Abstract

The hereditary stomatocytoses are a group of dominant haemolytic anaemias that show two main features: invaginated, 'stomatocytic' morphology; and a membrane leak to the univalent cations Na and K. A patient with the most severe variant of these conditions was reported to show a defect in an in vitro process of ATP-dependent endocytic vesiculation (ADEV), which is found in normal red cells. We have examined this endocytosis process in 11 leaky red cell pedigrees available to us in the UK. ADEV in broken membranes was absent only in the two most severely affected, 'overhydrated' pedigrees studied, both of which showed a deficiency in the membrane raft protein, stomatin. The process was present, although typically diminished by about 10-20% compared with normal red cells, in all others. The cross-linker dimethyl adipimate (DMA), which could correct the cation leak in some of these patients, also corrected the ADEV defect in the same patients. In those patients in whom DMA had no effect on the ion leak, ADEV was not absent. In normal cells, this process of vesiculation was inhibited by inhibitors of membrane 'raft' function, by an antistomatin antibody and by vanadate and N-ethyl maleimide, but not by inhibitors of a number of kinases. These data highlight the heterogeneity of these conditions. A mechanism is discussed by which a defect in raft-based endocytosis could lead to the exaggerated surface exposure of an ion channel, which could then function constitutively, i.e. 'leak'.

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