Aberrant Protein Sorting to the Nucleus during Erythroblast Enucleation: Mechanistic Basis for Membrane Protein Loss in Hereditary Elliptocytosis and Spherocytosis.

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1559-1559
Author(s):  
Marcela A. Salomao ◽  
Sarah Short ◽  
Gloria Lee ◽  
Xiuli An ◽  
Mohandas Narla ◽  
...  

Abstract During erythroblast enucleation, nuclei surrounded by plasma membrane separate from erythroblast cytoplasm. A key aspect of this process is sorting of membrane components to plasma membranes surrounding expelled nuclei and young reticulocytes. This protein partitioning performs a crucial role in regulating the protein content of reticulocyte plasma membranes. Although it is known that cytoskeletal actin, spectrin and protein 4.1R distribute to reticulocytes, little is known about the sorting patterns of erythroblast transmembrane proteins. In hereditary spherocytosis (HS) and hereditary elliptocytosis (HE), erythrocytes contain well-described deficiencies of various transmembrane proteins, in addition to those encoded by the mutant genes. For example, elliptocytic human and murine erythrocytes resulting from mutations in the 4.1R gene lack not only protein 4.1R but also transmembrane protein glycophorin C (GPC), known to be a 4.1R binding partner with a key role in linking cytoskeleton to bilayer. Similarly, in HS resulting from mutations in the ankyrin gene, deficiencies of band 3, Rh and GPA have been documented. Various molecular mechanisms could explain deficiencies of membrane proteins in HS and HE erythrocytes including: perturbed trafficking to the erythroblast membrane; aberrant protein sorting during erythroblast enucleation; and selective loss during reticulocyte membrane remodeling. We explored whether aberrant protein sorting during enucleation might be responsible for GPC deficiency in HE. First we performed immunochemical analysis of the sorting pattern of GPC using highly purified extruded nuclei and immature reticulocytes derived from terminally differentiated murine erythroblast cultures. Proteins from equivalent numbers of expelled nuclei and reticulocytes were analyzed by Western blotting. Using antibodies specific for GPC we determined that 90% of GPC sorted to reticulocyte plasma membranes. To validate these results we used live cell, three-color immunofluorescent microscopy and analyzed enucleating erythroblasts, reticulocytes and extruded nuclei from freshly harvested murine wild type bone marrow. Independently confirming the Western blot data, we found that GPC sorted almost exclusively to reticulocytes with little or no GPC in association with nuclear plasma membrane. Strikingly, in 4.1R null erythroblasts GPC was distributed exclusively to expelled nuclei. These findings unequivocally establish that skeletal protein 4.1R is critical for normal sorting of GPC to young reticulocytes and provide clear evidence that specific skeletal protein associations can regulate protein sorting during enucleation. Moreover, our data provide a molecular explanation for the underlying basis of GPC deficiency observed in 4.1R-deficient individuals with HE. We speculate that aberrant protein sorting may be a prevalent mechanism for the deficiencies of various membrane proteins in HS and HE and that their differential loss could contribute to the variable phenotypic expression of these hemolytic disorders.

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 103 (5) ◽  
pp. 1912-1919 ◽  
Author(s):  
James C.-M. Lee ◽  
J. Aura Gimm ◽  
Annie J. Lo ◽  
Mark J. Koury ◽  
Sharon W. Krauss ◽  
...  

AbstractDuring erythroblast enucleation, nuclei surrounded by plasma membrane separate from erythroblast cytoplasm. A key aspect of this process is sorting of erythroblast plasma membrane components to reticulocytes and expelled nuclei. Although it is known that cytoskeletal elements actin and spectrin partition to reticulocytes, little is understood about molecular mechanisms governing plasma membrane protein sorting. We chose glycophorin A (GPA) as a model integral protein to begin investigating protein-sorting mechanisms. Using immunofluorescence microscopy and Western blotting we found that GPA sorted predominantly to reticulocytes. We hypothesized that the degree of skeletal linkage might control the sorting pattern of transmembrane proteins. To explore this hypothesis, we quantified the extent of GPA association to the cytoskeleton in erythroblasts, young reticulocytes, and mature erythrocytes using fluorescence imaged microdeformation (FIMD) and observed that GPA underwent dramatic reorganization during terminal differentiation. We discovered that GPA was more connected to the membrane cytoskeleton, either directly or indirectly, in erythroblasts and young reticulocytes than in mature cells. We conclude that skeletal protein association can regulate protein sorting during enucleation. Further, we suggest that the enhanced rigidity of reticulocyte membranes observed in earlier investigations results, at least in part, from increased connectivity of GPA with the spectrin-based skeleton.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcela Salomao ◽  
Ke Chen ◽  
Jonathan Villalobos ◽  
Narla Mohandas ◽  
Xiuli An ◽  
...  

