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Showing papers in "Journal of Supramolecular Structure in 1978"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Calculations based on reported values for axon terminal density and synaptosomal ganglioside concentration in the rat reveal that nerve endings contribute less than 12% of total cerebral cortical gang lioside, and other considerations suggest the possibility thatgangliosides may be distributed over the entire neuronal surface.
Abstract: Gengliosides generally provide a small portion of the complex carbohydrate content of cell surfaces. An exception is the central nervous system where they comprise up to 5–10% of the total lipid of some membranes. This tissue is unique in that the quantity of lipid-bound sialic acid exceeds that of the protein-bound fraction. Over 30 different molecular species have been characterized to date. These range in complexity from sialosylgalactosyl ceramide with 2 sugars to the pentasialoganglioside of fish brain with 9 carbohydrate units. Virtually all cellular and subcellular fractions of brain that have been carefully examined contain gangliosides to one degree or another, but the majority of brain ganglioside is located in the neurons. Their mode of distribution within the neuron has not been entirely clarified by subcellular studies. Calculations based on reported values for axon terminal density and synaptosomal ganglioside concentration in the rat reveal that nerve endings contribute less than 12% of total cerebral cortical ganglioside. It is concluded that the plasma membranes of neuronal processes contain most of the neuronal ganglioside. These and other considerations suggest the possibility that gangliosides may be distributed over the entire neuronal surface.

321 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is strong evidence that band 3 mediates 1:1 anion exchange across the membrane through a conformational cycle while remaining fixed and asymmetrical.
Abstract: Band 3 is the predominant polypeptide and the purported mediator of anion transport in the human erythrocyte membrane. Against a background of minor and apparently unrelated polypeptides of similar electrophoretic mobility, and despite apparent heterogeneity in its glycosylation, the bulk of band 3 exhibits uniform and characteristic behavior. This integral glycoprotein appears to exist as a noncovalent dimer of two approximately 93,000-dalton chains which span the membrane asymmetrically. The protein is hydrophobic in its composition and in its behavior in aqueous solution and is best solubilized and purified in detergent. It can be cleaved while membrane-bound into large, topographically defined segments. An integral, outer-surface, 38,000-dalton fragment bears most of the band 3 carbohydrate. A 17,000-dalton, hydrophobic glycopeptide fragment spans the membrane. A approximately 40,000-dalton hydrophilic segment represents the cytoplasmic domain. In vitro, glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase and aldolase bind reversibly, in a metabolie-sensitive fashion, to this cytoplasmic segment. The cytoplasmic domain also bears the amino terminus of this polypeptide, in contrast to other integral membrane proteins. Recent electron microscopic analysis suggests that the poles of the band 3 molecule can be seen by freeze-etching at the two original membrane surfaces, while freeze-fracture reveals the transmembrane disposition of band 3 dimer particles. There is strong evidence that band 3 mediates 1:1 anion exchange across the membrane through a conformational cycle while remaining fixed and asymmetrical. Its cytoplasmic pole can be variously perturbed and even excised without a significant alteration of transport function. However, digestion of the outer-surface region leads to inhibition of transport, so that both this segment and the membrane-spanning piece (which is selectively labeled by covalent inhibitors of transport) may be presumed to be involved in transport. Genetic polymorphism has been observed in the structure and immunogenicity of the band 3 polypeptide but this feature has not been related to variation in anion transport or other band 3 activities.

282 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although active Na-K transport is not influenced by cholesterol enrichment of human red cells, several carrier-mediated transport pathways are inhibited and the cotransport of Na + K and similar results have been obtained by others in studies of organic acid transport and the transport of small neutral molecules such as erythritol and glycerol.
Abstract: Cholesterol and phospholipid are the two major lipids of the red cell membrane. Cholesterol is insoluble in water but is solubilized by phospholipids both in membranes and in plasma lipoproteins. Morever, cholesterol exchanges between membranes and lipoproteins. An equilibrium partition is established based on the amount of cholesterol relative to phospholipid (C/PL) in these two compartments. Increases in the C/PL of red cell membranes have been studied under three conditions: First, spontaneous increases in vivo have been observed in the spur red cells of patients with severe liver disease; second, similar red cell changes in vivo have been induced by the administration of cholesterol-enriched diets to rodents and dogs; third, increases in membrane cholesterol have been induced in vitro by enriching the C/PL of the lipoprotein environment with cholesterol-phospholipid dispersions (liposomes) having a C/PL of greater than 1.0. In each case, there is a close relationship between the C/PL of the plasma environment and the C/PL of the red cell membrane. In vivo, the C/PL mole ratio of red cell membranes ranges from a normal value of 0.09--1.0 to values which approach but do not reach 2.0. In vitro, this ratio approaches 3.0. Cholesterol enrichment of red cell membranes directly influences membrane lipid fluidity, as assessed by the rotational diffusion of hydrophobic fluorescent probes such as diphenyl hexatriene (DPH). A close correlation exists between increases in red cell membrane C/PL and decreases in membrane fluidity over the range of membrane C/PL from 1.0 to 2.0; however, little further change in fluidity occurs when membrane C/PL is increased to 2.0--3.0. Cholesterol enrichment of red cell membranes is associated with the transformation of cell contour to one which is redundant and folded, and this is associated with a decrease in red cell filterability in vitro. Circulation in vivo in the presence of the spleen further modifies cell shape to a spiny, irregular (spur) form, and the survival of cholesterol-rich red cells is decreased in the presence of the spleen. Although active Na-K transport is not influenced by cholesterol enrichment of human red cells, several carrier-mediated transport pathways are inhibited. We have demonstrated this effect for the cotransport of Na + K and similar results have been obtained by others in studies of organic acid transport and the transport of small neutral molecules such as erythritol and glycerol. Thus, red cell membrane C/PL is sensitive to the C/PL of the plasma environment. Increasing membrane C/PL causes a decrease in membrane fluidity, and these changes are associated with a reduction in membrane permeability, a distortion of cell contour and filterability and a shortening of the survival of red cells in vivo.

