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Blood, 28 May 2009, Vol. 113, No. 22, pp. 5372-5373.
Where spectrin snuggles with ankyrinPURDUE UNIVERSITY
Using the crystal structure of β-spectrin repeats 14 and 15 that bind ankyrin, together with a crystal structure of a fragment of ankyrin that binds spectrin, and detailed site-directed mutagenesis, Stabach and Ipsaro and their respective colleagues analyze for the first time the structure of the ankyrin-β-spectrin bridge that connects band 3 (AE1) and other proteins to the membrane skeleton.
In erythrocytes, the spectrin-based skeleton is composed of 100-nm-long In this issue of Blood, both Stabach et al2 and Ipsaro et al3 independently perform mapping of the ankyrin-spectrin interaction using largely nonoverlapping approaches. While both groups solve the crystal structure of repeats 14 and 15 of β-spectrin, Ipsaro et al attempted to identify the ankyrin binding site on β-spectrin by separately solving the crystal structure of a spectrin-binding fragment of ankyrin (residues 911-1068) and then examining the 2 crystal structures for charge and shape complementarity. While no obvious shape complementarity emerged, Ipsaro et al noted a patch of anionic amino acids within and adjacent to helix C of spectrin repeat 14 that matched up well with cationic amino acids in the crystallized fragment of ankyrin. In contrast, Stabach et al elected to locate the ankyrin binding site on their crystal structure of the β-spectrin repeats by performing site-directed mutagenesis. Upon mutation of 42 carefully selected residues, they identified 14 amino acids whose mutagenesis either abrogated or compromised ankyrin binding. Importantly, several of the identified residues coincided with the anionic residues hypothesized by Ipsaro et al to comprise the ankyrin binding site. Other critical residues resided either in the linker connecting the spectrin repeats or within a loop spanning helices B and C of repeat 15. It is the function of this latter loop that gives rise to an important distinction between the 2 papers. Stabach et al hypothesize that these loop-spanning residues control the tilt angle between β-spectrin repeats 14 and 15. Thus, unlike any other spectrin repeat structure published to date,4 the authors observe a 64° bend between the 2 spectrin repeats, and hypothesize that the pocket formed by this bend provides many of the high-affinity contacts involved in ankyrin binding. Ipsaro et al, in contrast, see no such bend, but they do observe crystallographic evidence for considerable flexibility within this region, suggesting that the linker could be flexible and that the spectrin conformer immobilized in their crystal structure assumes a nonbent conformation. Possible resolution of this discrepancy can be found in a recent online article by Davis et al5 that describes the crystal structure of the ankyrin binding domain (repeats 14-16) of β2-spectrin as having a bent structure. As observed by Stabach et al, Davis et al also find that differences in interrepeat contacts, involving an homologous loop in β2-spectrin, may be responsible for the unusual bend seen in the 2-repeat structure that binds ankyrin. In summary, a possible unifying interpretation that emerges from all of the data are that acidic amino acids near the C-terminus of helix C in repeat 14, together with the linker connecting repeat 14 to repeat 15 and the loop linking helices B and C of repeat 15, all contribute to formation of a flexible pocket on spectrin that associates with ankyrin. Because defects in the spectrin-ankyrin function are associated with such human pathologies as hereditary spherocytosis, cardiac arrhythmia, premature aging, deafness, and ataxia,6 further examination of this very important membrane complex is clearly warranted.
Footnotes
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests.
REFERENCES
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