Abstract During erythroblast enucleation, membrane proteins distribute between extruded nuclei and reticulocytes. In hereditary spherocytosis (HS) and hereditary elliptocytosis (HE), deficiencies of membrane proteins, in addition to those encoded by the mutant gene, occur. Elliptocytes, resulting from protein 4.1R gene mutations, lack not only 4.1R but also glycophorin C, which links the cytoskeleton and bilayer. In HS resulting from ankyrin-1 mutations, band 3, Rh-associated antigen, and glycophorin A are deficient. The current study was undertaken to explore whether aberrant protein sorting, during enucleation, creates these membrane-spanning protein deficiencies. We found that although glycophorin C sorts to reticulocytes normally, it distributes to nuclei in 4.1R-deficient HE cells. Further, glycophorin A and Rh-associated antigen, which normally partition predominantly to reticulocytes, distribute to both nuclei and reticulocytes in an ankyrin-1–deficient murine model of HS. We conclude that aberrant protein sorting is one mechanistic basis for protein deficiencies in HE and HS.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (10) ◽  
pp. 825-834
Author(s):  
Takaharu Sakuragi ◽  
Ryuta Kanai ◽  
Akihisa Tsutsumi ◽  
Hirotaka Narita ◽  
Eriko Onishi ◽  
...  

AbstractXkr8–Basigin is a plasma membrane phospholipid scramblase activated by kinases or caspases. We combined cryo-EM and X-ray crystallography to investigate its structure at an overall resolution of 3.8 Å. Its membrane-spanning region carrying 22 charged amino acids adopts a cuboid-like structure stabilized by salt bridges between hydrophilic residues in transmembrane helices. Phosphatidylcholine binding was observed in a hydrophobic cleft on the surface exposed to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. Six charged residues placed from top to bottom inside the molecule were essential for scrambling phospholipids in inward and outward directions, apparently providing a pathway for their translocation. A tryptophan residue was present between the head group of phosphatidylcholine and the extracellular end of the path. Its mutation to alanine made the Xkr8–Basigin complex constitutively active, indicating that it plays a vital role in regulating its scramblase activity. The structure of Xkr8–Basigin provides insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying phospholipid scrambling.


1975 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 438-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
A L Hubbard ◽  
Z A Cohn

The enzymatic iodination technique has been utilized in a study of the externally disposed membrane proteins of the mouse L cell. Iodination of cells in suspension results in lactoperoxidase-specific iodide incorporation with no loss of cell viability under the conditions employed, less than 3% lipid labeling, and more than 90% of the labeled species identifiable as monoiodotyrosine. 90% of the incorporated label is localized to the cell surface by electron microscope autoradiography, with 5-10% in the centrosphere region and postulated to represent pinocytic vesicles. Sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gels of solubilized L-cell proteins reveals five to six labeled peaks ranging from 50,000 to 200,000 daltons. Increased resolution by use of gradient slab gels reveals 15-20 radioactive bands. Over 60% of the label resides in approximately nine polypeptides of 80,000 to 150,000 daltons. Various controls indicate that the labeling pattern reflects endogenous membrane proteins, not serum components. The incorporated 125-I, cholesterol, and one plasma membrane enzyme marker, alkaline phosphodiesterase I, are purified in parallel when plasma membranes are isolated from intact, iodinated L cells. The labeled components present in a plasma membrane-rich fraction from iodinated cells are identical to those of the total cell, with a 10- to 20-fold enrichment in specific activity of each radioactive peak in the membrane.


