scholarly journals Fluorescence quenching of spectrin and other red cell membrane cytoskeletal proteins. Relation to hydrophobic binding sites

1992 ◽  
Vol 282 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Kahana ◽  
J C Pinder ◽  
K S Smith ◽  
W B Gratzer

The intrinsic fluorescence of spectrin is strongly quenched by low concentrations of 2-bromostearate. This results from binding at a series of hydrophobic sites. Analysis of dynamic fluorescence quenching by acrylamide, iodide and caesium ions, separately and in conjunction with 2-bromostearate, leads to the conclusion that most of the tryptophan side-chains are exposed to solvent. The sites at which the fatty-acid-quenched tryptophans are located apparently interact with the lipid bilayer in the cell, as judged by quenching by bromostearate dissolved in the lipid phase. A minor proportion of the side-chains in native spectrin give rise to sharp proton magnetic resonance signals, indicative of segmental mobility; these chain elements contain some tryptophan residues, as revealed by weak downfield signals from the heterocyclic ring protons. These signals are not appreciably perturbed by stearic acid or by phosphatidylserine liposomes, suggesting that the hydrophobic binding sites are not in mobile chain elements. By contrast with a series of globular proteins which, with the exception of serum albumins, show little or no quenching by 2-bromostearate, the peripheral red cell membrane skeletal proteins ankyrin (and its spectrin-binding domain), protein 4.1 and (to a lesser extent) actin show evidence of a high affinity for the hydrophobic ligand and may, like spectrin, interact directly with the bilayer in situ.

Author(s):  
Vincent T. Marchesi ◽  
Jon S. Morrow ◽  
David W. Speicher ◽  
William J. Knowles

2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-79
Author(s):  
O. A. Khokhlov

The composition of lipid phase of red-cell membrane in patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD) with pronounced postperfusion hemolysis (18 patients) before coronary artery bypass surgery and 1 hour after the completion of cardia bypass (CB) has been studied. It is shown that patients with IHD with pronounced hemolysis are characterized by the normal ratio of phospholipids (PL) fractions in red-cell membrane before surgery, which is connected with eth high content of young forms of red cells in blood at this stage. After surgery, the fraction of lysophosphatidylcholine and phosphatidic acid in red-cell membrane increases against the background of decrease of phosphatidylinositol  and phosphatidylcholine, which likely reflects the simultaneous activation of phospholipases of three classes (A, C, and D) in red cells during CB. Regardless of the phase of the study, the total content of PL in red-cell membrane of IHD patients with pronounced hemolysis is decrease at the high level of cholesterol (CS) and the CS/Pl ratio.


Biochemistry ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (25) ◽  
pp. 5593-5597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nurith Shaklai ◽  
Juan Yguerabide ◽  
Helen M. Ranney

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