Abstract

There is a high prevalence of the erythrocyte polymorphism ovalocytosis associated with reduced susceptibility to malaria in Papua New Guinea. The major erythrocyte integral membrane protein, Band-3, showed markedly increased phosphorylation in whole cells or isolated ghosts from ovalocytic individuals. The cytoplasmic domain of the ovalocyte Band-3 was found to be approx. 3 kDa largen than the normocytic protein. The N-terminal sequence of the ovalocytic Band-3 was different from the reported sequence for human Band-3, suggesting that the increased size results from an N-terminal extension. Since this is the region of Band-3 which is phosphorylated and interacts with the red cell cytoskeleton, it is likely that this alteration in ovalocytic Band-3 is the underlying cause of the diverse alterations in ovalocytic cells including increased phosphorylation, increased membraned rigidity, decreased agglutinability by blood group antibodies and refractoriness to invasion by malarial parasites.

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