| Literature DB >> 29386104 |
Leiting Pan1, Rui Yan2, Wan Li2, Ke Xu3.
Abstract
The erythrocyte cytoskeleton is a textbook prototype for the submembrane cytoskeleton of metazoan cells. While early experiments suggest a triangular network of actin-based junctional complexes connected by ∼200-nm-long spectrin tetramers, later studies indicate much smaller junction-to-junction distances in the range of 25-60 nm. Through super-resolution microscopy, we resolve the native ultrastructure of the cytoskeleton of membrane-preserved erythrocytes for the N and C termini of β-spectrin, F-actin, protein 4.1, tropomodulin, and adducin. This allows us to determine an ∼80-nm junction-to-junction distance, a length consistent with relaxed spectrin tetramers and theories based on spectrin abundance. Through two-color data, we further show that the cytoskeleton meshwork often contains nanoscale voids where the cell membrane remains intact and that actin filaments and capping proteins localize to a subset of, but not all, junctional complexes. Together, our results call for a reassessment of the structure and function of the submembrane cytoskeleton.Keywords: erythrocyte; junctional complex; membrane cytoskeleton; native ultrastructure; red blood cell; spectrin-actin-based cytoskeleton; super-resolution microscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29386104 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.12.107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423