280 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Assays using an extreme COOH-terminal ACTH antiserum indicate that the 31K ACTH/endorphin molecule in rat anterior and intermediate pituitary is similar to the pro-ACTH/end Morphin molecule from mousepituitary tumor cells, and sequential immunoprecipitation with ACTH and endorphin antisera demonstrates directly that a single molecule has antigenic determinants for both ACTH
Abstract: Extracts of rat anterior and intermediate-posterior pituitary were fractionated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and assayed for immunoactive ACTH and endorphin. In both lobes the major forms of immunoactive ACTH have apparent molecular weights of 31,000 (31K), 20--21K, 14K, and 4.5K, and the major forms of immunoactive endorphin have apparent molecular weights of 31K (coincident with the peak of immunoactive ACTH), 13K (a betaLPH-like peptide), and 3.5K (a beta-endorphin-like peptide). However, the quantitative distribution of immunoactivity among the various forms differs greatly between the lobes. Assays using an extreme COOH-terminal ACTH antiserum indicate that the 31K ACTH/endorphin molecule in rat anterior and intermediate pituitary is similar to the pro-ACTH/endorphin molecule from mouse pituitary tumor cells. A radioimmunoassay that is specific for the NH2-terminal non-ACTH, nonendorphin segment (referred to as 16K fragment) of the mouse pro-ACTH/endorphin molecule was used to assay extracts of rat pituitary. In addition to detecting material at 31K and 20--21K, the 16K fragment radioimmunoassay detects significant amounts of cross-reactive material with an apparent molecular weight of 16K in extracts of both lobes. This result also suggests that the structure and processing of the rat 31K ACTH/endorphin molecule is similar to that of mouse tumor cell pro-ACTH/endorphin. Cell suspensions were prepared from the anterior and intermediate lobes of the rat pituitary and maintained in culture for a 24-h period. The isolated cells from both lobes incorporate [3H] phenylalanine into immunoprecipitable ACTH- and endorphin-containing molecules. By sequential immunoprecipitation with ACTH and endorphin antisera, it is possible to demonstrate directly that a single molecule (31K ACTH/endorphin) has antigenic determinants for both ACTH and endorphin. Significant amounts of 31K ACTH/endorphin are released into the culture medium by isolated anterior lobe and intermediate lobe cells. The isolated intermediate lobe cells synthesize and secrete relatively large amounts of a beta-endorphin-like molecule; the isolated anterior lobe cells secrete significant amounts of both a betaLPH-like molecule and a beta-endorphin-like molecule. These same quantitative differences between anterior and intermediate lobe tissue were observed in immunoassays of extracts of the separated lobes and probably reflect differences in the processing of the common precursor. The isolated anterior lobe cells can be stimulated to release increased amounts of immunoprecipitable ACTH and endorphin by incubation with a cyclic AMP analog and a phosphodiesterase inhibitor.

210 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is presented indicating that human mononuclear phagocytes distinguish senescent RBC from mature RBC on the basis of selective Ig attachment to the membranes of senescent cells, suggesting that this IgG may be a "physiologic" autoantibody and contribute to the maintenance of homeostasis by performing regulatory function.
Abstract: The mechanism by which mononuclear phagocytes distinguish mature "self" from senescent "self" was investigated. Evidence is presented indicating that human mononuclear phagocytes distinguish senescent RBC from mature RBC on the basis of selective Ig attachment to the membranes of senescent cells. This Ig, eluted from senescent human RBC, was shown to be IgG and free of other Igs by immunodiffusion, immunoelectrophoresis, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The IgG was polyclonal with respect to light chains. The eluted IgG reattaches to homologous stored RBC, but not to mature autologous or allogeneic RBC, via the Fab region. It then initiates phagocytosis of these stored RBC by mononuclear phagocytes. Evidence suggests that the IgG is directed against altered membrane receptors. Thus, this IgG may be a "physiologic" autoantibody and contribute to the maintenance of homeostasis by performing regulatory function.

173 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Heinz Furthmayr1
TL;DR: The data confirm and extend the notion that the sialoglycoproteins in human red cells are dimeric molecules which are either preformed in the membrane or which can readily be generated in vitro.
Abstract: Two new sialoglycoproteins, glycophorin B and glycophorin C, were isolated from erythrocyte membranes by extraction with lithium diiodosalicylate, partition in aqueous phenol, gel filtration in detergent, and preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. The two proteins were characterized by amino acid and carbohydrate analysis, separation of tryptic peptides, and isolation and purification of the amino terminal glycopeptide from each polypeptide chain. Glycophorin B is found in two forms in electrophoretograms of normal erythrocyte membranes corresponding to monomer and dimer, as has been similarly described for glycophorin A. By using antibodies to a carboxy terminal determinant of glycophorin A, and direct staining of gels with antibodies and 125I-protein A from Staph. aureus, as well as by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoreis, only the two known forms of glycophorin A are detectable. The data confirm and extend the notion that the sialoglycoproteins in human red cells are dimeric molecules which are either preformed in the membrane or which can readily be generated in vitro. Only glycophorin A and glycophorin C are sensitive to trypsin while in situ in the intact red blood cells.

