Sumie Manno
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Sumie Manno.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Sumie Manno; Yuichi Takakuwa; Narla Mohandas
Asymmetric distribution of phospholipids is ubiquitous in the plasma membranes of many eukaryotic cells. The majority of the aminophospholipids are located in the inner leaflet whereas the cholinephospholipids are localized predominantly in the outer leaflet. Several functional roles for asymmetric phospholipid distribution in plasma membranes have been suggested. Disruption of lipid asymmetry creates a procoagulant surface on platelets and serves as a trigger for macrophage recognition of apoptotic cells. Furthermore, the dynamic process of phospholipid translocation regulates important cellular events such as membrane budding and endocytosis. In the present study, we used the red cell membrane as the model system to explore the contribution of phospholipid asymmetry to the maintenance of membrane mechanical properties. We prepared two different types of membranes in terms of their phospholipid distribution, one in which phospholipids were scrambled and the other in which the asymmetric distribution of phospholipids was maintained and quantitated their mechanical properties. We documented that maintenance of asymmetric distribution of phospholipids resulted in improved membrane mechanical stability. The greater difficulty in extracting the spectrin–actin complex at low-ionic strength from the membranes with asymmetric phospholipid distribution further suggested the involvement of interactions between aminophospholipids in the inner leaflet and skeletal proteins in modulating mechanical stability of the red cell membrane. These findings have enabled us to document a functional role of lipid asymmetry in regulating membrane material properties.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Xiuli An; Yuichi Takakuwa; Wataru Nunomura; Sumie Manno; Narla Mohandas
Protein 4.1 is an important structural component of the erythrocyte membrane. In contrast to our detailed understanding of the role of protein 4.1 in regulating membrane mechanical properties through modulation of spectrin-actin interaction, very little is known regarding the functional implications of protein 4.1 interaction with band 3. In the present study, we explored the potential role of protein 4.1-band 3 interaction in modulating membrane mechanical properties. Based on recent studies which identified the sequence motif IRRRY in band 3 as the protein 4.1 interacting domain, we studied the functional consequences of specific dissociation of band 3-protein 4.1 interaction by the synthetic peptide IRRRY. We show that protein 4.1 bound to the inside-out vesicles could be dissociated from band 3 but not from glycophorin C by IRRRY. Furthermore, incorporation of IRRRY into resealed ghosts resulted in decreased membrane deformability and increased membrane mechanical stability. The observed alterations in membrane properties appears to result from increased band 3-ankyrin interaction following dissociation of protein 4.1 from band 3. These studies have enabled us to identify an important functional role for band 3-protein 4.1 interaction in modulating erythrocyte membrane properties.
Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2000
Primrose Raphael; Yuichi Takakuwa; Sumie Manno; Shih-Chun Liu; Athar H. Chishti; Manjit Hanspal
The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum undergoes distinct morphologic changes during its 48-h life cycle inside human red blood cells. Parasite proteinases appear to play important roles at all stages of the erythrocytic cycle of human malaria. Proteases involved in erythrocyte rupture and invasion are possibly required to breakdown erythrocyte membrane skeleton. To identify such proteases, soluble cytosolic extract of isolated trophozoites/schizonts was incubated with erythrocyte membrane ghosts or spectrin-actin depleted inside-out vesicles, which were then analyzed by SDS-PAGE. In both cases, a new protein band of 155 kDa was detected. The N-terminal peptide sequencing established that the 155 kDa band represents truncated ankyrin. Immunoblot analysis using defined monoclonal antibodies confirmed that ankyrin was cleaved at the C-terminus. While the enzyme preferentially cleaved ankyrin, degradation of protein 4.1 was also observed at high concentrations of the enzyme. The optimal activity of the purified enzyme, using ankyrin as substrate, was observed at pH 7.0-7.5, and the activity was strongly inhibited by standard inhibitors of cysteine proteinases (cystatin, NEM, leupeptin, E-64 and MDL 28 170), but not by inhibitors of aspartic (pepstatin) or serine (PMSF, DFP) proteinases. Furthermore, we demonstrate that protease digestion of ankyrin substantially reduces its interaction with ankyrin-depleted membrane vesicles. Ektacytometric measurements showed a dramatic increase in the rate of fragmentation of ghosts after treatment with the protease. Although the role of ankyrin cleavage in vivo remains to be determined, based on our findings we postulate that the parasite-derived cysteine protease activity cleaves host ankyrin thus weakening the ankyrin-band 3 binding interactions and destabilizing the erythrocyte membrane skeleton, which, in turn, facilitates parasite release. Further characterization of the enzyme may lead to the development of novel antimalarial drugs.
American Journal of Hematology | 2008
Kotoe Kamata; Sumie Manno; Makoto Ozaki; Yuichi Takakuwa
Membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids and containing specific membrane proteins are designated as lipid rafts. Lipid rafts have been implicated in cell signaling pathways in various cell types. Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide‐binding protein (Gsα) has been shown to be a raft component of erythrocytes and has been implicated in cell signaling. Rafts are isolated as detergent‐resistant microdomains (DRMs) for biochemical analysis. Cholesterol depletion is widely used to disrupt raft structures to study their function in biological membranes. In the present study, we developed an alternate strategy for disrupting raft structures without altering membrane cholesterol content. Lidocaine hydrochloride, an amphipathic local anesthetic, is shown to reversibly disrupt rafts in erythrocyte membranes and alter the Gsα dependent signal transduction pathway. These findings provide evidence for the presence of rafts while maintaining normal cholesterol content in erythrocyte membranes and confirm a role for raft‐associated Gsα in signal transduction in erythrocytes. Am. J. Hematol., 2008.
