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1.
The effect of light and carbon nutrition on the synthesis of citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7) and malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) in dark-grown resting (carbon deficient) and in phototrophic division-synchronized cultures of Euglena gracilis Klebs strain z were investigated. Exposure of dark-grown Euglena to white or red light produced a transient increase in the specific activities of citrate synthase and malate dehydrogenase but blue light (of equal energy) was ineffective. Citrate-synthase activity increased at the end of the light phase and in early dark phase in phototrophic cultures division-synchronized by a regime of 14 h light-10 h dark. The addition of ethanol or malate produced a twofold increase in citrate-synthase activity compared with phototrophic cultures. White and blue light, but not red light, produced a transient repression of the metabolite-induced increase in citrate-synthase activity in division-synchronized cultures. Since only red light could effect a transient increase in the specific activity of mitochondrial enzymes, and the blue-red plastid receptor should respond to both blue and red light, the synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes in regreening cultures may be under the control of a new photoreceptor responding only to red light. In division-synchronized phototrophic cells the primary effector of synthesis of mitochondrial enzymes is not light but carbon nutrition.  相似文献   

2.
G. A. Codd  M. J. Merrett 《Planta》1971,100(2):124-130
Summary Phosphoryruvate carboxylase activity was determined in division synchronized Euglena gracilis strain Z cultures. The profile of enzyme activity was essentially that of a peak enzyme; activity increased over the light phase of the cycle, doubling by early dark phase followed by a substantial decline in activity near the end of the dark phase. Dark carbon dioxide fixation did not parallel changes in phosphoryruvate carboxylase activity. The rate of carbon dioxide fixation increased fourfold over the light phase but decreased in the dark phase until it was only double the rate at the beginning of the light phase.Although the specific activity of phosphopyruvate carboxylase was greater than that of ribulose 1–5 diphosphate carboxylase in Euglena cell extracts at all stages over the division cycle C4 acids were not an early product of carbon dioxide fixation in the light, neither did they ever account for more than a small proportion of the total 14C present in the soluble fraction of the cells. Phosphopyruvate carboxylase was shown by the non-aqueous localization technique to be present in the cytoplasm in Euglena, and it is concluded that the main function of this enzyme in algal cells is to provide an anaplerotic sequence to the tricarboxylic acid cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The preparation of a rabbit antibody to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) from Euglena gracilis and its use to quantitate RuBPCase in dark- and light-grown cells and during light-induced chloroplast development (greening) are described. Light-grown Euglena have at least 36 times more RuBPCase than dark-grown Euglena. Light is required for both the initiation and continued increase in net synthesis of RuBPCase over the dark level: brief illumination 12 hours before exposure to continuous light eliminates the lags in the accumulation and increase in activity of RuBPCase (as well as in chlorophyll accumulation); net synthesis is blocked in greening cells returned to the dark or exposed to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Streptomycin or cycloheximide prevents RuBPCase accumulation when added at the beginning of greening but only partially blocks accumulation when added after 25 hours of greening. After 24 hours of greening, the activity of RuBPCase per milligram chlorophyll continues to increase slowly while concentration of the enzyme per milligram chlorophyll remains constant. This increased activity may be due to activation of the enzyme as well as to net synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Exposure of dark-grown restingEuglena gracilis Klebs var.bacillaris Cori to light, ethanol, or malate produced an increase in the specific activity of fumarase (EC. 4.2.1.2) and succinate dehydrogenase (EC. 1.3.99.1) during the first 8–12 h of exposure to inducer, followed by a decrease in the specific activity of both mitochondrial enzymes between 12 and 72 h. The increased specific activity represented a net increase in the level of active enzyme, and it was dependent upon cytoplasmic protein synthesis. The photoinduction of fumarase required continuous illumination while the subsequent decrease in fumarase specific activity was independent of light. Light had little effect on the ethanol and malate induction of fumarase and succinate dehydrogenase. In the mutant W3BUL, which has no detectable protochlorophyll(ide) and chloroplast DNA, light induced both mitochondrial enzymes and the kinetics of enzyme induction were similar to the induction kinetics in wild-type cells. The induction of mitochondrial enzymes appears to be controlled by a non-chloroplast photoreceptor. Dark-grown resting cells of the plastidless mutant W10SmL have lost the ability to regulate fumarase levels. In this mutant, the specific activity of fumarase fluctuated and light had little effect on these fluctuations, indicating that fumarase synthesis was uncoupled from the nonchloroplast photoreceptor. Ethanol addition produced transient changes in fumarase specific activity in W10SmL indicating that in this mutant, mitochondrial enzymes are still inductible by metabolites. Fumarase synthesis in wild-type cells was not induced in the dark by levulinic acid, a chemical inducer of the breakdown ofEuglena storage carbohydrates. Taken together, our results indicate that the photoinduction of mitochondrial enzyme synthesis is not a result of the photoinduction of carbohydrate breakdown. The mechanisms by which light and organic carbon induce the synthesis ofEuglena mitochondria may differ.  相似文献   