152 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is postulated that choleragen exerts its effects on cells through the NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of an arginine or similar amino acid in either the cycl enzyme itself or a regulatory protein of the cyclase system.
Abstract: Choleragen exerts its effect on cells through activation of adenylate cyclase. Choleragen initially interacts with cells through binding of the B subunit of the toxin to the ganglioside GM1 on the cell surface. Subsequent events are less clear. Patching or capping of toxin on the cell surface may be an obligatory step in choleragen action. Studies in cell-free systems have demonstrated that activation of adenylate cyclase by choleragen requires NAD. In addition to NAD, requirements have been observed for ATP, GTP, and calcium-dependent regulatory protein. GTP also is required for the expression of choleragen-activated adenylate cyclase. In preparations from turkey erythrocytes, choleragen appears to inhibit an isoproterenol-stimulated GTPase. It has been postulated that by decreasing the activity of a specific GTPase, choleragen would stabilize a GTP-adenylate cyclase complex and maintain the cyclase in an activated state. Although the holotoxin is most effective in intact cells, with the A subunit having 1/20th of its activity and the B subunit (choleragenoid) being inactive, in cell-free systems the A subunit, specifically the A1 fragment, is required for adenylate cyclase activation. The B protomer is inactive. Choleragen, the A subunit, or A1 fragment under suitable conditions hydrolyzes NAD to ADP-ribose and nicotinamide (NAD glycohydrolase activity) and catalyzes the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety of NAD to the guandino group of arginine (ADP-ribosyltransferase activity). The NAD glycohydrolase activity is similar to that exhibited by other NAD-dependent bacterial toxins (diphtheria toxin, Pseudomonas exotoxin A), which act by catalyzing the ADP-ribosylation of a specific acceptor protein. If the ADP-ribosylation of arginine is a model for the reaction catalyzed by choleragen in vivo, then arginine is presumably an analog of the amino acid which is ADP-ribosylated in the acceptor protein. It is postulated that choleragen exerts its effects on cells through the NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of an arginine or similar amino acid in either the cyclase itself or a regulatory protein of the cyclase system.

114 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examination of the temperature dependence of approximate and polarity-corrected order parameters indicated that lipid phase separations occur in liver and heart plasma membranes, and it is suggested that the inhibition of these enzymes may be due in part to cation-mediated decreases in the lipid fluidity.
Abstract: The structures of rat liver and heart plasma membranes were studied with the 5-nitroxide stearic acid spin probe, I(12,3). The polarity-corrected order parameters (S) of liver and heart plasma membranes were independent of probe concentration only if experimentally determined low I(12,3)/lipid ratios were employed. At higher probe/lipid ratios, the order parameters of both membrane systems decreased with increasing probe concentration, and these effects were attributed to enhanced nitroxide radical interactions. Examination of the temperature dependence of approximate and polarity-corrected order parameters indicated that lipid phase separations occur in liver (between 19 degrees and 28 degrees C) and heart (between 21 degrees and 32 degrees C) plasma membranes. The possibility that a wide variety of membrane-associated functions may be influenced by these thermotropic phase separations is considered. Addition of 3.9 mM CaCl2 to I(12,3)-labeled liver plasma membrane decreased the fluidity as indicated by a 5% increase in S at 37 degrees C. Similarly, titrating I(12,3)-labeled heart plasma membranes with either CaCl2 or LaCl3 decreased the lipid fluidity at 37 degrees C, although the magnitude of the La3+ effect was larger and occurred at lower concentrations than that induced by Ca2+; addition of 0.2 mM La3+ or 3.2 mM Ca2+ increased S by approximately 7% and 5%, respectively. The above cation effects reflected only alterations in the membrane fluidity and were not due to changes in probe--probe interactions. Ca2+ and La3+ at these concentrations decrease the activities of such plasma membrane enzymes as Na+, K+-ATPase and adenylyl cyclase, and it is suggested that the inhibition of these enzymes may be due in part to cation-mediated decreases in the lipid fluidity.

110 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The D-glucose transporter from human erythrocytes has been purified and reconstituted by Kasahara and Hinkle and isolated the protein with 65% of the extracted phospholipid at a lipid-protein ratio of 14:1 by weight.
Abstract: The D-glucose transporter from human erythrocytes has been purified and reconstituted by Kasahara and Hinkle (J Biol Chem 252:7394--7390) Using a similar purification scheme, we have isolated the protein with 65% of the extracted phospholipid at a lipid-protein ratio of 14:1 by weight The KD (014 micrometer) and extent (11 nmoles/mg protein) for binding of 3H-cytochalasin B was determined by equilibrium dialysis Glucose was a linear competitive inhibitor of binding of cytochalasin B, with an inhibition constant of 30 mM To further characterize the protein, samples were filtered in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) through Sepharose 6B to remove 95% of the lipid followed by filtration of Sephadex G150 to remove the remaining lipid and a contaminating amount of a minor, lower-molecular-weight protein This preparation contains only 24% acidic and basic amino acids The protein also contains 5% neutral sugars (of which 3% is galactose), 7% glucosamine, and 5% sialic acid

108 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is presented based on the use of covalent chemical probes in sequence that the red cell membrane contains heterogeneous domains of PE and PS and that the transport systems for Pi and K+ are asymmetrically arranged.
