Carboxyl-terminal truncations of human anion exchanger impair its trafficking to the plasma membrane

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Abstract

The human anion exchanger AE1 (Band 3) is an abundant glycoprotein localized in plasma membrane of red cells and is responsible for the electro-neutral exchange of chloride for bicarbonate. In order to determine the role of the carboxyl-terminal tail of AE1 in its expression, function and trafficking to the plasma membrane, we generated a series of five constructs encoding truncation mutants missing the last 5 (Δ5), 11 (Δ11), 15 (Δ15), 20 (Δ20) or 35 (Δ35) amino-acids. In transiently transfected HEK 293 cells, immunoblotting of whole cell extracts showed that all the proteins were expressed at the same level as full-length AE1, except Δ20 and particularly Δ35, which showed a reduced expression. Furthermore, the last 15 amino-acids were not required for AE1 folding in the membrane, since Δ5, Δ11 and Δ15 were able to bind to an inhibitor affinity matrix, while Δ20 and Δ35 exhibited poor binding. Immunofluorescence and deglycosylation results showed that Δ15 and Δ11 were retained intracellularly, whereas a lower amount of Δ5 compared with WT trafficked to the plasma membrane. These results indicate that an intact C-terminal tail of human AE1 is important for efficient AE1 trafficking to the plasma membrane.

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Cordat, E., Li, J., & Reithmeier, R. A. F. (2003). Carboxyl-terminal truncations of human anion exchanger impair its trafficking to the plasma membrane. Traffic, 4(9), 642–651. https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0854.2003.00123.x

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