Palek J
Department of Biomedical Research, St Elizabeth's Hospital, Tufts Medical School, Boston, MA 02135.
Blood Rev. 1987 Sep;1(3):147-68. doi: 10.1016/0268-960x(87)90031-2.
The membrane skeleton, a protein lattice that laminates the internal side of the red cell membrane, contains four major proteins: spectrin, actin, protein 4.1 and ankyrin. By mass, the most abundant of these proteins is spectrin, a fibre-like protein composed of two chains, alpha and beta, which are twisted along each other into a heterodimer. At their head region, spectrin heterodimers are assembled into tetramers. At their distal end, these tetramers are interconnected into a two dimensional network by their linkage to oligomers of actin. This interaction is greatly strengthened by protein 4.1. The skeleton is attached to the membrane by ankyrin, a protein that connects the spectrin beta chain to the major transmembrane protein band 3, the anion channel protein. Additional attachment sites are those of protein 4.1 with several glycoproteins, namely glycophorin A and C, as well as direct interactions between spectrin, protein 4.1 and the negatively charged lipids of the inner membrane lipid bilayer. Hereditary spherocytosis, elliptocytosis and pyropoikilocytosis represent a group of disorders that are due to deficiency or dysfunction of one of the membrane skeletal proteins (Fig. 1). Known deficiency states include that of spectrin, ankyrin and protein 4.1. Severe spectrin and ankyrin deficiencies (with decrease in spectrin and ankyrin contents to about 50% of the normal amount) are both rare disorders associated with severe autosomal recessive hereditary spherocytosis. On the other hand, mild spectrin deficiency is found in the majority of patients with autosomal dominant spherocytosis in which the degree of spectrin deficiency correlates with the clinical severity of the disease. Protein 4.1 deficiency, in contrast, is associated with hereditary elliptocytosis, which in certain populations constitutes about 20% of all such patients. Known skeletal protein dysfunctions include mutants of both alpha and beta spectrin that involve the spectrin heterodimer self-association site. These are clinically expressed as hereditary elliptocytosis (HE) and a closely related disorder, hereditary pyropoikilocytosis (HPP). At the level of protein function, this defect can be detected by analysis of the content of spectrin dimers and tetramers in 0 degrees C low ionic strength extracts of red cell membranes. Their structural identification is accomplished by limited proteolytic digestion of spectrin followed by two-dimensional tryptic peptide mapping.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
膜骨架是一种覆盖在红细胞膜内侧的蛋白质晶格,包含四种主要蛋白质:血影蛋白、肌动蛋白、4.1蛋白和锚蛋白。按质量计算,这些蛋白质中含量最丰富的是血影蛋白,它是一种纤维状蛋白质,由α和β两条链组成,这两条链相互缠绕形成异二聚体。在其头部区域,血影蛋白异二聚体组装成四聚体。在其远端,这些四聚体通过与肌动蛋白寡聚体的连接相互连接成二维网络。4.1蛋白极大地增强了这种相互作用。骨架通过锚蛋白附着在膜上,锚蛋白是一种将血影蛋白β链与主要跨膜蛋白带3(阴离子通道蛋白)连接起来的蛋白质。其他附着位点是4.1蛋白与几种糖蛋白(即血型糖蛋白A和C)的结合位点,以及血影蛋白、4.1蛋白与内膜脂质双层带负电荷脂质之间的直接相互作用。遗传性球形红细胞增多症、椭圆形红细胞增多症和热异形红细胞症是一组由于膜骨架蛋白之一缺乏或功能障碍引起的疾病(图1)。已知的缺乏状态包括血影蛋白、锚蛋白和4.1蛋白的缺乏。严重的血影蛋白和锚蛋白缺乏(血影蛋白和锚蛋白含量降至正常量的约50%)都是与严重常染色体隐性遗传性球形红细胞增多症相关的罕见疾病。另一方面,大多数常染色体显性球形红细胞增多症患者存在轻度血影蛋白缺乏,其中血影蛋白缺乏程度与疾病的临床严重程度相关。相比之下,4.1蛋白缺乏与遗传性椭圆形红细胞增多症有关,在某些人群中,这种疾病约占所有此类患者的20%。已知的骨架蛋白功能障碍包括涉及血影蛋白异二聚体自缔合位点的α和β血影蛋白突变体。这些在临床上表现为遗传性椭圆形红细胞增多症(HE)和一种密切相关的疾病,遗传性热异形红细胞症(HPP)。在蛋白质功能水平上,这种缺陷可以通过分析红细胞膜0℃低离子强度提取物中血影蛋白二聚体和四聚体的含量来检测。它们的结构鉴定是通过对血影蛋白进行有限的蛋白水解消化,然后进行二维胰蛋白酶肽图谱分析来完成的。(摘要截断于400字)