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Nutritional Regulation of Organelle Biogenesis in Euglena
Author(s) -
Mark A. Horrum,
Steven D. Schwartzbach
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.68.2.430
Subject(s) - euglena , biochemistry , malate dehydrogenase , biology , microbody , chloroplast , cycloheximide , enzyme , euglena gracilis , dehydrogenase , enzyme assay , microbiology and biotechnology , protein biosynthesis , catalase , gene
Exposure of dark grown resting Euglena to ethanol produced a transient increase in the specific activity of the glyoxysomal enzyme malate synthase. Enzyme specific activity increased during the first 24 hours of ethanol treatment and then declined. Light exposure or malate addition failed to increase enzyme specific activity. The increase and decrease in enzyme specific activity represented changes in the amount of active enzyme. In both wild type cells and the plastidless mutant W(3)BUL, enzyme levels were always higher in the dark than in the light.The specific activity of the peroxisomal enzyme glycolate dehydrogenase began to increase 24 hours after dark grown resting Euglena were exposed to light. Ethanol, but not malate, prevented the increase and promoted a decrease in glycolate dehydrogenase levels. Cycloheximide produced a decline in enzyme levels similar to the decline produced by ethanol addition. Glycolate dehydrogenase was present in the plastidless mutant W(3)BUL indicating that it is coded in the nucleus and synthesized on cytoplasmic ribosomes. Streptomycin, a specific inhibitor of chloroplast protein synthesis and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, an inhibitor of photosynthetic CO(2) fixation, inhibited the photoinduction of glycolate dehydrogenase while having no effect on the photoinduction of NADP dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, another light induced, nuclear coded, cytoplasmically synthesized enzyme. Taken together, these results suggest that microbodies are continually synthesized in resting Euglena and their enzyme complement is determined through substrate induction of glyoxysomal and peroxisomal enzymes.

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