| Literature DB >> 3697360 |
D E Sears, V T Marchesi, J S Morrow.
Abstract
Human erythrocyte spectrin binds calmodulin weakly under native conditions. This binding is enhanced in the presence of urea. The site responsible for this enhanced binding in urea has now been shown to reside in a specific region of the spectrin beta-subunit. Cleavage of spectrin with trypsin, cyanogen bromide or 2-nitro-5-thiocyanobenzoic acid generates fragments of the molecule which retain the ability to bind calmodulin under denaturing conditions. The origin of these fragments, identified by two-dimensional peptide mapping, is the terminal region of the spectrin beta-IV domain. The smallest peptide active in calmodulin binding is a 10 000 Mr fragment generated by cyanogen bromide cleavage. Only the intact 74 000 Mr fragment generated by trypsin (the complete beta-IV domain) retains the capacity to reassociate with the isolated alpha-subunit of spectrin. The position of a putative calmodulin binding site near a site for subunit-subunit association and protein 4.1 and actin binding suggests a possible role in vivo for calmodulin regulation of the spectrin-actin membrane skeleton or for regulation of subunit-subunit associations. This beta-subunit binding site in erythrocyte spectrin is found in a region near the NH2-terminus at a position analogous to the alpha-subunit calmodulin binding site previously identified in a non-erythroid spectrin by ultrastructural studies.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3697360 DOI: 10.1016/0167-4838(86)90251-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002