2007 ◽  
Vol 292 (3) ◽  
pp. C1132-C1136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Leduc-Nadeau ◽  
Karim Lahjouji ◽  
Pierre Bissonnette ◽  
Jean-Yves Lapointe ◽  
Daniel G. Bichet

Over the past two decades, Xenopus laevis oocytes have been widely used as an expression system to investigate both physiological and pathological properties of membrane proteins such as channels and transporters. Past studies have clearly shown the key implications of mistargeting in relation to the pathogenesis of these proteins. To unambiguously determine the plasma membrane targeting of a protein, a thorough purification technique becomes essential. Unfortunately, available techniques are either too cumbersome, technically demanding, or require large amounts of material, all of which are not adequate when using oocytes individually injected with cRNA or DNA. In this article, we present a new technique that permits excellent purification of plasma membranes from X. laevis oocytes. This technique is fast, does not require particular skills such as peeling of vitelline membrane, and permits purification of multiple samples from as few as 10 and up to >100 oocytes. The procedure combines partial digestion of the vitelline membrane, polymerization of the plasma membrane, and low-speed centrifugations. We have validated this technique essentially with Western blot assays on three plasma membrane proteins [aquaporin (AQP)2, Na+-glucose cotransporter (SGLT)1, and transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV)5], using both wild-type and mistargeted forms of the proteins. Purified plasma membrane fractions were easily collected, and samples were found to be adequate for Western blot identification.


2014 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 454-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan R. Grover ◽  
Sarah L. Veatch ◽  
Akira Ono

ABSTRACTHIV-1 incorporates various host membrane proteins during particle assembly at the plasma membrane; however, the mechanisms mediating this incorporation process remain poorly understood. We previously showed that the HIV-1 structural protein Gag localizes to the uropod, a rear-end structure of polarized T cells, and that assembling Gag copatches with a subset, but not all, of the uropod-directed proteins, i.e., PSGL-1, CD43, and CD44, in nonpolarized T cells. The latter observation suggests the presence of a mechanism promoting virion incorporation of these cellular proteins. To address this possibility and identify molecular determinants, in the present study we examined coclustering between Gag and the transmembrane proteins in T and HeLa cells using quantitative two-color superresolution localization microscopy. Consistent with the findings of the T-cell copatching study, we found that basic residues within the matrix domain of Gag are required for Gag–PSGL-1 coclustering. Notably, the presence of a polybasic sequence in the PSGL-1 cytoplasmic domain significantly enhanced this coclustering. We also found that polybasic motifs present in the cytoplasmic tails of CD43 and CD44 also promote their coclustering with Gag. ICAM-1 and ICAM-3, uropod-directed proteins that do not copatch with Gag in T cells, and CD46, a non-uropod-directed protein, showed no or little coclustering with Gag. However, replacing their cytoplasmic tails with the cytoplasmic tail of PSGL-1 significantly enhanced their coclustering with Gag. Altogether, these results identify a novel mechanism for host membrane protein association with assembling HIV-1 Gag in which polybasic sequences present in the cytoplasmic tails of the membrane proteins and in Gag are the major determinants.IMPORTANCENascent HIV-1 particles incorporate many host plasma membrane proteins during assembly. However, it is largely unknown what mechanisms promote the association of these proteins with virus assembly sites within the plasma membrane. Notably, our previous study showed that HIV-1 structural protein Gag colocalizes with a group of uropod-directed transmembrane proteins, PSGL-1, CD43, and CD44, at the plasma membrane of T cells. The results obtained in the current study using superresolution localization microscopy suggest the presence of a novel molecular mechanism promoting the association of PSGL-1, CD43, and CD44 with assembling HIV-1 which relies on polybasic sequences in HIV-1 Gag and in cytoplasmic domains of the transmembrane proteins. This information advances our understanding of virion incorporation of host plasma membrane proteins, some of which modulate virus spread positively or negatively, and suggests a possible new strategy to enrich HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors with a desired transmembrane protein.


1980 ◽  
Vol 58 (10) ◽  
pp. 1156-1164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul C. Holland ◽  
George A. Cates ◽  
Byron S. Wenger ◽  
Barbara L. Raney

Plasma membranes were prepared from primary cell cultures of normal and genetically dystrophic chick embryonic pectoral muscle. These membranes were analyzed both by one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulphate – polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis and by two-dimensional electrophoresis using isoelectric focusing in the first dimension. No marked and reproducible abnormalities could be detected in the synthesis, or accumulation, of plasma membrane proteins of dystrophic muscle cells maintained in culture for periods of up to 6 days. Analysis of the relative rates of protein turnover, analysis of fucose incorporation into plasma membrane proteins, and comparison of iodinated cell surface proteins also failed to reveal distinct abnormalities in plasma membranes derived from cultured dystrophic muscle cells. Although the results obtained do not rule out an early defect in plasma membrane protein biosynthesis during the development of dystrophic skeletal muscle in vivo, they do demonstrate that the synthesis and assembly of at least the major plasma membrane proteins occur normally during the initial phases of terminal differentiation of isolated dystrophic skeletal muscle cells in tissue culture.


