Studies on Chloroplast Development and Replication in Euglena

Abstract
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.It is also shown that different bleached substrains exhibit substantial variation, both in total carotenoids and in Euglena alkaline DNase activity. These results are discussed in terms of the possibility that a cytoplasmic photoreceptor system is influencing the light-induced increase in Euglena alkaline DNase activity.