The membrane skeleton, a dynamic network of proteins associated with the plasma membrane, determines the shape and mechanical properties of erythrocytes. Deficiencies or defects in membrane skeletal proteins are associated with inherited disorders of erythrocyte morphology and function. Adducin is one of the proteins localized at the spectrin-actin junction of the membrane skeleton. In this work we show that deficiency of β-adducin produces an 80% decrease of -adducin and a fourfold up-regulation of γ-adducin in erythrocytes. β-Adducin or any other isoform generated by translation of abnormally spliced messenger RNAs could not be detected by our antibodies either in ghosts or in cytoplasm of −/− erythrocytes. Actin levels were diminished in mutant mice, suggesting alterations in the actin-spectrin junctional complexes due to the absence of adducin. Elliptocytes, ovalocytes, and occasionally spherocytes were found in the blood film of −/− mice. Hematological values showed an increase in reticulocyte counts and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, decreased mean corpuscular volume and hematocrit, and normal erythrocyte counts that, associated to splenomegaly, indicate that the mice suffer from mild anemia with compensated hemolysis. These modifications are due to a loss of membrane surface and dehydration that result in an increase in the osmotic fragility of red blood cells. The marked alteration in osmotic fragility together with the predominant presence of elliptocytes is reminiscent of the human disorder called spherocytic hereditary elliptocytosis. Our results suggest that the amount of adducin remaining in the mutant animals (presumably γ adducin) could be functional and might account for the mild phenotype.
The gp130-gp130 ligand system is also involved in VEGF regulation in human cardiac myocytes and OSM is the gp130 ligand responsible for this effect in the human system whereas LIF and CT-1 which had been shown to regulate VEGF expression in mouse and rat cardiac myocytes had no effect. Thus we have added OSM, which is produced by activated T lymphocytes and monocytes, to the list of regulatory molecules of VEGF production in the human heart. Our results lend further support to the notion that besides hypoxia, inflammation via induction of VEGF through autocrine or paracrine pathways plays a key role in (re)vascularisation of the myocardium.
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