ABSTRACT: We have enriched phosphoglucomutase (PGM; EC 5.4.2.2) approximately 20-fold from Paramecium tetraurelia cells by combined fractional precipitation with (NH4)2SO4, gel filtration and anion-exchange chromatography yielding two PGM peaks. Several parameters affecting PGM enzymic activity, molecular mass and pI were determined. Phosphorylation studies were done with isolated endogenous protein kinases. Like the 63 kDa phosphoprotein PP63, which is dephosphorylated within 80 ms during synchronous trichocyst exocytosis [Höhne-Zell, Knoll, Riedel-Gras, Hofer and Plattner (1992) Biochem. J. 286, 843-849], PGM has a molecular mass of 63 kDa and forms of identical pI. Since mammalian PGM activity depends on the presence of glucose 1,6-bisphosphate (Glc-1,6-P2) (which is lost during anion-exchange chromatography), we analysed this aspect with Paramecium PGM. In this case PGM activity was shown not to be lost, due to p-nitrophenyl phosphate-detectable phosphatase(s) (which we have separated from PGM), but also due to loss of Glc-1,6-P2. Like PGM from various vertebrate species, PGM activity from Paramecium can be fully re-established by addition of Glc-1,6-P2 at 10 nM, and it is also stimulated by bivalent cations and insensitive to chelating or thiol reagents. The PGM which we have isolated can be phosphorylated by endogenous cyclic-GMP-dependent protein kinase or by endogenous casein kinase. This results in three phosphorylated bands of identical molecular mass and pI values, as we have shown to occur with PP63 after phosphorylation in vivo (forms with pI 6.05, 5.95, 5.85). In ELISA, antibodies raised against PGM from rabbit skeletal muscle were reactive not only with original PGM but also with PGM fractions from Paramecium. Therefore, PGM and PP63 seem to be identical with regard to widely different parameters, i.e. co-elution by chromatography, molecular mass, phosphorylation by the two protein kinases tested, pI values of isoforms, and immuno-binding. Recent claims that PP63 ('parafusin') would not be identical with PGM specifically in Paramecium are critically evaluated. Since some glycolytic enzymes are discussed as being associated with the Ca(2+)-release channel in muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum, and since sub-plasmalemmal Ca2+ stores in Paramecium closely resemble sarcoplasmic reticulum, a possible function of PP63/PGM in exocytosis regulation is discussed, particularly since dephosphorylation strictly parallels exocytosis.