A molecular defect in two families with hemolytic poikilocytic anemia: reduction of high affinity membrane binding sites for ankyrin.
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 68 (6), 1566-1576
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci110411
Abstract
Patients from two families with chronic hemolytic anemia have been studied. The erythrocytes are very fragile and appear microcytic with a great variety of shapes. Clinical evaluation failed to identify traditionally recognized causes of hemolysis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) showed no significant abnormality of the major polypeptide bands. Erythrocytes spectrin-ankyrin and ankyrin-membrane interactions were analyzed with 125I-labeled spectrin, 125I-labeled ankyrin, and inside-out vesicles. Patients' vesicles bound 125I-spectrin normally. Likewise, patients' spectrin and ankyrin competed normally for the binding sites on control membranes. None of the individual components appeared to have abnormal thermal sensitivity. Ankyrin-stripped, inside-out vesicles prepared from the patients bound less 125I-ankyrin than did vesicles prepared from normals (P less than 0.05 for all corresponding points in the high-affinity region). Scatchard analysis showed the most significant abnormality to be a 50% reduction in the high affinity ankyrin binding sites. Similar experiments were performed with blood from patients with spherocytosis and splenectomized controls, but no abnormalities were detected. The water soluble 43,000-dalton fragments of band 3 (the high-affinity ankyrin binding sites) were prepared from one of the patients and competed normally for 125I-ankyrin binding in solution. This suggests that the primary structural defect is a reduction in the number of high affinity membrane binding sites for ankyrin, and is consistent with an abnormal organization of band 3 in the membrane.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deficiency of skeletal membrane protein band 4.1 in homozygous hereditary elliptocytosis. Implications for erythrocyte membrane stability.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981
- Tryptic digestion of spectrin in variants of hereditary elliptocytosis.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1981
- Spectrin tetramer–dimer equilibrium and the stability of erythrocyte membrane skeletonsNature, 1980
- Reconstitution of spectrin-deficient, spherocytic mouse erythrocyte membranes.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1979
- In vitro formation of a complex between cytoskeletal proteins of the human erythrocyteNature, 1979
- Effect of heat on the circular dichroism of spectrin in hereditary pyropoikilocytosis.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1979
- Self‐Association of Human SpectrinEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1978
- Human erythrocyte spectrin: Phosphorylation in intact cells and purification of the 32P-labeled protein in a non-aggregated stateLife Sciences, 1977
- Irreversible deformation of the spectrin-actin lattice in irreversibly sickled cells.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1976
- Intramembrane particle aggregation in erythrocyte ghosts. II. The influence of spectrin aggregationBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes, 1976