Abstract: The red cell membrane has an asymmetric arrangement of phospholipids. The amino-phospholipids are localized primarily on the inner surface of the membrane and the choline phospholipids are localized to a large extent on the outer surface of the membrane. Evidence is presented based on the use of covalent chemical probes in sequence that the red cell membrane contains heterogeneous domains of PE and PS and that the transport systems for Pi and K+ are asymmetrically arranged. Certain amino groups of PE, PS, and/or protein localized on the outer membrane surface are involved in Pi transport and certain amino groups of PE, PS, and/or protein localized on the inner surface of the membrane are involved in K+ transport. Cross-linking studies with DFDNB show that the cross-linked PE-PE molecules are rich in plasmalogens. This suggests that clusters of plasmalogen forms of PE occur in the membrane. Both PE and PS are cross-linked to membrane protein. These PE and PS molecules contain 24–28% 16:0 and 18:0 fatty acids and 12% fatty aldehydes. PE and PS molecules are cross-linked to a spectrin-rich fraction. It is proposed that the binding of spectrin to membrane PE and PS may help anchor spectrin to the inner surface of the membrane and regulate shape changes in the cell. K+-valinomycin forms a complex with TNBS and converts it from a non-penetrating proble to a penetrating probe. Valinomycin enhances K+ leak and Pi leak in the red cells. SITS inhibits completely the valinomycin-induced Pi leak and inhibits partially the valinomycin induced K+ leak. Valinomycin and IAA have additive effects on Pi leak. Ouabin has no effect on basal or valino-mycin-induced Pi leak. These data suggest that Pi leak and K+ leak occur by separate transport systems. In summary, the amino-phospholipids in the red cell membrane are asymmetrically arranged; some occur in clusters and some are closely associated with membrane proteins. Amino-phospholipids also are believed to bind spectrin to the inner surface of the membrane and also may play a role in cation and anion leak.

90 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Triton-insoluble complex as discussed by the authors includes spectrin (bands 1 and 2), actin (band 5), and bands 3' and 7' of the original erythrocyte.
Abstract: About 40% of human erythrocyte membrane protein is resistant to solubilization in 0.5% Triton X-114. These components comprise a structure called a Triton shell roughly similar in size and shape to the original erythrocyte and thus constitute a cytoskeleton. With increasing concentrations of Triton the lipid content of the Triton shell decreases dramatically, whereas the majority of the protein components remain constant. Exceptions to this rule include proteins contained in band 3, the presumed anion channel, and in band 4 which decrease with increasing Triton concentration. The Triton-insoluble complex includes spectrin (bands 1 and 2), actin (band 5), and bands 3' and 7. Component 3' has an apparent molecular weight of 88,000 daltons as does 3; but unlike 3, it is insensitive to protease treatment of the intact cell, has a low extinction coefficient at 280 nm, and is solubilized from the shells in alkaline water solutions. Component 7 also has a low extinction coefficient at 280 nm. Spectrin alone is solubilized from the Triton shells in isotonic media. The solubilized spectrin contains no bound Triton and coelectrophoreses with spectrin eluted in hypotonic solutions from ghosts. Electron micrographs of fixed Triton shells stained with uranyl acetate show the presence of numerous filaments which appear beaded and are 80--120 A in diameter. The filaments cannot be composed mainly af actin, but enough spectrin is present to form the filaments. Triton shells may provide an excellent source of material useful in the investigation of the erythrocyte cytoskeleton.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The transamidase-catalyzed production of gamma-glutamyl-epsilon-lysine cross-links in the membrane may be a common denominator in these cellular manifestations.
Abstract: A rise in the intracellular concentration of Ca2+-ions in human erythrocytes causes the formation of high-molecular-weight membrane protein polymers, cross-linked by gamma-glutamyl-epsilon-lysine side chain bridges. Cross-linking involves proteins at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane (band 4.1, spectrin, and band 3 materials) and the reaction is catalyzed by the intrinsic transglutaminase. This enzyme is regulated by Ca2+-ions and it exits in a latent form in normal cells. The protein polymer, isolated from the membranes of Ca2+-loaded intact human red cells, is heterogeneous in size and may contain as many as 6 moles of gamma-glutamyl-epsilon-lysine cross-links per 100,000 gm of protein. Synthetic compounds, which either compete against the epsilon-lysine cross-linking functionalities of the protein substrates (eg, histamine, aminoacetonitrile, cystamine) or directly inactivate the transamidase (eg, cystamine), inhibit the membrane polymerization reaction in intact human erythrocytes. They also interfere with the Ca2+-induced irreversible shape change from discocyte to echinocyte and inhibit the irreversible loss of membrane deformability. Thus, the transamidase-catalyzed production of gamma-glutamyl-epsilon-lysine cross-links in the membrane may be a common denominator in these cellular manifestations.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A group of proteins and polyamino acids with positively charged domains were shown to inhibit the binding of 125I-LDL to its receptor on the surface of human fibroblasts, and charge interactions are important in this binding reaction.
Abstract: A group of proteins and polyamino acids with positively charged domains were shown to inhibit the binding of 125I-LDL to its receptor on the surface of human fibroblasts. The list of inhibitory proteins included platelet factor 4 (which has a cluster of lysine residues at its carboxyl terminus), two lysine-rich histones, poly-L-lysines of chain length greater than 4, and protamine. These proteins were effective in the concentration range of 5--10 microgram/ml. Two other positively charged proteins, lysozyme and avidin, did not inhibit 125I-LDL binding. Kinetic studies suggested that protamine was not acting simply as a competitive inhibitor with regard to the LDL receptor. In light of previous data showing that polyanions such as heparin and polyphosphates also inhibit 125-I-LDL binding to its cell surface receptor, the current findings suggest that charge interactions are important in this binding reaction. In a related series of studies, a number of glycoproteins and their asialo derivatives as well as a number of sugar phosphates failed to inhibit 125I-LDL binding to its receptor in fibroblasts.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that incubation of “leaky” erythrocytes with a water-soluble proteolytic fragment containing the membrane attachment site for spectrin achieves a selective and controlled dissociation of spectrin from the membrane, and increases the rate of lateral mobility of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled integral membrane proteins.
