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

2.
The binding of human erythrocyte ankyrin (band 2.1) to the erythrocyte membrane has been characterized by reassociating purified ankyrin with ankyrin-depleted inside-out vesicles. Ankyrin reassociates at high affinity with a limited number of protease-sensitive sites located only on the cytoplasmic side of the erythrocyte membrane. Depleting the vesicles of band 4.2 does not affect their binding capacity. A 45,000-dalton polypeptide derived from the cytoplasmic portion of band 3 competitively inhibits the binding of ankyrin to inside-out vesicles. Although the bulk of band 3 molecules appear to have the potential for binding ankyrin, nly a fraction of the band 3 molecules in native membranes or in reconstituted liposomes actually provides accessible high affinity ankyrin binding sites.  相似文献   

3.
We studied the binding of actin to the erythrocyte membrane by a novel application of falling ball viscometry. Our approach is based on the notion that if membranes have multiple binding sites for F-actin they will be able to cross-link and increase the viscosity of actin. Spectrin- and actin-depleted inside-out vesicles reconstituted with purified spectrin dimer or tetramer induce large increases in the viscosity of actin. Comparable concentrations of spectrin alone, inside-out vesicles alone, inside-out vesicles plus heat-denatured spectrin dimmer or tetramer induce large increases in the viscosity of actin. Comparable concentrations of spectrin alone, inside-out vesicles alone, inside-out plus heat denatured spectrin, ghosts, or ghosts plus spectrin have no effect on the viscosity of actin. Centrifugation experiments show that the amount of actin bound to the inside-out vesicles is enhanced in the presence of spectrin. The interactions detected by low-shear viscometry reflect actin interaction with membrane- bound spectrin because (a) prior removal of band 4.1 and ankyrin (band 2.1, the high- affinity membrane attachment site for spectrin) reduces both spectrin binding to the inside-out vesicles and their capacity to stimulate increase in viscosity of actin in the presence of spectrin + actin are inhibited by the addition of the water-soluble 72,000- dalton fragment of ankyrin, which is known to inhibit spectrin reassociation to the membrane. The increases in viscosity of actin induced by inside-out vesicles reconstituted with purified spectrin dimer or tetramer are not observed when samples are incubated at 0 degrees C. This temperature dependence may be related to the temperature-dependent associations we observe in solution studies with purified proteins: addition of ankyrin inhibits actin cross-linking by spectrin tetramer plus band 4.1 at 0 degrees C, and enhances it at 32 degrees C. We conclude (a) that falling ball viscometry can be used to assay actin binding to membranes and (b) that spectrin is involved in attaching actin filaments or oligomers to the cytoplasmic surface of the erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

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

5.
We have studied the effects of band 4.1 phosphorylation on its association with red cell inside-out vesicles stripped of all peripheral proteins. Band 4.1 bound to these vesicles in a saturable manner, and binding was characterized by a linear Scatchard plot with an apparent Kd of 1-2 x 10(-7) M. Phosphorylation of band 4.1 by purified protein kinase C reduced its ability to bind to membranes, resulting in a reduction in the apparent binding capacity of the membrane by 60-70% but little or no change in the apparent Kd of binding. By contrast, phosphorylation of band 4.1 by cAMP-dependent kinase had no effect on membrane binding. Digestion of the stripped inside-out vesicles with trypsin cleaved 100% of the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 but had little or no effect on glycophorin. Binding of band 4.1 to these digested vesicles was reduced by 70%. Phosphorylation of band 4.1 by protein kinase C had no effect on its binding to the digested vesicles, suggesting that the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 contained the phosphorylation-sensitive binding sites. This was confirmed by direct measurement of band 4.1 binding to the purified cytoplasmic domain of band 3. Phosphorylation of band 4.1 by protein kinase C reduced its binding to the purified 43-kDa domain by as much as 90%, while phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent kinase was without effect. These results show a selective effect of protein kinase C phosphorylation on the binding of band 4.1 to one of its membrane receptors, band 3, and suggest a mechanism whereby one of the key red cell-skeletal membrane associations may be modulated.  相似文献   

