The primary sequence of human erythrocyte spectrin contains repetitive homologous sequence motifs of approximately 106 amino acids with 22 such motifs in the ␣-subunit and 17 in the -subunit. These homologous sequence motifs have been proposed to form domains with a triple-helical bundle type structure (Speicher, In this study, we show that these sequence motifs, while they do form compact proteolytically resistant units, are not completely independent. Peptides composed of two or three such motifs in tandem are substantially more stable than peptides composed of a single motif, as measured by proteolysis or by fluorescence or circular dichroism studies of urea or thermal denaturation. Circular dichroism and infrared spectroscopy measurements also indicate that these larger, more stable peptides exhibit greater secondary structure. In these respects, the peptides with tandem sequence motifs are more similar to intact spectrin than the peptide with a single sequence motif. Thus, we conclude that peptides with more than one sequence motif model spectrin more adequately than the peptides with one sequence motif, and that these sequence motifs are not completely independent domains.DHuman erythrocytes contain a dense, two-dimensional network of spectrin and other proteins that provides support to the lipid bilayer and maintains erythrocyte deformability (1). Spectrin, comprising ␣-and -subunits, plays a critical role in maintaining the architecture and therefore the integrity of the red cell membrane. Many hereditary hemolytic anemias involve spectrin mutations (2-4). Thus, it is important to understand the structural properties of spectrin. The bulk (about 90%) of the primary structure of spectrin comprises repetitive homologous units of approximately 106 amino acids in length. Several other proteins, including brain spectrin (fodrin), dystrophin, and ␣-actinin, also have similar repetitive amino acid units in their sequences and are known as the spectrin superfamily (5).A triple-helical bundle model has been suggested for the 106-amino acid sequence motif in which the three helices are aligned side by side, with the first and third parallel and the intervening second helix antiparallel (6 -8). X-ray diffraction studies of one such sequence motif unit from a non-erythroid spectrin support this model (9). In these x-ray studies, the peptide used was found to form a homodimer containing two triple-helical structures, in which two of the three helices are contributed by one monomer and the remaining helix by the other monomer. It is thought that this peculiar arrangement may be an artifact of crystallization, and the true structure of a single unit may be similar to the earlier suggested triplehelical bundle with a zigzag arrangement of the helices (9, 10). This arrangement aligns the amino-and carboxyl-terminal residues at opposite ends of this triple-helical bundle, and thus sequential motifs are thought to be linked in tandem in intact spectrin, producing a very long rod-shaped molecule, approximately 100 nm in l...