5.
6.
A chloroplast-associated fatty acid synthetase system in Euglena   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Fatty acid synthetase activity in etiolated Euglena gracilis strain Z is independent of added ACP and associated with a high-molecular-weight complex of the type found in yeast. Cells grown in the dark and then greened by illumination in a resting medium develop a second enzyme system which is dependent on added ACP and generally resembles the corresponding E. coli and plant enzymes. Cycloheximide has no effect on the appearance of the ACP-dependent fatty acid synthetase in greening cells whereas chloramphenicol causes complete inhibition at concentrations which decrease chlorophyll synthesis by 66%. An induction of the ACP-dependent fatty acid synthetase in the absence of chloroplast development occurs on exposure of dark-grown cells to doses of ultraviolet light which selectively affect proplastid nucleoprotein. This enzyme induction by ultraviolet light is inhibited by chloramphenicol. The protein synthesis machinery of the chloroplast appears to be responsible, either directly or indirectly, for the appearance of the ACP-dependent fatty acid synthetase of Euglena.  相似文献   

7.
Mayer SM  Beale SI 《Plant physiology》1990,94(3):1365-1375
Chlorophyll synthesis in Euglena, as in higher plants, occurs only in the light. The key chlorophyll precursor, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), is formed in Euglena, as in plants, from glutamate in a reaction sequence catalyzed by three enzymes and requiring tRNAGlu. ALA formation from glutamate occurs in extracts of light-grown Euglena cells, but activity is very low in dark-grown cell extracts. Cells grown in either red (650-700 nanometers) or blue (400-480 nanometers) light yielded in vitro activity, but neither red nor blue light alone induced activity as high as that induced by white light or red and blue light together, at equal total fluence rates. Levels of the individual enzymes and the required tRNA were measured in cell extracts of light- and dark-grown cells. tRNA capable of being charged with glutamate was approximately equally abundant in extracts of light- and dark-grown cells. tRNA capable of supporting ALA synthesis was approximately three times more abundant in extracts of light-grown cells than in dark-grown cell extracts. Total glutamyl-tRNA synthetase activity was nearly twice as high in extracts of light-grown cells as in dark-grown cell extracts. However, extracts of both light- and dark-grown cells were able to charge tRNAGlu isolated from light-grown cells to form glutamyl-tRNA that could function as substrate for ALA synthesis. Glutamyl-tRNA reductase, which catalyzes pyridine nucleotide-dependent reduction of glutamyl-tRNA to glutamate-1-semialdehyde (GSA), was approximately fourfold greater in extracts of light-grown cells than in dark-grown cell extracts. GSA aminotransferase activity was detectable only in extracts of light-grown cells. These results indicate that both the tRNA and enzymes required for ALA synthesis from glutamate are regulated by light in Euglena. The results further suggest that ALA formation from glutamate in dark-grown Euglena cells may be limited by the absence of GSA aminotransferase activity.  相似文献   

8.
Exposure of dark grown resting Euglena to light induced the synthesis of chloroplast valyl-tRNA synthetase. Ethanol, a specific inhibitor of Euglena chloroplast development had little effect on chloroplast valyl-tRNA synthetase induction during the first 12 h of light exposure. Ethanol, however, completely inhibited enzyme synthesis between 12–72 h of light exposure. Malate, an alternative carbon source, had little effect on the photoinduction of valyl-tRNA synthetase. When dark grown resting cells were exposed to 2 h of light and returned to the dark, chloroplast valyl-tRNA synthetase continued to accumulate for 8–12 h at a rate which was less than the rate in cells maintained continuously in the light. The mutant strain W3BUL lacks detectable chloroplast DNA and phototransformable protochlorophyllide, but retains a plastid remnant. Exposure of strain W3BUL to light induced the synthesis of chloroplast valyl-tRNA synthetase and enzyme induction was not inhibited by ethanol. After 72 h of light exposure in the presence or absence of ethanol, enzyme levels in strain W3BUL were comparable to the levels found in the wildtype strain after 8–14 h of light exposure. These results suggest that the nonchloroplast photoreceptor regulates the initial phase of enzyme synthesis. Mutant strain W10BSmL differs from strain W3BUL in that the plastid remnant if present, is greatly reduced. Chloroplast valyl-tRNA synthetase was undetectable in the strain W10BSmL suggesting that the levels of active, cytoplasmically synthesized, chloroplast localized enzymes may be related to the developmental status of the chloroplast through the extent to which the enzyme precursor can be accumulated and or posttranslationally processed into an active enzyme within the chloroplast or chloroplast remnant.This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM26994, Biomedical support grant RR-0755 and funds from the Research Council, University of Nebraska  相似文献   

