The anion transport system of the red blood cell The role of membrane protein evaluated by the use of ‘probes’

Author(s):  
Z. Ioav Cabantchik ◽  
Philip A. Knauf ◽  
Aser Rothstein
1976 ◽  
Vol 455 (2) ◽  
pp. 526-537 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z.Ioav Cabantchik ◽  
Philip A. Knauf ◽  
Thomas Ostwald ◽  
Howard Markus ◽  
Lorinda Davidson ◽  
...  

1983 ◽  
Vol 244 (1) ◽  
pp. C68-C74 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Y. Law ◽  
R. Steinfeld ◽  
P. A. Knauf

Human K562 leukemic cells exhibit several erythroid properties, including synthesis and expression of the major red blood cell sialoglycoprotein, glycophorin. This has led us to ask if these cells express a functional anion transport system analogous to that which is associated with the other major erythrocyte glycoprotein, band 3. The chloride-36 exchange flux in K562 cells is less than 0.6% of that which would be expected in mature erythrocytes under similar conditions. Unlike red blood cells, K562 cells do not exhibit a high chloride-sulfate selectivity, and various agents that inhibit red blood cell chloride exchange are all much less effective in K562 cells. On the basis of these flux measurements, K562 cells probably contain less than 600 fully functional red blood cell-like band 3 molecules per cell, in contrast to about a million molecules in the mature red blood cell. The possible-existence of greatly altered band 3 molecules with a reduced turnover rate and/or a reduced affinity for chloride and for various inhibitors is unlikely but cannot be completely excluded. Anion transport was also measured in K562 cells that had been induced to increase hemoglobin synthesis by various chemical agents. Even under these conditions, chloride fluxes indicated no substantial increase in the number of functional anion transport sites or their chloride transport rate.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2120-2120
Author(s):  
Evan A Schwartz ◽  
Rahima Zennadi

Abstract Abstract 2120 In sickle cell disease (SCD), the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) ERK1/2 is constitutively active and can be inducible by agonist-stimulation only in sickle but not in normal human erythrocytes. ERK1/2 is involved in activation of ICAM-4-mediated sickle red blood cell (SSRBC) adhesion to the endothelium. However, other effects of the ERK1/2 activation in SSRBCs leading to the complex SCD pathophysiology, such as alteration of RBC hemorheology are still unknown. To further characterize global ERK1/2-induced changes in membrane protein phosphorylation within human RBCs, a label-free quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis was applied to sickle and normal RBC membrane ghosts pre-treated with U0126, a specific inhibitor of MEK1/2, the upstream kinase of ERK1/2 activation, in the presence or absence of recombinant active ERK2. Across eight unique treatment groups, 375 phosphopeptides from 155 phosphoproteins were quantified with an average technical coefficient of variation in peak intensity of 19.8%. Consistent with other RBC membrane phosphorylation studies, the phosphoproteins of SSRBC membrane ghosts with the highest number of uniquely phosphorylated peptides (>10), were ankyrin-1 of the ankyrin complex (n=33), spectrin β chain of the cytoskeleton network (n=15), and proteins of the junctional complex involved in binding integral membrane proteins to cytoskeletal proteins, including α- and β-adducins (n=22 and n=18, respectively), dematin (n=16) and protein 4.1 (n=17). In addition, several other phosphoproteins with >5 unique phosphorylated peptides, affecting RBC shape, flexibility, anion transport and protein trafficking, and adhesion, all of which contribute to the pathophysiology of SCD, were also observed. However, the MEK1/2 inhibitor U0126 was able to significantly down-regulate 37 unique RBC membrane phosphopeptides (from 21 unique phosphoproteins) in SSRBCs. We found that MEK1/2-dependent ERK1/2 activation in SSRBCs affected membrane-bound proteomes of both the junctional and ankyrin complexes, including dematin, α-adducin, β-adducin with phosphorylation of residues within the ERK1/2 consensus motif, and glycophorin A. MEK1/2/ERK1/2 signaling in SSRBCs induced changes within the actins/spectrins network as well by affecting phosphorylation of β-spectrins. Furthermore, the peptide metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 (mGlu7) also underwent serine phosphorylation at the ERK consensus motif. This could explain the rate of active glutamate transport in these cells. Significant changes only in membrane ghosts prepared from SSRBCs treated with U0126 or after addition of exogenous active ERK2 to these membrane ghosts, were also observed in the status of leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domains protein 2, leucine-zipper-like transcriptional regulator 1, glucose transporter 1, and adenylyl cyclase-associated protein 1 (CAP1), which may potentially disturb degradation of misfolded glycoproteins and receptor ubiquitination, protein transcription, glucose transport and cAMP production, respectively. These data also suggest that a negative regulatory mechanism might exist in normal cells to prevent activation of ERK1/2-dependent phosphorylation of these membrane proteins. Among all these phosphorylated proteomes, glycophorin A was the most affected protein in SSRBCs by this ERK1/2 pathway, which contained 12 unique phosphorylated peptides, suggesting that in addition to its effect on sickle RBC adhesion, increased glycophorin A phosphorylation via the ERK1/2 pathway may also affect glycophorin A interactions with band 3, which could result in decreased in both anion transport by band 3 and band 3 trafficking. The abundance of thirteen of the thirty-seven phosphopeptides was subsequently increased in normal RBCs co-incubated with recombinant ERK2, and therefore represent specific MEK1/2 phospho-inhibitory targets mediated via ERK2. These findings expand upon the current model for the involvement of ERK1/2 signaling in RBCs. These findings also identify additional protein targets of this pathway other than the RBC adhesion molecule ICAM-4 and enhance the understanding of the mechanism of small molecule inhibitors of MEK/1/2/ERK1/2, which could be effective in ameliorating RBC hemorheology and adhesion, the hallmarks of SCD. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1994 ◽  
Vol 299 (3) ◽  
pp. 665-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Fricker ◽  
V Dubost ◽  
K Finsterwald ◽  
J L Boyer

The substrate specificity for the transporter that mediates the hepatic uptake of organic anions in freshly isolated hepatocytes of the elasmobranch little skate (Raja erinacea) was determined for bile salts and bile alcohols. The Na(+)-independent transport system exhibits a substrate specificity, which is different from the specificity of Na(+)-dependent bile salt transport in mammals. Unconjugated and conjugated di- and tri-hydroxylated bile salts inhibit uptake of cholyltaurine and cholate competitively. Inhibition is significantly greater with unconjugated as opposed to glycine- or taurine-conjugated bile salts. However, the number of hydroxyl groups in the steroid moiety of the bile salts has only minor influences on the inhibition by the unconjugated bile salts. Since the transport system seems to represent an archaic organic-anion transport system, other anions, such as dicarboxylates, amino acids and sulphate, were also tested, but had no inhibitory effect on bile salt uptake. To clarify whether bile alcohols, the physiological solutes in skate bile, share this transport system, cholyltaurine transport was studied after addition of 5 beta-cholestane-3 beta,5 alpha,6 beta-triol, 5 alpha-cholestan-3 beta-ol and 5 beta-cholestane-3 alpha, 7 alpha, 12 alpha-triol. These bile alcohols inhibit cholyltaurine uptake non-competitively. In contrast, uptake of 5 beta-cholestane-3 alpha,7 alpha,12 alpha-triol, which is Na(+)-independent, is not inhibited by cholyltaurine. The findings further characterize a Na(+)-independent organic-anion transport system in skate liver cells, which is not shared by bile alcohols and has preference for unconjugated lipophilic bile salts.


2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (6) ◽  
pp. 894-896
Author(s):  
Jean L Raphael ◽  

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