Abstract: Interactions between spectrin and the inner surface of the human erythrocyte membrane have been implicated in the control of lateral mobility of the integral membrane proteins. We report here that incubation of “leaky” erythrocytes with a water-soluble proteolytic fragment containing the membrane attachment site for spectrin achieves a selective and controlled dissociation of spectrin from the membrane, and increases the rate of lateral mobility of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled integral membrane proteins (> 70% of label in band 3 and PAS-1). Mobility of membrane proteins is measured as an increase in the percentage of uniformly fluorescent cells with time after fusion of fluorescent with nonfluorescent erythrocytes by Sendai virus. The cells are permeable to macromolecules since virus-fused erythrocytes lose most of their hemoglobin. The membrane attachment site for spectrin has been solubilized by limited proteolysis of inside-out erythrocyte vesicles and has been purified (V). Bennett, J Biol Chem 253:2292 (1978). This 72,000-dalton fragment binds to spectrin in solution, competitively inhibits association of 32P-spectrin with inside-out vesicles with a Ki of 10−7M, and causes rapid dissociation of 32P-spectrin from vesicles. Both acid-treated 72,000-dalton fragment and the 45,000 dalton-cytoplasmic portion of band 3, which also was isolated from the proteolytic digest, have no effect on spectrin binding, release, or membrane protein mobility. The enhancement of membrane protein lateral mobility by the same polypeptide that inhibits binding of spectrin to inverted vesicles and displaces spectrin from these vesicles provides direct evidence that the interaction of spectrin with protein components in the membrane restricts the lateral mobility of integral membrane proteins in the erythrocyte.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison is made of the specific combining sites of a number of lectins and of antibodies with emphasis on those reacting with blood group A, B, and H determinants.
Abstract: A comparison is made of the specific combining sites of a number of lectins and of antibodies with emphasis on those reacting with blood group A, B, and H determinants. The ranges of site sizes and specificities of both groups are similar both from immunochemical studies and from the limited x-ray diffraction data available.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is presented to indicate differences in the leucylpeptide backbones of the antibiotic-sensitive cells and the drug-resistant DC-3F/AD X cells as revealed by sodium dodecyl gel electrophoresis.
Abstract: Plasma membrane proteins and glycoproteins have been isolated from Chinese hamster cells of the spontaneously transformed DC-3F parental cell line and the DC-3F/AD X line with a high level of acquired resistance to actinomycin D Plasma membrane preparations from both cell lines band at 116 g/ml after isopycnic centrifugation We present evidence to indicate differences in the leucylpeptide backbones of the antibiotic-sensitive cells and the drug-resistant DC-3F/AD X cells In addition, there are differences in the plasma membrane glycopeptides of the two cell lines as revealed by sodium dodecyl gel electrophoresis Drug-resistant cells synthesize a surface glycopeptide which is much larger than the major one present on the drug-sensitive cells Both of these cell lines are devoid of 5′-nucleotidase and alkaline phosphatase activities The role of plasma membrane protein differences in drug-resistant cells is discussed

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that in both cases clusters of receptors become linked across the membrane to actin- and myosin-containing structures, and that in this case the clusters are then actively collected into a cap by an analogue of the muscle sliding filament mechanism.
Abstract: We have made observations, by double fluorescence staining of the same cell, of the distributions of surface receptors, and of intracellular actin and myosin, on cultured normal fibroblasts and other flat cells, and on lymphocytes and other rounded cells. The binding of multivalent ligands (a lectin or specific antibodies) to a cell surface receptor on flat cells clusters the cell receptors into small patches, which line up directly over the actin- and myosin-containing stress fibers inside the cell. Similar ligands binding to rounded cells can cause their surface receptors to be collected into caps on the surface, and these caps are invariably found to be associated with concentrations of actin and myosin under the capped membrane. Although these ligand-induced surface phenomena appear to be different on flat and rounded cells, we propose that in both cases clusters of receptors become linked across the membrane to actin- and myosin-containing structures. In flat cells these structures are very long stress fibers; therefore, when clusters of receptors become linked to these fibers, the clusters are immobilized. In round cells, membrane-associated actin- and myosin-containing structures are apparently much less extensive than in flat cells; therefore, clusters of receptors linked to these structures are still mobile in the plane of the membrane. We suggest that in this case the clusters are then actively collected into a cap by an analogue of the muscle sliding filament mechanism. To explain the transmembrane linkage, we propose that actin is associated with the plasma membrane as a peripheral protein which is directly or indirectly bound to an integral protein (or proteins) X of the membrane. Individual molecules of any receptor are not bound to X, but after they are specifically clustered into patches, a patch of receptors then becomes bound to S and hence to actin/myosin. Patching and capping of specific receptors on rounded cells is often accompanied by a specific endocytosis of the ligand-receptor complexes. This represents one common transport mechanism of a protein (the ligand) across the plasma membrane. The possibility is discussed that this type of endocytosis is mediated by a transmembrane linkage of the clustered receptor to actin/myosin. Another mechanism of endocytosis involves the “coated pit” structures that are observed by electron microscopy of plasma membranes. The possible relationships between an actin/myosin and a coated pit mechanism of endocytosis are explored.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Measurements of the ribosome-binding capacity of rough and smooth microsomal membranes reconstituted after solubilization with detergents suggest that ribophorins are necessary for in vitro ribosomes binding.
