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      Cytoskeletal Integrators: The Spectrin Superfamily

      Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology
      Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d3213856e86">This review discusses the spectrin superfamily of proteins that function to connect cytoskeletal elements to each other, the cell membrane, and the nucleus. The signature domain is the spectrin repeat, a 106–122-amino-acid segment comprising three α-helices. α-actinin is considered to be the ancestral protein and functions to cross-link actin filaments. It then evolved to generate spectrin and dystrophin that function to link the actin cytoskeleton to the cell membrane, as well as the spectraplakins and plakins that link cytoskeletal elements to each other and to junctional complexes. A final class comprises the nesprins, which are able to bind to the nuclear membrane. This review discusses the domain organization of the various spectrin family members, their roles in protein–protein interactions, and their roles in disease, as determined from mutations, and it also describes the functional roles of the family members as determined from null phenotypes. </p><p class="first" id="d3213856e89">Members of the spectrin superfamily, characterized by their unique structural repeats, connect cytoskeletal elements (e.g., microtubules and microfilaments) to each other, the cell membrane, and the nucleus. </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology
          Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol
          Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
          1943-0264
          October 03 2016
          October 03 2016
          October 2016
          : 8
          : 10
          : a018259
          Article
          10.1101/cshperspect.a018259
          ef250732-ba47-42e3-a210-08725ccbe9ef
          © 2016
          History

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