Enzymatic basis for the calcium‐induced decrease of membrane protein methyl esterification in intact erythrocytes

Abstract
The effect of Ca2+ loading, induced by the ionophore A23187, on methyl esterification of membrane proteins (i.e. bands 2.1, 3, 4.1 and 4.5) has been investigated in intact human erythrocytes. When the cells were incubated with L-[methyl-3H]methionine, 40 .mu.M CaCl2 and 10 .mu.M A23187 induce a 50% inhibition of membrane protein methyl esterification. This effect is selectively due to the increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration, as it is antagonized by 10 mM EGTA, and other divalent cations such as Mn2+ do not exert any inhibition. In order to clarify the mechanism(s) of the reported inhibition, the various events involved in the methyl esterification process in vivo were analyzed. L-Methionine uptake as well as protein methylase II activity are not directly affected by altered intracellular Ca2+ concentrations. Conversely in the Ca2+-loaded erythrocytes the conversion of [3H]methionine into [3H]AdoMet, catalyzed by AdoMet synthetase, decreases up to 25%. When the undialyzed erythrocyte cytosolic fraction is assayed in vitro for AdoMet synthetase the activity of the enzyme from the CaCl2/A23187-treated erythrocytes is significantly lower than the control, up to 5 mM ATP. This result suggests that in the Ca2+-loaded erythrocytes the ATP intracellular concentration is significantly lowered. The direct evaluation of ATP intracellular concentration, by HPLC, confirms a significant drop of ATP level, as a consequence of the Ca2+ loading. The removal of Ca2+ from the cells quantitatively restores both the AdoMet synthesis and the methyl esterification levels. The possible role of altered ATP intracellular concentrations as a regulatory factor in the AdoMet-dependent reactions as well as in post-translational protein methylation related to the ageing process is also discussed.