“…The most important differences between GTP-dependent Ca2+ mobilization in rat liver microsomes and the other systems investigated are the speed and extent of Ca2+ efflux (Gill et al, 1986;Ueda et al, 1986;Henne & S6ling, 1986;Mullaney et al, 1987;Allan et al, 1989), lack of enhancement of InsP3-dependent Ca2t efflux by GTP (Gill et al, 1986;Ueda et al, 1986;Henne & S6ling, 1986;Wolf et al, 1987), the requirement for PEG (Wolf et al, 1987) and the promotion of uptake of Ca2+ caused by GTP in conditions where intravesicular Ca2t is precipitated by oxalate (Hamachi et al, 1987;Chueh et al, 1987;Mullaney et al, 1987Mullaney et al, , 1988. Paiement et al (1987) have shown that, at relatively high (millimolar) concentrations, GTP causes fusion of stripped endoplasmic-reticulum vesicles prepared from rat liver. We have demonstrated that low concentrations of GTP (micromolar) can induce fusion of rat liver microsomes, using the techniques of electron micro-scopy, light-scattering analysis (Dawson et al, 1987) and fluorescence-resonance energy transfer between microsomal vesicles differentially labelled with the fluorescence probes R18 and F 18 (Comerford .…”