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Ransom-Hodgkins
WD, Brglez I, Wang X, Boss WF (2000) Plant Physiol 122: 957-965
Calcium-regulated
proteolysis of eEF1A
Eukaryotic
elongation factor 1alpha (eEF1A) can be post-translationally modified
by the addition of phosphorylglycerylethanolamine (PGE). [(14)C]Ethanolamine
was incorporated into the PGE modification, and with carrot (Daucus
carota L.) suspension culture cells, eEF1A was the only protein
that incorporated detectable quantities of [(14)C]ethanolamine (Ransom
et al., 1998). When 1 mM CaCl(2) was added to microsomes containing
[(14)C]ethanolamine-labeled eEF1A ([(14)C]et-eEF1A), there was a
60% decrease in the amount of [(14)C]et-eEF1A recovered after 10
min. The loss of endogenous [(14)C]et-eEF1A was prevented by adding
EGTA. Recombinant eEF1A, which did not contain the PGE modification,
also was degraded by microsomes in a Ca(2+)-regulated manner, indicating
that PGE modification was not necessary for proteolysis; however,
it enabled us to quantify enodgenous eEF1A. By monitoring [(14)C]et-eEF1A,
we found that treatment with phospholipase D or C, but not phospholipase
A(2), resulted in a decrease in [(14)C]et-eEF1A from carrot microsomes.
The fact that there was no loss of [(14)C]et-eEF1A with phospholipase
A(2) treatment even in the presence of 1 mM Ca(2+) suggested that
the loss of membrane lipids was not essential for eEF1A proteolysis
and that lysolipids or fatty acids decreased proteolysis. At micromolar
Ca(2+) concentrations, proteolysis of eEF1A was pH sensitive. When
1 microM CaCl(2) was added at pH 7.2, 35% of [(14)C]et-eEF1A was
lost; while at pH 6.8, 10 microM CaCl(2) was required to give a
similar loss of protein. These data suggest that eEF1A may be an
important downstream target for Ca(2+) and lipid-mediated signal
transduction cascades.
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