IntroductionA recently discovered family of cytoskeletal proteins belongs within both the spectrin and plakin superfamilies. These superfamilies consist of proteins that contribute to the linkage between the plasma membrane and the cytoskeleton. Spectrin superfamily members bind and crosslink actin filaments and attach these to membrane receptors. Members of the plakin superfamily were first identified as components of desmosomes and hemidesmosomes, connecting the adhesion receptors to intermediate filaments, but they also can crosslink different cytoskeletal elements. At present we know of two mammalian genes that encode related members of the new family, BPAG1 and MACF1, and a single Drosophila gene, short stop (shot) (Figs 1 and 2). Each of these is also known by other names, which reflects their independent discovery by different groups: MACF1 is known as ACF7, MACF, MACF7, macrophin, trabeculin α and ABP620; BPAG1 is known as dystonin and MACF2; shot is known as kakapo, kopupu and groovin (Brown et al., 1995a;Bernier et al., 1996;Becker et al., 1997;Prout et al., 1997;Gregory and Brown, 1998;Strumpf and Volk, 1998;Walsh and Brown, 1998;Leung et al., 1999b; Okuda et al., 1999;Sun et al., 1999;Yang et al., 1999;Lee et al., 2000;Leung et al., 2001b;Sun et al., 2001). A single Caenorhabditis elegans gene can also be identified in the genomic sequence; this is currently annotated as three genes: ZK1151.1, ZK1151.2 and ZK1151.3 (C. elegans Sequencing Consortium, 1998). Because the proteins encoded by these genes share features with both spectrin and plakin superfamily members and may represent the evolutionary precursor of the plakins (see below), we refer to them as spectraplakins to highlight their dual nature. Here we discuss the possible functions of spectraplakins indicated by their sequences and by biochemical and genetic studies, extrapolating from the functions of homologous cytoskeletal proteins.Spectraplakins in various species were identified independently in quite different contexts. In the fly, the spectraplakin shot emerged from genetic screens aimed at identifying genes required for integrin-mediated adhesion (Prout et al., 1997;Gregory and Brown, 1998;Strumpf and Volk, 1998) or axon extension (Van Vactor et al., 1993;Lee et al., 2000). The vertebrate spectraplakin BPAG1/dystonin was identified as a protein targeted by the autoimmune disease bullous pemphigoid in humans (Minoshima et al., 1991) and as the gene affected in the disease dystonia musculorum in mice (Brown et al., 1995a;Guo et al., 1995).
Diverse motifs within spectraplakin isoformsThe full complexity of the genes producing spectraplakins has gradually emerged. The first spectraplakin product characterised, BPAG1e, is a substantial protein of 2649 residues encoded by an 8.7 kb mRNA; yet this appears to be the smallest and simplest of the spectraplakin products (Fig. 3). The previous lack of awareness of the larger spectraplakins is likely to have led to erroneous conclusions being drawn in the older literature about the functions of th...