To study the changes in the synthesis of the major membrane skeletal proteins, their assembly on the membrane, and their turnover during terminal red blood cell maturation in vivo, we have compared early proerythroblasts and late erythroblasts obtained from the spleens of mice at different times after infection with the anemia-inducing strain of Friend virus (FVA). Metabolic labeling of these cells indicates striking differences between early and late erythroblasts. In early erythroblasts, spectrin and ankyrin are synthesized in large amounts in the cytosol with proportionately high levels of spectrin and ankyrin messenger RNA (mRNA). In contrast, only small amounts of these polypeptides are incorporated into the skeleton, which is markedly unstable. In late erythroblasts, however, the synthesis of spectrin and ankyrin and their mRNA levels are substantially reduced, yet the net amounts of these polypeptides assembled in the membrane skeleton are markedly increased, and the membrane skeleton becomes stable with no detectable protein turnover. The mRNA levels and the synthesis of the band 3 and 4.1 proteins are increased considerably in terminally differentiated normoblasts with a concomitant increase in the net amount and the half-life of the newly assembled spectrin and ankyrin. Thus, the increased accumulation of spectrin and ankyrin at the late erythroblast stage is a consequence of an increased recruitment of these proteins on the membrane and an increase in their stability rather than a transcriptional upregulation. This is in contrast to band 3 and 4.1 proteins, which accumulate in direct proportion to their mRNA levels and rates of synthesis. These results suggest a key role for the band 3 and 4.1 proteins in conferring a long-term stability to the membrane skeleton during terminal red blood cell differentiation.
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Antioxidants (Basel)
December 2024
Laboratorio de Hematobiología, Escuela Nacional de Medicina y Homeopatía, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Mexico City 07700, Mexico.
Oxidative stress is widely recognized as a key mechanism in the development of hypertension. Under pathological conditions, such as in hypertension, oxidative stress leads to irreversible posttranslational modifications of proteins, which result in loss of protein function and cellular damage. We have previously documented physiological and morphological changes across various blood and bone marrow cell lineages, all of which exhibit elevated oxidative stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Sci
December 2024
Department of Ophthalmology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Sci Rep
November 2024
Oxidation in Red Cell Disorders Research Unit, Department of Clinical Microscopy, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University, 154, Rama I Road, Patumwan district, Bangkok, Thailand.
Hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is the most prevalent form of congenital hemolytic anemia, being caused by genetic mutations in genes encoding red blood cell cytoskeletal proteins. Mutations in the ANK1 and SPTB genes are the most common causes of HS.; however, pathogenicity analyses of these mutations remain limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAltern Ther Health Med
November 2024
Hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is a common variant of inherited hemolytic anemia, in which abnormalities of red blood cells (RBC) structural proteins lead to loss of erythrocyte membrane surface area, resulting in spherical, hyperdense, weakly deformable RBCs. It is characterized by the presence of osmotically fragile erythrocytes, known as spherocytes in peripheral blood smear (PBS). The mutations that cause HS occur in genes encoding for red blood cell membrane/cytoskeletal proteins, predominantly, ankyrin-1, α- and β-spectrins, band-3, and protein 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
August 2024
Department of Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Introduction: Deletion or mutation of members of the spectrin gene family contributes to many neurologic and neuropsychiatric disorders. While each spectrinopathy may generate distinct neuropathology, the study of βΙ spectrin's role () in the brain has been hampered by the hematologic consequences of its loss.
Methods: Jaundiced mice () that lack βΙ spectrin suffer a rapidly fatal hemolytic anemia.
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