Publication | Open Access
Defective spectrin dimer-dimer association with hereditary elliptocytosis.
110
Citations
18
References
1982
Year
Normal Dimer-dimer AssociationBiochemistryGenetic DisorderMedicineHematologyPathologyDimer-dimer AssociationCellular BiologyCytoskeletonMolecular PathologySpectrin DimerMolecular DiagnosticsCell BiologyCellular PhysiologyLysosomal Storage DiseaseHereditary ElliptocytosisCell Physiology
We examined erythrocytes from 18 patients with hereditary elliptocytosis. Spectrin from eight patients (referred to as type 1) was defective in dimer-dimer association as demonstrated in two ways. First, there was an increased amount of spectrin dimer with a concomitant decrease in tetramer as measured in erythrocyte membrane preparations extracted at 0 degrees C under low-salt conditions (the amount of spectrin dimer was 15-33% of total spectrin species compared with a normal range of 3-7%). Second, the equilibrium constants of spectrin dimer-dimer association were decreased in both solution and in situ membrane. Spectrin from the remaining 10 patients (referred to as type 2) showed normal dimer-dimer association. Membrane skeletons, produced from ghosts of both types of hereditary elliptocytosis by Triton X-100 extraction, were unstable when mechanically shaken. Because spectrin tetramers, but not dimers, can crosslink actin, we postulate that the defective spectrin dimer-dimer association in type 1 diminishes actin crosslinking and thus is responsible for membrane skeletal instability. A defective protein-protein association in type 2, however, remains to be identified.
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