Abstract

Wild-type cells of the unicellular rhodophyte, Cyanidium caldarium, synthesize chlorophyll a, phycobiliproteins, and heme from δ-aminolevulinic acid during light-dependent chloroplast development but are unable to make photosynthetic pigments in the dark. C. caldarium, mutant GGB-Y, is an obligate heterotroph which, in the light, produces a chloroplast devoid of photosynthetic pigments. The present investigation has shown that δ-aminolevulinic acid is synthesized in cells of mutant GGB-Y incubated with levulinic acid, a competitive inhibitor of δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase (the second enzyme in the porphyrin biosynthetic pathway). In vivo, cells of mutant GGB-Y preferentially incorporated C 1 of glutamate and α-ketoglutarate into the C 5 fragment (formaldehyde) of δ-aminolevulinic acid after alkaline periodate degradation. This suggested that δ-aminolevulinic acid arises directly from the carbon skeleton of glutamate and α-ketoglutaric acid. The pattern of incorporation of C 3, C 4, and C 5 of α-ketoglutarate into the C 1–C 4 (succinic acid) fragment of δ-aminolevulinic acid after alkaline periodate degradation was consistent with the origin of δ-aminolevulinic acid from a five-carbon precursor. C 1 and C 2 of glycine and C 2 and C 3 of succinate were incorporated into both the formaldehyde and succinate fragments of δ-aminolevulinic acid in a manner inconsistent with condensation of glycine and succinyl CoA by δ-aminolevulinic acid synthetase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the porphyrin pathway in animals and bacteria. Extracts of the soluble protein from cells of mutant GGB-Y displayed a Soret band at 410 nm indicating the presence of hemoproteins. This shows that mutant GGB-Y cells synthesize heme. The respiration of radiolabeled glutamate, α-ketoglutarate, and glycine to 14CO 2 is consistent with the existence of mitochondrial cytochromes in cells of mutant GGB-Y and with the ability of the mutant to synthesize δ-aminolevulinic acid. The present results suggest that δ-aminolevulinic acid is synthesized directly from glutamate or α-ketoglutarate and that this is the only process by which the rate-limiting intermediate in the porphyrin pathway is synthesized in C. caldarium. If correct, the rate-limiting, regulative enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway for synthesis of chlorophyll a, bile pigment (phycocyanobilin), and heme must have been completely different in the evolutionary antecedents of modern-day plants and animals.

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