| Literature DB >> 21877118 |
B Machnicka1, R Grochowalska, D M Bogusławska, A F Sikorski, M C Lecomte.
Abstract
This review focuses on the recent advances in functions of spectrins in non-erythroid cells. We discuss new data concerning the commonly known role of the spectrin-based skeleton in control of membrane organization, stability and shape, and tethering protein mosaics to the cellular motors and to all major filament systems. Particular effort has been undertaken to highlight recent advances linking spectrin to cell signaling phenomena and its participation in signal transduction pathways in many cell types.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21877118 PMCID: PMC3249148 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-011-0804-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Spectrin genes and their expression in mammalian tissue
| Subunit | Gene | Chromosome | Tissue expression | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| αI |
| 1q21–q23 | Isoform αΙΣ1 RBC and isoform (αΙΣ*) in brain | [ |
| αII |
| 9q33–q34 | Several isoforms present in all non-erythroid cells | [ |
| βI |
| 14q22–q23.2 | βIΣ1 erythrocytes, βIΣ2 isoforms in brain and muscle, βI-spectrin was also detected in lymphocytes | [ |
| βII |
| 2q21 | All nucleated cells | [ |
| βIII |
| 11q13 | Golgi and vesicular membrane skeletons, plasma membrane in neurons and epithelial cells | [ |
| βIV |
| 19q13.13 | Neurons (axon, initial segment, nodes of Ranvier) and pancreatic islets, nucleus | [ |
| βV |
| 15q21 | Low level in many tissues, outer segments of photoreceptor rods and cones, basolateral membrane of gastric epithelial cells and outer hair cell (OHC) | [ |
Examples of spectrin functions in cellular processes and signaling
| Spectrin isoforms | Function in cellular processes/signaling | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| αI | Supports RBC shape and maintains cell membrane integrity and its mechanical properties | [ |
| αII | Engaged in maintaining cell architecture, morphology, and plasma membrane stability | [ |
| Engaged in regulation of neurite outgrowth stimulated by NCAM | [ | |
| Participates in the organization of specialized membranes—TRPC4 channels | [ | |
| Engaged in cell adhesion and spreading, regulation of actin dynamics | [ | |
| Modifies cell cycle by altering cell adhesion | [ | |
| Engaged in DNA interstrand cross-links repair, connected to maintaining chromosomal stability | [ | |
| βI | Supports RBC shape and maintains cell membrane integrity and its mechanical properties | [ |
| Contributes to the formation of TCR complexes in lymphocytes | [ | |
| Involved in early cellular apoptotic events | [ | |
| βII | Engaged in cell morphology and mechanical properties, compaction and accumulation of E-cadherin in the epithelial cell-cell contact | [ |
| Delivery of proteins and phospholipids to the membrane | [ | |
| Cell cycle regulation by involvement in TGFβ signaling | [ | |
| βIII | Participates in the organization of the glutamate transporter EAAT4 in Purkinje cells | [ |
| Facilitates membrane protein transport via the secretory and endocytic pathways | [ | |
| βIV | Regulates localisation of voltage-gated channels at the axon initial segment and node of Ranvier, synchronizes action potentials, provides multifunctional regulatory platform for sodium channels, plays an important role in the structure and stability of excitable membranes in heart and brain | [ |
| Involved in targeting of critical structural and regulatory proteins | [ | |
| βV | Engaged in cell flexibility | [ |
| Engaged in OHCs’ electromotility | [ |
Fig. 1A model of the human red cell membrane. The spectrin-actin interaction is modulated by accessory proteins such as protein 4.1, together with dematin, adducin, tropomyosin and tropomodulin. Their functions are to stabilize the actin-spectrin complex, to maintain actin filament length (adducin acts as a capping protein), and to bind the spectrin-based network to the transmembrane proteins (the glycophorin C, the anion exchanger AE1) via adapter proteins (protein p55 and protein 4.2). Another major binding site to membrane is mediated via ankyrin, which binds to β-spectrin and the anion exchanger AE1. The Rh/RhAG-ankyrin complex can be also a link between the red cell membrane and the spectrin-based skeleton. Spectrins also interact directly with phospholipids such as phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine, membrane components actively confined to the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer. The aminophospholipid-binding sites in β-spectrin are localized in close proximity to the attachment sites for both ankyrin and 4.1, the proteins engaged in spectrin links to the membrane. AE1 anion exchanger, GPA glycophorin A, GPB glycophorin B, GPC glycophorin C, GLUT 1 glucose transporter 1, Rh rhesus factor, RhAG Rh-associated glycoprotein