1988 ◽  
Vol 254 (2) ◽  
pp. 385-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
R C Poole ◽  
A P Halestrap

1. Rat and rabbit erythrocyte plasma-membrane proteins were solubilized with decanoyl-N-methylglucamide and reconstituted into liposomes. The procedure includes detergent removal by gel filtration, followed by a freeze-thaw step. 2. The rate of [1-14C]pyruvate uptake into these vesicles was inhibited by approx. 70% by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate and p-chloromercuribenzenesulphonate. The extent of uptake at equilibrium was not affected by the presence of these inhibitors, but was dependent on the osmolarity of the suspending medium. 3. Reconstituted bovine erythrocyte membranes, which have no lactate carrier, showed a much slower time course of pyruvate uptake, with no inhibitor-sensitive component. 4. L- but not D-lactate competed for alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate-sensitive [1-14C]pyruvate uptake.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon G. Church ◽  
Shobha Ghosh ◽  
Basil D. Roufogalis ◽  
Antonio Villalobo

Plasma-membrane-bound kinases of AS-30D ascites from transplantable rat hepatocarcinoma were shown to extensively catalyze the phosphorylation of plasma membrane proteins and membrane lipids, using [γ-32P]ATP or [γ-32P]GTP as a phosphate donor. In contrast, plasma membranes from normal adult rat liver or fast-growing regenerating liver (24 h after partial hepatectomy) produce significantly less activity for protein phosphorylation and little phosphorylation of the lipids. However, neonatal (24 h old) rat liver plasma membrane preparations show levels of phosphorylation of proteins and lipids intermediate between those in the tumor cell line and normal adult plasma membrane preparations. Phosphatidic acid was identified as one of the 32P-labelled lipids in the tumor plasma membrane chloroform–methanol (2:1, v/v) extract. Phosphorylation of protein was not affected by cAMP or cGMP. However, calcium ion (in the presence or absence of calmodulin) significantly modifies the 32P labelling of a series of proteins in normal tissue but has little effect with the neoplastic preparations. Some plasma membrane proteins were capable of nucleotide binding, instead or in addition to being phosphorylated. Finally, the presence of membrane-bound phosphoprotein phosphatase(s) was also demonstrated in all the preparations examined by means of chase experiments with nonlabelled ATP or GTP, and (or) by the use of the phosphoprotein phosphatase inhibitor, orthovanadate.


1996 ◽  
Vol 109 (7) ◽  
pp. 1667-1676 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Mayer ◽  
I.E. Ivanov ◽  
D. Gravotta ◽  
M. Adesnik ◽  
D.D. Sabatini

An in vitro system to study the transport of plasma membrane proteins from the TGN to the basolateral plasma membrane of polarized MDCK cells has been developed in which purified cell fractions are combined and transport between them is studied under controlled conditions. In this system, a donor Golgi fraction derived from VSV or influenza virus-infected MDCK cells, in which 35S-labeled viral glycoproteins were allowed to accumulate in the TGN during a low temperature block, is incubated with purified immobilized basolateral plasma membranes that have their cytoplasmic face exposed and are obtained by shearing-lysis of MDCK monolayers grown on cytodex beads. Approximately 15–30% of the labeled glycoprotein molecules are transferred from the Golgi fraction to the acceptor plasma membranes and are recovered with the sedimentable (1 g) beads. Transport is temperature, energy and cytosol dependent, and is abolished by alkylation of SH groups and inhibited by the presence of GTP-gamma-S, which implicates GTP-binding proteins and the requirement for GTP hydrolysis in one or more stages of the transport process. Endo H-resistant glycoprotein molecules that had traversed the medial region of the Golgi apparatus are preferentially transported and their luminal domains become accessible to proteases, indicating that membrane fusion with the plasma membrane takes place in the in vitro system. Mild proteolysis of the donor or acceptor membranes abolishes transport, suggesting that protein molecules exposed on the surface of these membranes are involved in the formation and consumption of transport intermediates, possibly as addressing and docking proteins, respectively. Surprisingly, both VSV-G and influenza HA were transported with equal efficiencies to the basolateral acceptor membranes. However, low concentrations of a microtubular protein fraction preferentially inhibited the transport of HA, although this effect was not abolished by microtubule depolymerizing agents. This system shows great promise for elucidating the mechanisms that effect the proper sorting of plasma membrane proteins in the TGN and their subsequent targeting to the appropriate acceptor membrane.


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