Abstract: | During initial exposure to 40 nanomolar propargylglycine (PAG), Lemna paucicostata colonies undergo abnormal fragmentation and a lag in frond emergence, most severe at 24 to 48 hours. Thereafter, frond emergence resumes and the frond/colony ratio rises. Such `adapted' plants withstand subculture into the same concentration of PAG without fragmentation or decreases in frond emergence, and display enhanced tolerance to higher concentrations. Adaptation is not dependent upon outgrowth of a few preexisting especially tolerant plants. Exogenous methionine prevents these events and overcomes the PAG-induced lag in frond emergence even after it is underway. These changes in frond emergence are not reflected in the rates of protein and wet weight accumulation which decrease by about 25% during the first 24 hours and continue unchanged thereafter. Cystathionine γ-synthase activity rapidly decreases to 9% of control during the first 12 hours of exposure to 40 nanomolar PAG but thereafter climbs to 12% of control. Studies of the uptake and internal concentration of PAG during these events are reported. Exposure to a combination of 36 micromolar lysine plus 3 micromolar threonine is an alternative means to bring about sublethal methionine deprivation. Thus exposed, Lemna undergoes an analogous sequence of effects on morphology and growth which are preventable by exogenous methionine and which lead to an adapted state. Cystathionine γ-synthase specific activity in plants adapted to 36 micromolar lysine plus 3 micromolar threonine is 1.8 times control. However, addition of PAG showed that under these conditions enzyme activity can be decreased to as little as 54% of control without affecting the growth rate. Together these results suggest that adaptation is related to methionine limitation and that the plants adjust, in part, by increasing the steady-state concentrations of cystathionine γ-synthase and other enzymes in the methionine pathway. |