These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Patterns of spectrin transcripts in erythroid and non-erythroid cells.
    Author: Prchal JT, Papayannopoulou T, Yoon SH.
    Journal: J Cell Physiol; 1990 Aug; 144(2):287-94. PubMed ID: 1696273.
    Abstract:
    Spectrin is the major protein of the membrane erythrocyte skeleton. More recently, homologous but non-identical spectrins (fodrins) were also found in various non-erythroid tissues. Spectrin mRNA in erythroid and various non-erythroid cells was examined by direct hybridization with human alpha-spectrin, beta-spectrin (erythroid spectrins), and alpha-fodrin (non-erythroid spectrin) cDNA probes. Northern blot analysis of poly (A)+ RNA revealed a distinct pattern of expression in erythroid vs. non-erythroid cells. Erythroid cells from early erythroblasts to reticulocyte stage expressed two mRNA species of beta-spectrin, whereas they expressed only a single species of alpha-spectrin, and no alpha-fodrin mRNA. In contrast, non-erythroid cells (platelets, myeloid cells, liver, muscle, heart, cerebellum, and eye lens) expressed either no alpha-spectrin mRNA or a different molecular weight transcript(s) of this gene, and a single species of alpha-fodrin mRNA. Additionally, they also expressed from none to multiple species of beta-spectrin, and these were of different molecular size(s) from that found in erythroid cells (with the exception of platelets). Transcripts of non-erythroid spectrin, alpha-fodrin, were found as a single copy only in non-erythroid tissues. Human and murine erythroleukemia cells expressed both erythroid spectrin transcripts in addition to alpha-fodrin and raise the possibility that erythroid progenitors may have the potential to express both erythroid and non-erythroid species. These data indicated that several mRNA species of beta-spectrin could be detected in both erythroid and some non-erythroid cells. Whether multiple spectrin peptides could also be found with functional heterogeneity is unclear. However, in each case, the pattern combination observed appeared to be tissue-specific.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]