6.
In order to explore the binding sites for calcium-activated neutral protease (CANP) with high calcium sensitivity (muCANP) on the inner surface of human erythrocyte membranes, we analyzed the binding of muCANP to two kinds of membranes modified by treatment with phospholipase C or Triton X-100. Binding analyses were performed using an immunoblot technique. The amount of muCANP bound to phospholipase C-treated inside-out vesicles was essentially the same as that bound to untreated inside-out vesicles. It was also observed that muCANP binds to Triton X-100-treated membranes, in which most of the integral proteins and glycerophospholipids are removed while the lining proteins remain intact. In both types of modified membrane, the bound muCANP was rapdily converted to an active form by autolysis at physiological free Ca2+ concentrations. These results indicate that the binding sites for muCANP on the inner surface of erythrocyte membranes consist of components other than membrane phospholipids. In addition, it is suggested that one of the binding sites for muCANP is some lining protein.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The mechanism for binding of human erythrocyte calpain I to human erythrocyte inside-out vesicles was studied by immunoelectrophoretic blot analysis. Binding of calpain I to inside-out vesicles was observed both in the absence and presence of Ca2+. Moreover, in the absence of Ca2+, acidic proteins like casein, ovalbumin and calpastatin suppressed while basic proteins like arginase and lysozyme did not affect the binding of calpain I to inside-out vesicles. Here, we propose a model for the binding of calpain to the membrane.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of rabbit muscle phosphorylase kinase (EC 2.7.1.38) with human erythrocyte membranes was investigated. It was found that at pH 7.0 the kinase binds to the inner face of the erythrocyte membrane (inside-out vesicles) and that this binding is Ca2+- and Mg2+-dependent. The sharpest increase in the binding reaction occurs at concentrations between 70 and 550 nM free Ca2+. Erythrocyte ghost or right-side out erythrocyte vesicles showed a significantly lower capacity to interact with phosphorylase kinase. Autophosphorylated phosphorylase kinase shows a similar Ca2+-dependent binding profile, while trypsin activation of the kinase and calmodulin decrease the original binding capacity by about 50%. Heparin (200 micrograms/ml) and high ionic strength (50 mM NaCl) almost completely blocks enzyme-membrane interaction; glycogen does not affect the interaction.  相似文献   

10.
A C Newton  S L Cook  W H Huestis 《Biochemistry》1983,22(26):6110-6117
Band 3, the anion transport protein of human erythrocyte membranes, can be transferred from cells to liposomes and from liposomes back to cell membranes, retaining function and native orientation. After incubation with cells, sonicated phosphatidylcholine vesicles bind a transmembrane protein that comigrates with band 3 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Like native red cell band 3, the vesicle-bound protein is cleaved by chymotrypsin into 65- and 30-kdalton fragments and is not cleaved by trypsin. The protein can be cross-linked by copper-phenanthroline oxidation either before or after transfer to vesicles; in either case, the vesicle fractions contain high molecular weight material that is dissociated into 95-kdalton species by mercaptoethanol. Band 3-vesicle complexes contain no detectable cell lipid and are specifically permeable to anions. Greater than 99% of their anion uptake can be blocked by the band 3 inhibitor 4,4'-diisothiocyano-2,2'-stilbenedisulfonic acid (DIDS). Red cells whose band 3 function has been blocked irreversibly by DIDS or eosin maleimide regain part of their anion permeability upon incubation with band 3-vesicle complexes. Under the conditions employed, an average of one copy of functional band 3 is delivered to half of the cells, increasing by 2.3-fold the number of cells containing functional anion transporters. Incubation of pure lipid vesicles or red cell membrane buds with either normal red cells or eosin maleimide inhibited cells has no detectable effect on the cells' anion permeability.  相似文献   

