Anomalous effects of cycloheximide on phenylalanine ammonia-lyase: role of synthesis and inactivation in leaf disks of helianthus annuus*☆

1974 
Abstract The activity of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) increases dramatically in leaf disks of sunflower (Helianthus annuus) cultured on 0.1 M sucrose in the dark. If disks are subsequently transferred to water, PAL activity decays rapidly. After inactivation the level of PAL can be increased again by transferring the tissue back to sucrose. The initial increase in PAL activity appears to involve an increase in the rate of PAL formation and the appearance is inhibited by cycloheximide. Inactivation of the enzyme is also inhibited by cycloheximide. A comparison of cycloheximide inhibition at different concentrations showed that inactivation was much more sensitive to the inhibitor than PAL formation. The rate of PAL inactivation was very low in fresh disks placed directly on water ( t 1/2 = > 1 day) but increased greatly after culture on sucrose ( t 1/2 = 2 to 4 hr). Therefore, culture appears to increase PAL inactivation as well as PAL formation. Reappearance of PAL activity after inactivation is stimulated rather than inhibited by cycloheximide. The change in effect of cycloheximide from inhibition to apparent stimulation can best be explained by the observation that (1) the turnover of PAL, both formation and inactivation, increases greatly as a result of culture on sucrose and (2) inactivation is more sensitive to cycloheximide than formation. Thus, even where an anomalous cycloheximide insensitive appearance of PAL activity occurs, a mechanism other than reactivation of the enzyme may be involved.
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