Abstract

The mechanism of dissociation of the stable dimer of band 3 was investigated during the incubation of isolated erythrocyte membranes or resealed ghosts at 37 degrees C. The kinetics of changes in the structural and functional integrity of the membrane domain of band 3 (MDB3) were measured and correlated with the change in the Stokes radius of band 3. MDB3 integrity was determined as follows: (1) by measuring the fluorescence emission spectrum of 4, 4'-di-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulphonate (DIDS) bound covalently to MDB3; (2) by measuring the number of DIDS covalent binding sites present after incubation of unlabelled resealed ghosts; and (3) by measuring the anion transport V(max) by using the same resealed ghosts. Incubation of membranes at 37 degrees C caused the dissociation of band 3 dimers to monomers but only after a lag period lasting approx. 50 h. The observation of such a lag implies that dissociation involves a sequence of molecular events beginning with some type of initial process. We have discovered that this initial process involves a conformation change in MDB3. There was a shift in the fluorescence spectrum for DIDS-labelled band 3 and a decrease in the DIDS binding capacity and transport activity of the unlabelled protein. Incubation of membranes at 4 degrees C inhibited the conformational change in MDB3 and the dissociation of dimers. Furthermore, no conformational change in MDB3 was observed when erythrocytes were incubated at 37 degrees C. We suggest that MDB3 unfolding is the molecular event responsible for the subsequent dissociation of stable dimers of band 3 to monomers during the incubation of erythrocyte membranes at 37 degrees C. The monomers so generated are either not functional in anion exchange or they have an attenuated functionality. The absence of a conformational change for band 3 in erythrocytes might imply that haemolysis perturbs the membrane structure and somehow predisposes band 3 to the conformational change that occurs during incubation at 37 degrees C.

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