9.
During chloroplast development in Euglena, the activity of a specific DNase, Euglena alkaline DNase, increases in a manner similar to that of chlorophyll synthesis, but without the lag customarily associated with the early hours of chlorophyll synthesis. The increase in Euglena alkaline DNase activity is not inhibited by chloramphenicol or by streptomycin, but is inhibited by cycloheximide. Euglena alkaline DNase activity is present in a group of aplastidic substrains which contain carotenoids. These results are interpreted to mean that this chloroplast-related DNase is synthesized in the cytoplasm, and that the genetic information for this enzyme is probably nuclear.  相似文献   

10.
By use of specific immunochemical procedures, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase), antigen and catalytic activity were shown to have coincident step-patterns of accumulation during the cell cycle of Chlorella sorokiniana. Pulse-chase studies, employing radioactive sulfate, were performed during the period of rapid accumulation of enzyme activity and during the period of constant enzyme activity in the cell cycle. No degradation of RuBPCase antigen could be detected during either of these cell cycle periods. Thus, the step-pattern of accumulation of RuBPCase activity resulted from periodic synthesis of an enzyme that was stable under steady-state cell cycle conditions. Although inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide, at different times in the cell cycle in the light, resulted in rapid decay of RuBPCase activity, this loss in activity occurred without detectable loss in enzyme antigen. When synchronous cells were placed into the dark, to slow the rate of protein synthesis in the absence of cycloheximide, the levels of enzyme antigen and activity decreased by 30 and 50%, respectively, during the 10-hour dark period. Thus, in C. sorokiniana changes in RuBPCase activity do not necessarily reflect parallel changes in enzyme antigen, particularly when cell growth is perturbed by changes from steady-state cultural conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Mayer SM  Beale SI 《Plant physiology》1991,97(3):1094-1102
Wild-type Euglena gracillis cells synthesize the key chlorophyll precursor, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), from glutamate in their plastids. The synthesis requires transfer RNAGlu (tRNAGlu) and the three enzymes, glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, glutamyl-tRNA reductase, and glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase. Non-greening mutant Euglena strain W14ZNaIL does not synthesize ALA from glutamate and is devoid of the required tRNAGlu. Other cellular tRNAGlus present in the mutant cells were capable of being charged with glutamate, but the resulting glutamyl-tRNAs did not support ALA synthesis. Surprisingly, the mutant cells contain all three of the enzymes, and their cell extracts can convert glutamate to ALA when supplemented with tRNAGlu obtained from wild-type cells. Activity levels of the three enzymes were measured in extracts of cells grown under a number of light conditions. All three activities were diminished in extracts of cells grown in complete darkness, and full induction of activity required 72 hours of growth in the light. A light intensity of 4 microeinsteins per square meter per second was sufficient for full induction. Blue light was as effective as white light, but red light was ineffective, in inducing extractable enzyme activity above that of cells grown in complete darkness, indicating that the light control operates via the nonchloroplast blue light receptor in the mutant cells. Of the three enzyme activities, the one that is most acutely affected by light is glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase, as has been previously shown for wild-type Euglena cells. These results indicate that the enzymes required for ALA synthesis from glutamate are present in an active form in the nongreening mutant cells, even though they cannot participate in ALA formation in these cells because of the absence of the required tRNAGlu, and that the activity of all three enzymes is regulated by light. Because the absence of plastid tRNAGlu precludes the synthesis of proteins within the plastids, the three enzymes must be synthesized in the cytoplasm and their genes encoded in the nucleus in Euglena.  相似文献   

12.
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 W3BUL, enzyme levels were always higher in the dark than in the light.  相似文献   

13.
When dark grown Euglena are exposed to more than about 400 foot candles of white light, there is an exponential reduction in the specific activity of malate enzyme. The original activity is reduced by more than 90%. This reduction in malate enzyme is not inversely co-ordinate, in an Ames-Garry plot, which the production of chlorophyll.  相似文献   

