differences among the classes. Our results illustrate that ARM and HEAT-repeat proteins, while having a common phylogenetic origin, have since diverged significantly. We discuss evolutionary scenarios that could account for the great diversity of repeats observed.  相似文献   

11.
The protein tyrosine kinase c-Src is negatively regulated by phosphorylation of Tyr527 in its C-terminal tail. The repressed state is achieved through intramolecular interactions involving the phosphorylated tail, the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain and the SH3 domain. Both the SH2 and SH3 domains have also been shown to mediate the intermolecular interaction of Src with several proteins. To test which amino acids of the Src SH3 domain are important for these interactions, and whether the intra- and intermolecular associations involve the same residues, we carried out a detailed mutational analysis of the presumptive interaction surface. All mutations of conserved hydrophobic residues had an effect on both inter- and intramolecular interactions of the Src SH3 domain, although not all amino acids were equally important. Chimeric molecules in which the Src SH3 domain was replaced with those of spectrin or Lck showed derepressed kinase activity, whereas a chimera containing the Fyn SH3 domain was fully regulated. Since spectrin and Lck SH3 domains share the conserved hydrophobic residues characteristic of SH3 domains, other amino acids must be important for specificity. Mutational analysis of non- or semi-conserved residues in the RT and n-Src loops showed that some of these were also involved in inter- and intramolecular interactions. Stable transfection of selected SH3 domain mutants into NIH-3T3 cells showed that despite elevated levels of phosphotyrosine, the cells were morphologically normal, indicating that the SH3 domain was required for efficient transformation of NIH-3T3 cells by Src.  相似文献   

12.
The complete cDNA and polypeptide sequences of human erythroid alpha-spectrin.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Overlapping human erythroid alpha-spectrin cDNA clones were isolated from lambda gt11 libraries constructed from cDNAs of human fetal liver and erythroid bone marrow. The composite 8001-base pair (bp) cDNA nucleotide sequence contains 187-bp 5'- and 528-bp 3'-untranslated regions and has a single long open reading frame of 7287 bp that encodes a polypeptide of 2429 residues. As previously described (Speicher, D. W., and Marchesi, V. T. (1984) Nature 311, 177-180), spectrin is composed largely of homologous 106-amino acid repeat units. From the amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA, alpha-spectrin can be divided into 22 segments. Segments 1-9 and 12-19 are homologous and can therefore be considered repeats; the average number of identical residues in pairwise comparisons of these repeats is 22 out of 106, or 21%. Of these 17 repeats, 11 are exactly 106 amino acids in length, whereas five others differ from this length by a single residue. Segments 11, 20, and 21, although less homologous, appear to be related to the more highly conserved repeat units. The very N-terminal 22 residues, segment 10, which is atypical both in length and sequence, and the C-terminal 150 residues in segment 22 appear to be unrelated to the conserved repeat units. The sequence of the erythroid alpha-spectrin polypeptide chain is compared to that of human alpha-fodrin and chicken alpha-actinin to which it is related. alpha-Spectrin is more distantly related to dystrophin.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
The richness of proline sequences in titins qualifies these giant proteins as the largest source of intrinsically disordered structures in nature. An extensive search and analysis for Src homology domain 3 (SH3) ligand motifs revealed a myriad of broadly distributed SH3 ligand motifs, with the highest density in the PEVK segments of human titin. Besides the canonical class I and II motifs with opposite orientations, novel overlapping motifs consisting of one or more of each canonical motif are abundant. Experimentally, the binding affinity and critical residues of these putative titin-based SH3 ligands toward nebulin SH3 and other SH3-containing proteins in muscle and non-muscle cell extracts were validated with peptide array technology and by the sarcomere distribution of SH3-containing proteins. A 28-mer overlapping motif-containing PEVK module binds to nebulin SH3 in and around the canonical cleft, especially to the acidic residues in the loops, as revealed by NMR titration. Molecular dynamics and molecular docking studies indicated that the overlapping motif can bind in opposite orientations with comparable energy and contact areas and predicts correctly orientation-specific contacts in NMR data. We propose that the overlap ligand motifs are a new class of ligands with innate ability to dictate SH3 domain orientation and to facilitate the rate, strength, and stereospecificity of receptor interactions. Proline-rich sequences of titins are candidates as major hubs of SH3-dependent signaling pathways. The interplay of elasticity and dense clustering of mixed receptor orientations in titin PEVK segment have important implications for the mechanical sensing, force sensitivity, and inter-adapter interactions in signaling pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Cloning and analysis of cDNA clones for rat kidney alpha-spectrin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have isolated a 3922-base pair (bp) cDNA clone for rat nonerythroid alpha-spectrin from a rat kidney lambda gt11 cDNA library. Sequence analysis revealed that this cDNA contains an open reading frame of 3090 bp encoding for the C-terminal 1030 amino acid sequence of rat kidney alpha-spectrin. The 3'-untranslated region (including a 38-bp poly(A+) tail) contains an 832-bp sequence. A single mRNA of about 8 kilobase pairs was detected in rat liver, kidney, brain, heart, intestine, lung, testis, stomach, spleen, and muscle with varying abundances, which is consistent with and further confirms the presence of spectrins in nonerythroid tissues as demonstrated previously by immunoblot analysis. Southern blot analysis suggested that there is a single gene for nonerythroid alpha-spectrin. The derived amino acid sequence contains sequence from the spectrin 106-residue internal repeat 12 to the C terminus of rat kidney alpha-spectrin. Sequence comparison with human and chicken nonerythroid alpha-spectrin showed that nonerythroid alpha-spectrin is well conserved during evolution. The rat kidney alpha-spectrin sequence, when compared to rat brain alpha-spectrin, contains an extra 76-amino-acid sequence at the C terminus. Sequence comparison of all the internal repeats available revealed that the internal repeat 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 has highest sequence similarity with internal repeat 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17, respectively. Therefore, internal repeats 3-8 and 12-17 are most likely derived from an ancestral gene through gene duplication, suggesting that the spectrin gene is derived from a half-spectrin gene by gene duplication and divergence during evolution.  相似文献   