Biochemistry | 2013
Nobuto Arashiki; Naoki Kimata; Sumie Manno; Narla Mohandas; Yuichi Takakuwa
Oxidative damage and clustering of band 3 in the membrane have been implicated in the removal of senescent human erythrocytes from the circulation at the end of their 120 day life span. However, the biochemical and mechanistic events leading to band 3 cluster formation have yet to be fully defined. Here we show that while neither membrane peroxidation nor methemoglobin (MetHb) formation on their own can induce band 3 clustering in the human erythrocytes, they can do so when acting in combination. We further show that binding of MetHb to the cytoplasmic domain of band 3 in peroxidized, but not in untreated, erythrocyte membranes induces cluster formation. Age-fractionated populations of erythrocytes from normal human blood, obtained by a density gradient procedure, have allowed us to examine a subpopulation, highly enriched in senescent cells. We have found that band 3 clustering is a feature of only this small fraction, amounting to ∼0.1% of total circulating erythrocytes. These senescent cells are characterized by an increased proportion of MetHb as a result of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent reductase activity and accumulated oxidative membrane damage. These findings have allowed us to establish that the combined effects of membrane peroxidation and MetHb formation are necessary for band 3 clustering, and this is a very late event in erythrocyte life. A plausible mechanism for the combined effects of membrane peroxidation and MetHb is proposed, involving high-affinity cooperative binding of MetHb to the cytoplasmic domain of oxidized band 3, probably because of its carbonylation, rather than other forms of oxidative damage. This modification leads to dissociation of ankyrin from band 3, allowing the tetrameric MetHb to cross-link the resulting freely diffusible band 3 dimers, with formation of clusters.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Sumie Manno; Narla Mohandas; Yuichi Takakuwa
Human erythrocytes are continuously exposed to glucose, which reacts with the amino terminus of the β-chain of hemoglobin (Hb) to form glycated Hb, HbA1c, levels of which increase with the age of the circulating cell. In contrast to extensive insights into glycation of hemoglobin, little is known about glycation of erythrocyte membrane proteins. In the present study, we explored the conditions under which glucose and ribose can glycate spectrin, both on the intact membrane and in solution and the functional consequences of spectrin glycation. Although purified spectrin could be readily glycated, membrane-associated spectrin could be glycated only after ATP depletion and consequent translocation of phosphatidylserine (PS) from the inner to the outer lipid monolayer. Glycation of membrane-associated spectrin led to a marked decrease in membrane deformability. We further observed that only PS-binding spectrin repeats are glycated. We infer that the absence of glycation in situ is the consequence of the interaction of the target lysine and arginine residues with PS and thus is inaccessible for glycation. The reduced membrane deformability after glycation in the absence of ATP is likely the result of the inability of the glycated spectrin repeats to undergo the obligatory unfolding as a consequence of interhelix cross-links. We thus postulate that through the use of an ATP-driven phospholipid translocase (flippase), erythrocytes have evolved a protective mechanism against spectrin glycation and thus maintain their optimal membrane function during their long circulatory life span.
Biochemistry | 2016
Nobuto Arashiki; Masaki Saito; Ichiro Koshino; Kotoe Kamata; John Hale; Narla Mohandas; Sumie Manno; Yuichi Takakuwa
An asymmetric distribution of phospholipids in the membrane bilayer is inseparable from physiological functions, including shape preservation and survival of erythrocytes, and by implication other cells. Aminophospholipids, notably phosphatidylserine (PS), are confined to the inner leaflet of the erythrocyte membrane lipid bilayer by the ATP-dependent flippase enzyme, ATP11C, counteracting the activity of an ATP-independent scramblase. Phospholipid scramblase 1 (PLSCR1), a single-transmembrane protein, was previously reported to possess scrambling activity in erythrocytes. However, its function was cast in doubt by the retention of scramblase activity in erythrocytes of knockout mice lacking this protein. We show that in the human erythrocyte PLSCR1 is the predominant scramblase and by reconstitution into liposomes that its activity resides in the transmembrane domain. At or below physiological intracellular calcium concentrations, total suppression of flippase activity nevertheless leaves the membrane asymmetry undisturbed. When liposomes or erythrocytes are depleted of cholesterol (a reversible process in the case of erythrocytes), PS quickly appears at the outer surface, implying that cholesterol acts in the cell as a powerful scramblase inhibitor. Thus, our results bring to light a previously unsuspected function of cholesterol in regulating phospholipid scrambling.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Sumie Manno; Yuichi Takakuwa; Narla Mohandas
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995
Sumie Manno; Yuichi Takakuwa; Kaoru Nagao; Narla Mohandas
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2002
Akinori Soejima; Fumika Kaneda; Sumie Manno; Naoki Matsuzawa; Hitoshi Kouji; Toshihiko Nagasawa; Seiichi Era; Yuichi Takakuwa