14.
Euglena gracilis strain (Z) cells were synchronized under photoautotrophic conditions using a 14 hour light:10 hour dark regimen. The cells grew during the light period (growth phase) and divided during the following 10 hour period either in the dark or in the light (division phase). Changes in morphology of the pyrenoid and in the distribution of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) within the chloroplasts were followed by immunoelectron microscopy during the growth and division phases of Euglena cells. Epon-embedded sections were labeled with an antibody to the holoenzyme followed by protein A-gold. The immunoreactive proteins were concentrated in the pyrenoid, and less densely distributed in the stroma during the growth phase. During the division phase, the pyrenoid could not be detected and the gold particles were dispersed throughout the stroma. Toward the end of the division phase, the pyrenoid began to form in the center of a chloroplast, and the immunoreactive proteins started to concentrate over that rudimentary pyrenoid. During the growth phase, small areas rich in gold particles, called `satellite pyrenoid,' were observed, in addition to the main pyrenoid. From a comparison of photosynthetic CO2-fixation with the total carboxylase activity of Rubisco extracted from Euglena cells in the growth phase, it is suggested that the carboxylase in the pyrenoid functions in CO2-fixation in photosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
The R and M phase variants of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus were isolated. The growth rates in the dark and in the light in glucose-containing media were much higher for the Rba. sphaeroides R variant than for the M variant. For the Rba. capsulatus R and M variants, growth rates in the dark and in the light in fructose- or glucose-containing media differed insignificantly. The cells of Rba. sphaeroides and Rba. capsulatus phase variants growing in media with glucose and fructose exhibited differences in activity of the key enzymes of the Embden–Meyerhof–Parnas (EMP) and Entner–Doudoroff (ED) pathways. The oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) does not participate in glucose and fructose metabolism in the studied bacteria. Specific activity of the ED pathway enzymes was higher in dark-grown R and M variants of both Rba. sphaeroides and Rba. capsulatus than in the cells grown under light. Specific activity of the EMP enzymes was higher for the R and M variants of both cultures grown in the light than for those grown in the dark. Activities of the 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate and fructose bisphosphate aldolases, the key enzymes of the ED and EMP pathways in Rba. sphaeroides M variant grown in the medium with glucose in the light or in the dark, were approximately twice those of the R variant. In the medium with fructose activities of these enzymes in both R and M variants did not change significantly depending on growth conditions. Activities of the enzymes of the EMP and ED pathways in the extracts of the Rba. capsulatus R and M cells grown with glucose or fructose did not change significantly. Cultivation of Rba. sphaeroides and Rba. capsulatus phase variants in the medium with fructose resulted in a considerably increased synthesis of 1-phosphofructokinase. Induction of 1-phosphofructokinase synthesis in Rba. sphaeroides occurred only in the light, while in Rba. capsulatus induction of this enzyme in the medium with fructose was observed both in the dark and in the light. Thus, under aerobic conditions in the dark the phase variants of both bacteria probably assimilated glucose and fructose via the ED pathway, while in the light the EMP pathway was active.  相似文献   

16.
Regulation of polyamine biosynthesis during growth and differentation of Euglena gracilis was investigated. Increased activity of l-ornithine decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.17), the enzyme which catalyzes the initial step in polyamine synthesis in Euglena, and accumulation of polyamines were observed prior to DNA replication in synchronous cultures of heterotropically or photoautotrophically grown cells. In photoatotrophic cells three maxima of polyamine synthesis were observed during the light period of the cell cycle. The transition from quiescence of active growth was accompanied in heterotrophic Euglena by a very large stimulation of ornithine decaboxylase activity and polyamine synthesis; the decrease in growth potential of these cells was correlated with a decrease in polyamine levels. In contrast, differentiation of Euglena, i.e., a shift from heterotrophic to photoautotrophic mode of living in the absence of division, led only to a minor stimulation of polyamine biosynthesis. α-Methylornithine, an inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase, blocked the growth of heterotrophic Euglena, and depletion of intracellular polyamines decreased the differentiation rate. Both events could be reversed only by addition of putrescine to the growth medium. This study suggests that Euglena requires a minimal intracellular level of polyamines to grow and differentiate under optimal conditions. This requirement seems to be more stringent for cell division.  相似文献   