Abstract: Rat liver rough endoplasmic reticulum membranes (ER) contain two characteristic transmembrane glycoproteins which have been designated ribophorins I and II and are absent from smooth ER membranes. These proteins (MW 65,000 and 63,000 respectively) are related to the binding sites for ribosomes, as suggested by the following findings: i) The ribophorin content of the rough ER membranes corresponds stoichiometrically to the number of bound ribosomes; ii) ribophorins are quantitatively recovered with the bound polysomes after most other ER membrane proteins are dissolved with the nonionic detergent Kyro EOB; iii) in intact rough microsomes ribophorins can be cross-linked chemically to the ribosomes and therefore are in close proximity to them. Treatment of rough microsomes with a low Triton-X-100 concentration leads to the lateral displacement of ribosomes on the microsomal surface and to the formation of aggregates of bound ribosomes in areas of membranes which frequently invaginate into the microsomal lumen. Subfractionation of Triton-treated microsomes containing invaginations led to the recovery of smooth and "rough-inverted" vesicles. Ribophorins were present only in the latter fraction, indicating that both proteins are displaced together with the ribosomes when these aggregate without detaching. Measurements of the ribosome-binding capacity of rough and smooth microsomal membranes reconstituted after solubilization with detergents suggest that ribophorins are necessary for in vitro ribosome binding. Ribophorin-like proteins were found in rough microsomes obtained from secretory tissues of several animal species. The two proteins present in rat lacrimal gland microsomes have the same mobility as hepatocyte ribophorins and cross-react with antisera against them.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data are consistent with the view that the cells possess different populations of binding sites with differences in ability to facilitate the uptake of the toxins and that in the resistant lines the most active receptors have been reduced or eliminated.
Abstract: The toxic lectin modeccin, which inhibits protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells, is cleaved upon treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol into two peptide chains which move in polyacrylamide gels at rates corresponding to molecular weights 28,000 and 38,000. After reduction, the toxin loses its effect on cells, while its ability to inhibit cell-free protein synthesis increases. Like abrin and ricin it inhibits protein synthesis by inactivating the 60S ribosomal subunits. Modeccin binds to surface receptors containing terminal galactose residues. Competition experiments with various glycoproteins indicate that the modeccin receptors are different from the abrin receptors. In addition, they were present on HeLa cells in much smaller numbers. Moreover, mutant lines resistant to abrin and ricin were not resistant to modeccin and vice-versa. The toxin resistance of various mutant cell lines could not be accounted for by a reduced number of binding sites on cells. The data are consistent with the view that the cells possesss different populations of binding sites with differences in ability to facilitate the uptake of the toxins and that in the resistant lines the most active receptors have been reduced or eliminated.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is speculated that spectrin phosphorylation state may be regulated 1) by metabolic intermediates and other internal chemical signals that modulate kinase and phosphatase activities per se or determine their intracellular localization and 2) by membrane deformation that alters enzyme-spectrin interaction locally.
Abstract: The phosphorylation of spectrin polypeptide 2 is thought to be involved in the metabolically dependent regulation of red cell shape and deformability. Spectrin phosphorylation is not affected by cAMP. The reaction in isolated membranes resembles the cAMP-independent, salt-stimulated phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate, casein, by enzyme(s) present both in isolated membranes and cytoplasmic extracts. Spectrin kinase is selectively eluted from membranes by 0.5 M NaCl and co-fractionates with eluted casein kinase. Phosphorylation of band 3 in the membrane is inhibited by salt, but the band 3 kinase is otherwise indistinguishable operationally from spectrin kinase. The membrane-bound casein (spectrin) kinase is not eluted efficiently with spectrin at low ionic strength; about 80% of the activity is apparently bound at sites (perhaps on or near band 3) other than spectrin. Partitioning of casein kinase between cytoplasm and membrane is metabolically dependent; the proportion of casein kinase on the membrane can range from 25% to 75%, but for fresh cells is normally about 40%. Dephosphorylation of phosphorylated spectrin has not been studied intensively. Slow release of 32Pi from [32P] spectrin on the membrane can be demonstrated, but phosphatase activity measured against solubilized [32P] spectrin is concentrated in the cytoplasm. The crude cytoplasmic phosphospectrin phosphatase is inhibited by various anions – notably, ATP and 2,3-DPG at physiological concentrations. Regulation of spectrin phosphorylation in intact cells has not been studied. We speculate that spectrin phosphorylation state may be regulated (1) by metabolic intermediates and other internal chemical signals that modulate kinase and phosphatase activities per se or determine their intracellular localization and (2) by membrane deformation that alters enzyme–spectrin interaction locally. Progress in the isolation and characterization of spectrin kinase and phosphospectrin phosphatase should lead to the resolution of major questions raised by previous work: the relationships between membrane-bound and cytoplasmic forms of the enzymes, the nature of their physical interactions with the membrane, and the regulation of their activities in defined cell-free systems.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that echinocytogenic effects indeed occur when the naturally occurring phospholipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) is localized in the outer half of the bilayer, and stomatocyTogenic effects occur when LPC is in the inner half.
