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Transgene rescue identifies an essential function for Drosophila beta spectrin in the nervous system and a selective requirement for ankyrin-2-binding activity

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posted on 2011-05-27, 00:00 authored by G. H. Mazock, Amlan Das, Christine Base, Ronald R. Dubreuil
The protein spectrin is ubiquitous in animal cells and is believed to play important roles in cell shape and membrane stability, cell polarity, and endomembrane traffic. Experiments here were undertaken to identify sites of essential β spectrin function in Drosophila and to determine whether spectrin and ankyrin function are strictly linked to one another. The Gal4-UAS system was used to drive tissue-specific overexpression of a β spectrin transgene or to knock down spectrin expression with dsRNA. The results show that 1) overexpression of β spectrin in most of the cell types studied was lethal; 2) knockdown of β spectrin in most tissues had no detectable effect on growth or viability of the organism; and 3) nervous system-specific expression of a UAS-β spectrin transgene was sufficient to overcome the lethality of a loss-of-function β spectrin mutation. Thus β spectrin expression in other cells was not required for development of fertile adult males, although females lacking nonneuronal spectrin were sterile. Previous data indicated that binding of the DAnk1 isoform of ankyrin to spectrin was partially dispensable for viability. Domain swap experiments here uncovered a different requirement for neuronal DAnk2 binding to spectrin and establish that DAnk2-binding is critical for β spectrin function in vivo.

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Publisher Statement

© 2010 by The American Society for Cell Biology. The original work is available through American Society for Cell Biology at DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E10-03-0180

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology

Language

  • en_US

issn

1939-4586

Issue date

2010-08-15

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