11.
The hemoglobin binding sites on the inner surface of the erythrocyte membrane were identified by measuring the fraction of hemoglobin released following selective proteolytic or lipolytic enzyme digestion. In addition, binding stoichiometry to and fractional hemoglobin release from inside-out vesicle preparations of human and rabbit membranes were compared since rabbit membranes differ significantly from human membranes only in that they lack glycophorin. Our results show that rabbit inside-out vesicles bind about 65% less human or rabbit hemoglobin under conditions of optimal and stoichiometric binding, despite being otherwise similar in composition. We suggest that this difference is either directly or indirectly due to the absence of glycophorin in rabbit membranes. Further supportive evidence includes demonstrating (a) that neuraminidase treatment of human membranes did not affect hemoglobin binding and (b) that reconstitution of isolated glycophorin into phospholipid vesicles increased the hemoglobin binding capacity in a manner proportional to the fraction of glycophorin molecules oriented with their cytoplasmic sides exposed to the exterior of the vesicle. Proteolysis of human inside-out vesicles either before or after addition of hemoglobin reduced the binding capacity by about 25%. This is consistent with the known proportion of total hemoglobin binding sites involving band 3 protein and the selective lability of the cytoplasmic aspect of band 3 protein to proteolysis. Phospholipid involvement in hemoglobin binding was determined using various phospholipase C preparations which differ in their reactivity profiles. Approximately 38% of the bound hemoglobin was released upon cleavage of phospholipid headgroups. These results suggest that the predominant sites of binding for hemoglobin on the inner surface of the red cell membrane are the two major integral membrane glycoproteins.  相似文献   

12.
The exposure of the carboxyl-terminal of the Band 3 protein of human erythrocyte membranes in intact cells and membrane preparations to proteolytic digestion was determined. Carboxypeptidase Y digestion of purified Band 3 in the presence of non-ionic detergent released amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3. The release of amino acids was very pH dependent, digestion being most extensive at pH 3, with limited digestion at pH 6 or above. The 55,000 dalton carboxyl-terminal fragment of Band 3, generated by mild trypsin digestion of ghost membranes, had the same carboxyl-terminal sequence as intact Band 3, based on carboxypeptidase Y digestion. Treatment of intact cells with trypsin or carboxypeptidase Y did not release any amino acids from the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3. In contrast, carboxypeptidase Y readily digested the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 in ghosts that were stripped of extrinsic membrane proteins by alkali or high salt. This was shown by a decrease in the molecular weight of a carboxyl-terminal fragment of Band 3 after carboxypeptidase Y digestion of stripped ghost membranes. No such decrease was observed after carboxypeptidase Y treatment of intact cells. In addition, Band 3 purified from carboxypeptidase Y-treated stripped ghost membranes had a different carboxyl-terminal sequence from intact Band 3. Cleavage of the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 was also observed when non-stripped ghosts or inside-out vesicles were treated with carboxypeptidase Y. However, the digestion was less extensive. These results suggest that the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 may be protected from digestion by its association with extrinsic membrane proteins. We conclude, therefore, that the carboxyl-terminal of Band 3 is located on the cytoplasmic side of the red cell membrane. Since the amino-terminal of Band 3 is also located on the cytoplasmic side of the erythrocyte membrane, the Band 3 polypeptide crosses the membrane an even number of times. A model for the folding of Band 3 in the erythrocyte membrane is presented.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the associations of purified red cell band 4.2 with red cell membrane and membrane skeletal proteins using in vitro binding assays. Band 4.2 bound to the purified cytoplasmic domain of band 3 with a Kd between 2 and 8 X 10(-7) M. Binding was saturable and slow, requiring 2-4 h to reach equilibrium. This finding confirms previous work suggesting that the principal membrane-binding site for band 4.2 lies within the 43-kDa cytoplasmic domain of band 3 (Korsgren, C., and Cohen, C. M. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 5536-5543). Band 4.2 also bound to purified ankyrin in solution with a Kd between 1 and 3.5 X 10(-7) M. As with the cytoplasmic domain of band 3, binding was saturable and required 4-5 h to reach equilibrium. Reconstitution with ankyrin of inside-out vesicles stripped of all peripheral proteins had no effect upon band 4.2 binding to membranes; similarly, reconstitution with band 4.2 had no effect upon ankyrin binding. This shows that ankyrin and band 4.2 bind to distinct loci within the 43-kDa band 3 cytoplasmic domain. Coincubation of ankyrin and band 4.2 in solution partially blocked the binding of both proteins to the membrane. Similarly, coincubation of bands 4.1 and 4.2 in solution partially blocked binding of both to membranes. In all cases, the data suggest the possibility that domains on each of these proteins responsible for low affinity membrane binding are principally affected. The data also provide evidence for an association of band 4.2 with band 4.1. Our results show that band 4.2 can form multiple associations with red cell membrane proteins and may therefore play an as yet unrecognized structural role on the membrane.  相似文献   