Abstract: Discocytic human red cells undergo discocyte-echinocyte and discocyte-stomatocyte transformations under the action of a wide variety of lipid-soluble anionic and cationic agents respectively. These shape transformations are explained by the bilayer couple hypothesis of Sheetz and Singer to be the result of preferential distribution of the anionic agents in the outer half of the bilayer and the cationic agents in the inner half of the bilayer. We demonstrate that echinocytogenic effects indeed occur when the naturally occurring phospholipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) is localized in the outer half of the bilayer, and stomatocytogenic effects occur when LPC is in the inner half. However, in contrast to the bilayer couple hypothesis, our results show that simple equivalent membrane surface area expansion on each layer is insufficient to maintain the discocytic shape and there exists a differential concentration effect of LPC on the two halves of the bilayer.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggests that for some proteins, disruption of the tertiary structure is sufficient to allow attachment of carbohydrate, and that other denatured proteins may possess additional restrictions imposed by their secondary structure.
Abstract: Previous studies have shown that a membrane preparation from hen oviduct catalyzes transfer of oligosaccharide from oligosaccharide-P-P-dolichol to denatured RNase and alpha-lactalbumin. To gain further insight into the structural requirements of a protein that allow it to serve as a substrate for glycosylation, the acceptor ability of a variety of other modified proteins containing the tripeptide sequence-ASN-X-(SER/THR)-has been investigated. Of 7 proteins tested, 2 (ovine prolactin and rabbit muscle triosephosphate isomerase) could be enzymatically glycosylated by a particulate preparation from hen oviduct. The remaining 5 proteins, assayed as either S-carboxymethylated or S-aminoethylated derivatives, were inactive as carbohydrate acceptors. However, cyanogen bromide treatment of 2 of the inactive proteins, bovine catalase and concanavalin A from jack bean, yielded peptide fragments which served as substrates for glycosylation. These results suggests that for some proteins, disruption of the tertiary structure is sufficient to allow attachment of carbohydrate. Other denatured proteins may possess additional restrictions imposed by their secondary structure. In certain cases, these restrictions are removed when the polypeptide chain is fragmented.

Journal ArticleDOI
Ralston Gb1
TL;DR: A study of the physical-chemical properties of spectrin and its size, shape, self-association pattern, and its interaction with other components leads to a plausible model for the way this protein performs its biological role.
Abstract: In recent years considerable progress has been made in the understanding of the structure and function of the red blood cell membrane. The protein spectrin, of high molecular weight and propensity for self-association, appears to play a major role, in concert with actin, in maintaining the shape and integrity of the membrane. A study of the physical-chemical properties of spectrin, and its size, shape, self-association pattern, and its interaction with other components, leads to a plausible model for the way this protein performs its biological role. The evidence from the structure and interactions of spectrin suggests a structure which is relatively symmetrical yet highly expanded, and which allows extensive, two-dimensional network formation with actin. In these respects, the structure of spectrin is quite different from that of myosin, to which it has often been likened.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the consequence of phosphorylation is formation of additional interactions between spectrin and monomeric actin molecules, and this view is supported by the formation of an insoluble mass of protein on treatment with a cross-linking reagent.
Abstract: The effects of phosphorylation of spectrin on the properties of the cytoskeletal network of the human erythrocyte have been studied. A suspension of the cytoskeletal residues obtained after extraction of the ghosts with the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 forms a gel on addition of membrane kinase and ATP. Phosphorylation has no effect on the association state of purified spectrin. No species higher than a tetramer of polypeptide chains is formed in vitro; in the absence of divalent cations, this tetramer is an entity liberated from and evidently present in the membrane. It has not so far proved possible to detect any F-actin in the cytoskeleton before or after phosphorylation. It is suggested that the consequence of phosphorylation is formation of additional interactions between spectrin and monomeric actin molecules. This view is supported by the formation, after phosphorylation of the Triton-extracted cytoskeleton, of an insoluble mass of protein on treatment with a cross-linking reagent. In the absence of divalent cations, a series of oligomeric species is progressively liberated from the cytoskeleton on extraction with solutions of low ionic strength. These oligomers contain actin as well as spectrin, and are thought to result from disruption of the network by random denaturation of the mono meric actin in the absence of divalent metal ions. A schematic view of the effects of phosphorylation on the structure of the cytoskeleton is presented.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using the cytotoxicity assay the presence of high-affinity binding sites of type I can be demonstrated on sensory ganglia cells from E8 chick embryos but not from E4 embryos and not on liver and heart cells fromE8 embryos, and type I receptor-bearing cells were detectable in the brain using this assay.
Abstract: When single-cell suspensions prepared from embroyonic day 8 (E8) chick sensory ganglia are incubated with nerve growth factor (NGF), anti-NGF antiserum, and complement, an NGF-dependent cytotoxic kill of 20 (±3)% of the ganglia cells is observed. This percentage is increased by a factor of two when only the neuronal cells are tested. No kill is observed on the nonneuronal cell population representing 50% of the ganglia dissociate. When E8 sensory ganglia cells are cultured in the presence of NGF following cytotoxic kill, the large, phase-bright NGF-reponsive neurons are missing from the culture. These results indicate that the cells recognized in the cytotoxicity assay have to carry NGF-binding sites of type I, which is the one with the higher affinity of the two types of NGF-binding sites (I and II) present on sensory ganglia cells. This conclusion is further supported by the following data: (a) half maximal cytotoxicity is reached already at a concentration of NGF which is below the KD of binding site I; (b) a washing step which removes all NGF bound to type II receptors while leaving a high percentage of type I receptors occupied has no effect on the percentage of ganglia cells killed. Using the cytotoxicity assay the presence of high-affinity binding sites of type I can be demonstrated on sensory ganglia cells from E8 chick embryos but not from E4 embryos and not on liver and heart cells from E8 embryos. Further, type I receptor-bearing cells were detectable in the brain using this assay. At E8, NGF receptors could be detected on cells of the forebrain and the tectum but not on brain stem cells. Cytotoxic kill of forebrain cells was found to be especially high at E8 and E9, and decreased by E10.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the outer surface poles of the IMP can be seen by freeze-etching after they are unmasked by proteolysis under conditions which excise the surrounding sialopeptides from the membrane.
