Abstract: | The correlation between the ATP-dependent Ca2+ binding and the phosphorylation of the membranes from swine and bovine erythrocytes was studied. The Ca2+ binding was measured by using 45CaCl2, and the phosphorylation by [gamma-32P]ATP was studied with the technique of SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 200 mM NaCl and KCl markedly repressed the Ca2+ binding of swine erythrocyte membranes. The radioactivity of 32P-labelled membranes was revealed mainly in 250,000 dalton protein and a lipid fraction. NaCl and KCl also repressed the phosphorylation of the lipid which was identified as triphosphoinositide by paper chromatography. The membranes prepared from trypsin-digested erythrocytes completely retained the Ca2+-binding activity, and lost 30% of (Ca2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase activity. The Ca2+-binding and ATPase activity of isolated membranes decreased to 55% and to 0%, respectively, by tryptic digestion. Neither the Ca2+ binding nor the phosphorylation of polyphosphoinositides were detected in bovine erythrocyte membranes. These results suggest that the formation of triphosphoinositide rather than the (C2+ + Mg2+)-ATPase of membranes is linked to the ATP-dependent Ca2+ binding of erythrocyte membranes. |