17.
The spectrin superfamily (spectrin, alpha-actinin, utrophin and dystrophin) has in common a triple helical repeating unit of ~106 amino acid residues. In spectrin, alpha and beta chains contain multiple copies of this repeat. beta-spectrin chains contain the majority of binding activities in spectrin and are essential for animal life. Canonical beta-spectrins have 17 repeats; beta-heavy spectrins have 30. Here, the repeats of five human beta-spectrins, plus beta-spectrins from several other vertebrates and invertebrates, have been analysed. Repeats 1, 2, 14 and 17 in canonical beta are highly conserved between invertebrates and vertebrates, and repeat 8 in some isoforms. This is consistent with conservation of critical functions, since repeats 1, 2 and 17 bind alpha-spectrin. Repeats 1 of beta-spectrins are not always detected by SMART or Pfam tools. A profile hidden Markov model of beta-spectrin repeat 1 detects alpha-actinins, but not utrophin or dystrophin. Novel examples of repeat 1 were detected in the spectraplakins MACF1, BPAG1 and plectin close to the actin-binding domain. Ankyrin binds to the C-terminal portion of repeat 14; the high conservation of this entire repeat may point to additional, undiscovered ligand-binding activities. This analysis indicates that the basic triple helical repeat pattern was adapted early in the evolution of the spectrin superfamily to encompass essential binding activities, which characterise individual repeats in proteins extant today.  相似文献   

18.
We have identified four repeats and five domains that are novel in proteins encoded by the Pyrobaculum aerophilum str. IM2 proteome using automated in silico methods. A "repeat" corresponds to a region comprising less than 55 amino acid residues that occurs more than once in the protein sequence and sometimes present in tandem. A "domain" corresponds to a conserved region comprising greater than 55 amino acid residues and may be present as single or multiple copies in the protein sequence. These correspond to (1) 85 amino acid residues AAG domain, (2) 72 amino acid residues GFGN domain, (3) 43 amino acid residues KGG repeat, (4) 25 amino acid residues RWE repeat, (5) 25 amino acid residues RID repeat, (6) 108 amino acid residues NDFA domain, (7) 140 amino acid residues VxY domain, (8) 35 amino acid residues LLPN repeat and (9) 98 amino acid residues GxY domain. A repeat or domain is characterized by specific conserved sequence motifs. We discuss the presence of these repeats and domains in proteins from other genomes and their probable secondary structure.  相似文献   

19.
The complete sequence of dystrophin predicts a rod-shaped cytoskeletal protein   总被引:181,自引:0,他引:181  
M Koenig  A P Monaco  L M Kunkel 《Cell》1988,53(2):219-228
The complete sequence of the human Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) cDNA has been determined. The 3685 encoded amino acids of the protein product, dystrophin, can be separated into four domains. The 240 amino acid N-terminal domain has been shown to be conserved with the actin-binding domain of alpha-actinin. A large second domain is predicted to be rod-shaped and formed by the succession of 25 triple-helical segments similar to the repeat domains of spectrin. The repeat segment is followed by a cysteine-rich segment that is similar in part to the entire COOH domain of the Dictyostelium alpha-actinin, while the 420 amino acid C-terminal domain of dystrophin does not show any similarity to previously reported proteins. The functional significance of some of the domains is addressed relative to the phenotypic characteristics of some Becker muscular dystrophy patients. Dystrophin shares many features with the cytoskeletal protein spectrin and alpha-actinin and is a large structural protein that is likely to adopt a rod shape about 150 nm in length.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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