Abstract: The major red cell membrane protein, band 3, is a glycoprotein which extends across the membrane from the extracellular space into the cytoplasmic compartment. It is widely held that band 3 is a component of the intramembrane particles (IMP) which can be demonstrated by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. In this study, we find that the outer surface poles of the IMP can be seen by freeze-etching after they are unmasked by proteolysis under conditions which excise the surrounding sialopeptides from the membrane. The poles appear as distinctive projections, 30--50 A in diameter, the "ES particles." The ES particles remain associated with the outer surface of the membrane following cleavage of the band 3 polypeptide by chymotrypsin or pronase. This is consistent with previous biochemical studies which have shown that the 38,000-dalton outer surface segment of band 3 is intercalated in the lipid bilayer. A granulofibrillar component at the inner surface of the membrane is provisionally identified as the 40,000-dalton inner-surface domain of band 3.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A protocol is outlined to recover erythrocyte-specific fragments from thrombocyte-rich plasma that allows detection of spectrin-free vesicles in whole blood stored under blood bank conditions for 12 days.
Abstract: When human erythrocytes are depleted of endogenous ATP they release spectrin-free vesicles as a light vesicle fraction [Lutz et al: J Cell Biol 73: 548, 1977] and chains of rounded vesicles as well as flattened myelin forms in a heavy vesicle fraction. The heavy fraction retains some spectrin, and glycophorin is partially degraded. The release of both types of fragments is not dependent upon added Ca+2, and 50 micrometer EGTA does not prevent the vesicle release. Concomitant with vesicle release, a large fraction of the major protein components of the cell is found in disulfide-bonded aggregates. A protocol is outlined to recover erythrocyte-specific fragments from thrombocyte-rich plasma. It allows detection of spectrin-free vesicles in whole blood stored under blood bank conditions for 12 days. In freshly drawn blood no such vesicles are observed, but particles are obtained that are different from thrombocyte fragments and that show a prominent glycoprotein running slightly faster than glycophorin.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the major factor leading to premature destruction in this disorder is whole cell rigidity conferred by increased intracellular hemoglobin concentrations, rather than any associated membrane rigidity.
Abstract: We have studied the deformability of subpopulations of red cells from a patient with "desiccytosis," a disorder characterized by increased membrane permeability to potassium and associated with a probable increase in sodium-sodium exchange. Cells become increasingly dehydrated after maturation because of continued potassium loss without compensatory sodium gain, and they exhibit a progressive increase in mean cell hemoglobin concentration (MCHC). This increase in MCHC causes the cells to become underformable at shear stress values which result in extensive deformation of normal cells. Reduction of MCHC to approximately normal levels by suspending the cells in hypotonic medium restores normal deformability to all but 0.1--0.2% of the cells. These results suggest that the major factor leading to premature destruction in this disorder is whole cell rigidity conferred by increased intracellular hemoglobin concentrations, rather than any associated membrane rigidity.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of cross-linked membrane protein polymers in the generation ofISCs is discussed and is synthesized in terms of a unified concept for the determinants of the genesis of ISCs.
Abstract: Irreversibly sickled cells (ISCs) are sickle erythrocytes which retain bipolar elongated shapes despite reoxygenation and owe their biophysical abnormalities to acquired membrane alterations. Freeze-etched membranes both of ISCs produced in vitro and ISCs isolated in vivo reveal microbodies fixed to the internal (PS) surface which obscure spectrin filaments. Intramembranous particles (IMPs) on the intramembrane (PF) surface aggregate over regions of subsurface microbodies. Electron microscopy of diaminobenzidine-treated of ISC ghosts show the microbodies to contain hemoglobin and/or hemoglobin derivatives. Scanning electron microscopy and freeze-etching demonstrate that membrane--hemoglobin S interaction in ISCs enhances the membrane loss by microspherulation. Membrane-bound hemoglobin is five times greater in in vivo ISCs than non-ISCs, and increases during ISC production, parallelling depletion of adenosine triphosphate. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of ISC membranes shows the presence of high-molecular-weight heteropolymers in the pre--band 1 region, a decrease in band 4.1 and an increase in bands 7, 8, and globin. The role of cross-linked membrane protein polymers in the generation of ISCs is discussed and is synthesized in terms of a unified concept for the determinants of the genesis of ISCs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: All steroid hormone receptors have a site with both common structural features and a role in the regulation of steroid hormone binding, indicating the importance of an ester structure in the inhibition of steroid binding.
Abstract: Binding of steroid hormones is inhibited by protease inhibitors and substrates. The protease inhibitors phenylmethyl sulphonylfluoride, tosyl-lysine chloromethyl ketone, and tosylamide-phenylethyl-chloromethyl ketone and the protease substrates tosyl arginine methyl ester and tryptophan methyl ester eliminate specific binding of aldosterone, dexamethasone, dihydrotestosterone, estrogen, and progesterone to their respective receptors. These protease inhibitors and substrates also inhibit binding of progesterone to the 20,000 molecular weight mero-receptor formed from the progesterone receptor in chick oviduct. The binding of estradiol to rat alpha-fetoprotein is inhibited by the protease inhibitors and substrates but not by tryptophan or tryptophan amide, indicating the importance of an ester structure in the inhibition of steroid binding. Our results suggest that all steroid hormone receptors have a site with both common structural features and a role in the regulation of steroid hormone binding.