Abstract

The major transmembrane protein of the red blood cell, known as band 3, AE1, and SLC4A1, has two main functions: 1) catalysis of Cl−/ exchange, one of the steps in CO2 excretion, and 2) anchoring the membrane skeleton. This review summarizes the 150-year history of research on red cell anion transport and band 3 as an experimental system for studying membrane protein structure and ion transport mechanisms. Important early findings were that red cell Cl− transport is a tightly coupled 1:1 exchange and band 3 is labeled by stilbenesulfonate derivatives that inhibit anion transport. Biochemical studies showed that the protein is dimeric or tetrameric (paired dimers) and that there is one stilbenedisulfonate binding site per subunit of the dimer. Transport kinetics and inhibitor characteristics supported the idea that the transporter acts by an alternating access mechanism with intrinsic asymmetry. The sequence of band 3 cDNA provided a framework for detailed study of protein topology and amino acid residues important for transport. The identification of genetic variants produced insights into the roles of band 3 in red cell abnormalities and distal renal tubular acidosis. The publication of the membrane domain crystal structure made it possible to propose concrete molecular models of transport. Future research directions include improving our understanding of the transport mechanism at the molecular level and of the integrative relationships among band 3, hemoglobin, carbonic anhydrase, and gradients (both transmembrane and subcellular) of , Cl−, O2, CO2, pH, and nitric oxide (NO) metabolites during pulmonary and systemic capillary gas exchange.

Highlights

  • The most abundant protein in the red blood cell membrane is known as band 3, AE1, capnophorin, and SLC4A1

  • In mature normal human red cells, band 3 can exist in the following states: 1) Untethered dimer

  • glycophorin A (GPA) and Prx2 are sufficiently abundant to be associated with all forms of band 3, including the untethered dimer [7], but GPA does not appear to be associated with the untethered fraction of band 3 [320]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The most abundant protein in the red blood cell membrane is known as band 3, AE1, capnophorin, and SLC4A1. . the base influx likely actual OHÀ transport at by band 3, but it is difficult to make a quantitative comparison between OHÀ and ClÀ fluxes, because raising the extracellular pH to produce an appreciable [OHÀ] inhibits monovalent anion exchange [90]. The membrane domain crystal structure has no bound substrate anion, but the substrate binding site is likely located between the NH2-terminal ends of the a-helical portions of TM3 and TM10 [18, 20], by analogy with UraA [174]. This location is close to but distinct from the site of covalently bound H2DIDS (Fig. 6). A better understanding of all the diffusion processes would help resolve the metabolon controversy

SUMMARY
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Biochem J 473
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