N-Methyl mesoporphyrin IX, an inhibitor of heme synthesis, increases extractable 8-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) synthase activity when administered to growing cultures of Euglena gracilis Klebs strain Z Pringsheim in micromolar concentrations. Wild-type light-grown green cells and white aplastidic cells exhibited 2.8-fold and 1.8-fold increases, respectively, in ALA synthase activity within five to six hours after incubation with 4 x 106 molar N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX. Protoheme levels were decreased and 59Fe incorporation into heme was inhibited by N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX, indicating that, as in animal cells, N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX acts specifically to block iron insertion into protoporphyrin IX. Chlorophyll synthesis in wild-type cells was not affected within the first 6 hours after administration of N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX. In animals, fungi, and bacteria, the first identified step hepatic ALA synthase within 4 h after injection into mice. We now report that N-methyl mesoporphyrin IX increases extractable ALA synthase activity, inhibits incorporation of exogenous 59Feinto heme in vivo, and diminishes heme levels in Euglena, but has no effect on Chl formation within the first 6 h after administration.MATERIALS AND METHODS Cultures of Euglena gracilis Klebs strain Z Pringsheim and an aplastidic mutant derived from this strain, W14ZNa 1 L (23), were kindly provided by H. Lyman (State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY). Cells were grown at 23°C and 32 ltE m-2s-' of cool white and red fluorescent light in a glucose-based heterotrophic medium as previously described (6). Cell population densities were determined with a Coulter Counter (Model ZBI, Coulter Electronics). Chl was extracted into methanol and quantitated by spectrophotometry, using the absorption coefficients of MacKinney (19). ALA synthase was extracted and assayed by the methods previously reported (6), except that cells were disrupted by sonication for four periods using a Sonifier (Model W 185, Heat Systems-Ultrasonics), and ALA was measured by condensation with ethyl acetoacetate at pH 6.8 (18) followed by color development with Ehrlich Hg reagent (26). Spectrophotometry was performed on a Cary Model 219 instrument (Varian).Protoheme was extracted by slight modification of the method of Stillman and Gassman (25). All operations were carried out at ice temperature. Cells were extracted with three 5-ml portions of 90% acetone containing 10-2 M NH40H. These extracts were discarded. The cells were then extracted with 2 ml acetone containing 2% HCI. A second l-ml acetone-HCl extraction supernatant was added to the first, and then 2 ml peroxide-free diethyl ether were added to the combined acetone extracts. After mixing, 6 ml H20 were added, the solution was thoroughly mixed, and briefly centrifuged to separate the phases. The upper ether phase was removed and the lower phase was extracted with I ml ether. The combined heme-containing ether phases were backwashed once with 1 ml H20. After evaporation of the ether, protoheme was de...