Abstract
The peroxisomal enzyme, urate oxidase (EC 1.7.3.3), and the next enzyme of the urate pathway, allantoinase (EC 3.5.2.5), demonstrate a lightmediated rise of activity in the cotyledons of mustard (Sinapis alba L.). The capacity of the peroxisomes for urate breakdown, marked by the time course of urate oxidase, develops distinctly later than the two other peroxisome functions (fatty acid breakdown, “glyoxysomal” function; glycolate breakdown, “leaf peroxisomal” function). The light effect on urate oxidase and allantoinase is mediated through the phytochrome system in all three seedling organs (cotyledons, hypocotyl, radicle), as revealed by induction/reversion experiments with red/far-red light pulses and continuous irradiation with far-red light (high irradiance reaction of phytochrome). Both enzyme activities can be induced by phytochrome in the seedling cotyledons only during a sensitive period of about 48 h prior to the actual light-mediated rise of activity, making it necessary to assume the existence of a long-lived intermediate (“transmitter”) in the signal response chain connecting enzyme formation to the phytochrome system. Detailed kinetic investigation, designed to test whether urate oxidase and allantoinase are controlled by phytochrome via the same signal response chain (coordinate induction), revealed large differences between the two enzymes: (i) a different onset of the loss of reversibility of a red light induction by a far-red light pulse (=onset of transmitter formation=coupling point; 48 h/24 h after sowing for urate oxidase/allantoinase); (ii) a different onset of the response (=onset of competence for transmitter= starting point; 72 h/48 h); (iii) full loss of reversibility (=completion of transmitter formation) is reached at different times (independence point, 90 h/52 h). These differences show that phytochrome controls urate oxidase and allantoinase via separate signal response chains. While urate oxidase can be localized in the peroxisomal fraction isolated from crude organelle extracts of the cotyledons by density gradient centrifugation, most of the allantoinase activity found in the peroxisomal fraction did not appear to be an integral part of the peroxisome but originated presumably from adhering membrane fragments.

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