pubmed-article:3941079 | pubmed:abstractText | The synthetic peptide, L-Val-L-Tyr-L-Pro-L-isoAsp-Gly-L-Ala, is a substrate for the erythrocyte and brain protein carboxyl methyltransferases. These enzymes catalyze the methyl esterification of the free alpha-carboxyl group of the isoaspartyl residue, to which the glycyl residue is linked through the side chain beta-carboxyl group. In this work, we show that the alpha-methyl ester of this peptide was rapidly demethylated (t1/2 = 4 min at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4) in erythrocyte cytosolic extracts and that the product of this reaction appears to be the succinimide ring derivative of the peptide. The rate of demethylation, measured at either pH 6.0 or 7.4, was the same in buffer and erythrocyte extracts, suggesting that succinimide formation was a nonenzymatic reaction. The L-succinimide is more stable than the ester, but can be hydrolyzed in buffer at pH 7.4 (t1/2 = 180 min at 37 degrees C) to give a mixture of about 75% isoaspartyl peptide and 25% normal aspartyl peptide. The metabolism of the succinimide hexapeptide in erythrocyte extracts appears to be more complex, however. The implications of this work for the methylation and demethylation of cellular proteins containing structurally altered aspartyl residues are discussed. | lld:pubmed |