Abstract

In Dictyostelium discoideum, a chemoacttractant-stimulated incorporation of radioactivity from [ methyl- 3H]methionine into protein in the presence of cycloheximide has previously been assumed to represent carboxyl methylation. In this paper, however, evidence is presented which demonstrates it to be a non-covalent binding of methionine to structural components of the cell. Certain pitfalls in the assay of carboxyl methylation by measurement of methanol production are described, and the assay has been optimized to avoid measurement of other volatile compounds. When carboxyl methylation is measured as the amount of methanol formed from methylated protein, methanol production is near the limit of detection in all current methods of assay. No increase of methanol production could be observed upon a single or repeated stimulation of aggregative cells with their chemoattractant, cyclic AMP. We conclude that carboxyl methylation is either absent in Dictyostelium, or that it involves only a small amount of specific methyl acceptors.

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