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AJP - Cell Physiology, Vol 264, Issue 5 C1144-C1154, Copyright © 1993 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
P. A. Knauf, N. M. Strong, J. Penikas, R. B. Wheeler Jr and S. Q. Liu
Department of Biophysics, University of Rochester Medical Center, New York 14642.
Eosin-5-maleimide (EM) has been used as a fluorescent probe for the external-facing transport site of the human erythrocyte band 3 protein. Changes in chloride concentration at both sides of the membrane have no significant effect on the inhibitory potency of EM as a reversible inhibitor of Cl- exchange at 0 degrees C, however, demonstrating that it is not a competitive inhibitor. The affinity of EM for the form of band 3 with the transport site facing outward is approximately five times greater than for the form with the transport site facing the cytoplasm; binding of iodide to the external transport site causes no statistically significant decrease in affinity for EM. Eosin, without the maleimide moiety, is a slightly more potent inhibitor than is EM. Erythrosin, an analogue with four iodide atoms replacing the four bromide atoms in eosin, is a much more potent inhibitor, with a half-inhibitory concentration of only 3.1 microM, > 30 times lower than that of EM. Neither eosin nor erythrosin inhibition is affected by changes in chloride concentration as would be expected for a competitive inhibitor. Thus EM and the other eosin derivatives bind to a site separate from the external transport site, but one that is affected by the changes of transport site conformation from the inward-facing to the outward-facing state.
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