Abstract
Five sulfhydryl groups of band 3, the anion-transport protein of the red blood cell membrane, can be labeled byN-ethylmaleimide (NEM). Two of these are located in a 35,000-dalton, C-terminal segment produced by chymotrypsin treatment of cells. Extensive treatment of unsealed ghosts with chymotrypsin results in the disappearance of the 35,000-dalton segment, but its two NEM-binding sites are preserved in a 9000-dalton peptide. The latter must therefore be a proteolytic product of the larger segment. Labeling of sulfhydryl groups of band 3 by an impermeant analog of NEM occurs in inside-out, but not in right-side-out vesicles derived from red cell ghosts, supporting the conclusion that NEM-reactive sulfhydryl groups, including those in the 35,000- and 9000-dalton segments, are exposed at the cytoplasmic face of the membrane. These findings support the conclusion that the 35,000-dalton segment crosses the bilayer, and suggest that the 9000-dalton segment may be a membrane-crossing portion of the 35,000-dalton segment.