14.
This report describes Ca2+-dependent binding of 125I-labeled calmodulin (125I-CaM) to erythrocyte membranes and identification of two new CaM-binding proteins. Erythrocyte CaM labeled with 125I-Bolton Hunter reagent fully activated erythrocyte (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase. 125I-CaM bound to CaM depleted membranes in a Ca2+-dependent manner with a Ka of 6 x 10(-8) M Ca2+ and maximum binding at 4 x 10(-7) M Ca2+. Only the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane bound 125I-CaM. Binding was inhibited by unlabeled CaM and by trifluoperazine. Reduction of the free Ca2+ concentration or addition of trifluoperazine caused a slow reversal of binding. Nanomolar 125I-CaM required several hours to reach binding equilibrium, but the rate was much faster at higher concentrations. Scatchard plots of binding were curvilinear, and a class of high affinity sites was identified with a KD of 0.5 nM and estimated capacity of 400 sites per cell equivalent for inside-out vesicles (IOVs). The high affinity sites of IOVs most likely correspond to Ca2+ transporter since: (a) Ka of activation of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase and KD for binding were nearly identical, and (b) partial digestion of IOVs with alpha-chymotrypsin produced activation of the (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase with loss of the high affinity sites. 125I-CaM bound in solution to a class of binding proteins (KD approximately 55 nM, 7.3 pmol per mg of ghost protein) which were extracted from ghosts by low ionic strength incubation. Soluble binding proteins were covalently cross-linked to 125I-CaM with Lomant's reagent, and 2 bands of 8,000 and 40,000 Mr (Mr of CaM subtracted) and spectrin dimer were observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis autoradiography. The 8,000 and 40,000 Mr proteins represent a previously unrecognized class of CaM-binding sites which may mediate unexplained Ca2+-induced effects in the erythrocyte.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of a calcium-activated neutral protease (CANP) with high calcium sensitivity (muCANP) to erythrocyte membranes and its subsequent autolytic activation on the membranes were analyzed by an immunoblot technique. In the presence of calcium ions, muCANP bound to the erythrocyte membranes as a heterodimer of 79- and 28-kDa subunits and was converted quickly on the membranes to an active form with a 76-kDa large subunit. The active form was then released from the membranes to the soluble fraction. These sequential reactions, however, were not specific to inside-out vesicles, but occurred also, except for some Ca2+-independent binding, on right side-out vesicles. A rapid degradation of some membrane proteins was observed after binding of muCANP to the membranes. The binding of muCANP to erythrocyte membranes was inhibited by substrates and the endogenous CANP inhibitor, which is also a suicide substrate. These results strongly suggest that muCANP binds to membranes by recognition of membrane proteins as substrates and not at a special site for activation. Thus, a possible mechanism for muCANP activation on membranes is that muCANP first binds to substrates on membranes, is activated, and then degrades the substrates to deform the membrane structures.  相似文献   

16.
Band 4.2 is a human erythrocyte membrane protein of incompletely characterized structure and function. Erythrocytes deficient in band 4.2 protein were used to examine the functional role of band 4.2 in intact erythrocyte membranes. Both the lateral and the rotational mobilities of band 3 were increased in band 4.2-deficient erythrocytes compared to control cells. In contrast, the lateral mobility of neither glycophorins nor a fluorescent phospholipid analog was altered in band 4.2-deficient cells. Compared to controls, band 4.2-deficient erythrocytes manifested a decreased ratio of band 3 to spectrin, and band 4.2-deficient membrane skeletons had decreased extractability of band 3 under low-salt conditions. Normal band 4.2 was found to bind to spectrin in solution and to promote the binding of spectrin to ankyrin-stripped inside-out vesicles. We conclude that band 4.2 provides low-affinity binding sites for both band 3 oligomers and spectrin dimers on the human erythrocyte membrane. Band 4.2 may serve as an accessory linking protein between the membrane skeleton and the overlying lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