17.
Latzko E  Gibbs M 《Plant physiology》1969,44(2):295-300
Profile analyses of the enzymes comprising the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle have been performed in extracts of dark grown and greening Euglena gracilis var. bacillaris. Chlorella pyrenoidosa grown photoautotrophically, in the light with glucose or in the dark with glucose, Tolypothrix tenuis, Chromatium and leaves of spinach. Amounts of activity are compared with the level of photosynthetic CO2 fixation. Only in Chromatium were all enzyme activities sufficient to support the in vivo rate of CO2 fixation. In organisms other than Chromatium, some enzymes and particularly fructose 1,6-phosphatase and ribulose 1.5-diphosphate carboxylase appeared to be present in insufficient amounts to support the photosynthetic rate of the intact cell. Developmental studies with Euglena and growth studies with Chlorella led to the conclusion that these enzymes were associated with the cycle. Suppression of CO2 fixation in heterotrophically grown Chlorella was accompanied by a striking decrease in the same enzymes whose activities increased in greening Euglena.  相似文献   

18.
Chloroplast as a Locale of L-myo-Inositol-1-Phosphate Synthase   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Chloroplasts from 5 to 7 day old Vigna radiata seedling, grown under alternate light/dark conditions or from green Euglena gracilis Z. cells have been found to harbor L-myo-inositol-1-phosphate synthase (EC 5.5.1.4) activity. In contrast, dark-grown V. radiata seedlings, or streptomycin-bleached Euglena cells exhibit either reduced or no enzyme activity. An apparent enhancement of the chloroplastic inositol synthase by growth in presence of light is observed.  相似文献   

19.
Photoreactivating (PR) enzyme activity has already been demonstrated by us in cell-free extracts of Euglena gracilis var. bacillaris Pringsheim using the Hemophilus transformation assay. This activity can also be detected in extracts using a direct non-biological assay for the photorepair of thymine dimers in DNA. PR enzyme is found in extracts of both wild-type cells and cells of an aplastidic mutant, W3BUL, lacking detectable chloroplast DNA, indicating that the PR enzyme is neither coded nor translated exclusively in the chloroplast, but is probably coded in the nucleus and translated in the cytoplasm. Growing cultures of wild-type cells manifest a large increase in PR enzyme activity in vitro upon entering stationary phase. This correlates with the increased photoreactivability of chloroplast inheritance in vivo in stationary phase cells, previously found for Euglena, and suggests that a substantial part of the newly synthesized PR enzyme is available to repair plastid DNA. When dark-grown nondividing wild-type cells are exposed to light, there is a large increase in the specific activity of PR enzyme measured in vitro. This increase is prevented by cycloheximide but not by chloramphenicol or streptomycin, indicating that the enzyme is synthesized on 87s cytoplasmic ribosomes rather than 68s chloroplast ribosomes. Wavelengths of light effective for PR of chloroplast DNA in vivo are also effective for the light induction of PR enzyme. A brief illumination (45 min) of dark-grown nondividing wild-type cells triggers the synthesis of PR enzyme which continues in the absence of light. Growing cultures of W3BUL also exhibit a preferential synthesis of PR enzyme in the staionary phase of growth, but the specific activity in vitro is consistently ten times higher than that of wild-type. Dark-grown non-dividing cultures of W3BUL also show a cycloheximide-sensitive light induction of PR enzyme synthesis which, however, is dependent on the continued presence of light. The light induction of PR enzyme synthesis can be regarded as the induction of an enzyme by one of its substrates.  相似文献   

20.
Euglena gracilis showed a typical photoassimilation of propionate when cultured on propionate as a sole carbon source. While the acid is metabolized by the methylmalonyl-coenzyme A (CoA) pathway under illumination, supporting growth of Euglena (K. Hosotani, A. Yokota, Y. Nakano, and S. Kitaoka, 1980, Agr. Biol. Chem.44, 1097–1103), it does not allow the protozoon to grow in the dark although it was actively taken up and metabolized. Kinetics of incorporation of radioactivity of labeled propionate, trapping effect of exogenous lactate in the incorporation of labeled propionate and radiorespirometric pattern revealed that propionate was metabolized by the lactate pathway in Euglena in the dark. Enzymes involved in the lactate pathway were located in mitochondria. The reason why Euglena can not grow on propionate in the dark is explained by the failure of producing C4 dicarboxylic acids essential for biosynthesis of amino acids and sugars, like the mitochondrial oxidation of fatty acids in higher animals. The Euglena cells cultured in the dark contained enzymes of both methylmalonyl-CoA and lactate pathways, but lack of photosynthetically generated ATP has been suggested to force Euglena to select the less-ATP-requiring but futile pathway.  相似文献   

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