17.
Polyclonal antibodies were raised in rabbits against a synthetic peptide which corresponds to the 12-amino acid carboxyl-terminal sequence of murine erythrocyte Band 3. Immunoblots of ghost membrane proteins showed that the antibody specifically recognized murine or rat Band 3 but not human or canine Band 3. The antibody also bound to murine ghost membranes applied directly to nitrocellulose but not to human ghost membranes. This shows that the carboxyl terminus of Band 3 is available for antibody binding in ghost membranes and that the carboxyl-terminal sequences of human and mouse Band 3 are not identical. The specificity of the antibody for the carboxyl terminus of Band 3 was confirmed by the loss of antibody binding after digestion of detergent-solubilized ghost membrane proteins with carboxypeptidase Y. In addition, carboxyl-terminal fragments of Band 3 generated by protease treatment of cells or ghost membranes were positive on immunoblots while amino-terminal fragments were negative. In contrast, protease-treated stripped ghost membranes did not contain a carboxyl-terminal fragment of Band 3 that was detectable on immunoblots. The carboxyl terminus of Band 3 was localized to the cytoplasmic side of the erythrocyte membrane since antibody binding as determined by immunofluorescence occurred in ghosts and permeabilized cells but not in intact cells. In addition, competition studies using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and immunoblots showed that cells and resealed ghosts competed poorly for antibody compared to ghost membranes, inside-out vesicles, or albumin-conjugated peptide.  相似文献   

18.
Erythrocyte band 4.1 is an important protein in the control and maintenance of the cytoskeleton. Skate erythrocyte band 3, the anion exchanger, appears to play a pivotal role in the regulation of volume-stimulated solute efflux during volume expansion. Because band 4.1 interacts with band 3, we tested whether their interaction might change during volume expansion. Skate red blood cells were volume-expanded in either hypotonic media (one-half osmolarity) or were swollen under isoosmotic conditions by inclusion of ethylene glycol or ammonium chloride in the medium. Microsomal membranes isolated from red cells under volume expanded conditions demonstrated a significant decrease in the amount of band 4.1 bound to band 3. In unstimulated cells, approximately one third of the binding of band 4.1 occurred to band 3. This binding was characterized as being sensitive to competition by the peptide IRRRY. The majority of band 4.1 is bound to glycophorin (as demonstrated in other species), and this binding does not change during volume expansion. The alteration in band 4.1:band 3 interaction occurs within 5 min after volume expansion and is transient, returning to near normal interaction within 60 min. Two drugs that promote band 3 oligomerization, pyridoxal-5'-phosphate and DIDS, also decreased band 4.1 interaction with band 3. Band 4.1 and ankyrin binding to band 3 may be reciprocally related as high-affinity ankyrin binding sites to band 3 observed under volume-expanded conditions are decreased by inclusion of band 4.1 in the binding reactions. J. Exp. Zool. 289:177-183, 2001.  相似文献   

19.
Interaction of bilirubin with different types of erythrocyte membrane vesicles such as unsealed, heterogeneous, sealed and inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from human and goat erythrocytes was studied. Out of various types of membrane vesicles, in both species, unsealed membrane vesicles bound quantitatively higher amounts of bilirubin followed by heterogeneous and sealed membrane vesicles whereas inside-out membrane vesicles bound the lowest amount of bilirubin. These differences in the amount of bound bilirubin to different membrane vesicles were correlated well with the percentage accessibility of sialic acid to neuraminidase in these membranes suggesting that bilirubin bound preferentially to the outer layer of erythrocyte membranes than the inner layer. Further, membrane vesicles prepared from human erythrocytes bound higher amounts of bilirubin than those prepared from goat erythrocytes. This can be ascribed to different phospholipid composition of these membranes.  相似文献   

20.
We have purified the human erythrocyte membrane protein band 4.2 to greater than 85% homogeneity. The protein was extracted from spectrin-actin-depleted inside-out vesicles in a pH 11 medium and purified by gel filtration in the presence of 1 M KI. The purified protein was heterogeneous and had an average S20,w of 5.5 and an average Stokes radius of 82 A. By electron microscopy, the protein appeared heterogeneous in size and shape, having a diameter ranging from 80 to 150 A. The protein bound saturably to band 4.2-depleted red cell inside-out vesicles, and the binding exhibited a concave Scatchard plot. Binding was reduced greater than 90% by proteolytic digestion of membranes. Digestion studies suggested that there are two classes of binding sites for band 4.2 on the cytoplasmic aspect of red cell membranes, one of which is likely to be band 3. The purified 43-kDa cytoplasmic domain of band 3 competed for band 4.2 binding to red cell membranes and could completely abolish binding when added at a concentration of greater than 200 micrograms/ml. The purification of band 4.2 and the characterization of its association with red cell membranes should facilitate the discovery of the function of this major red cell membrane protein.  相似文献   

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