ABSTRACICarboxymethoxylamine (amino-oxyacetate), methoxylamine, and acethydrazide are shown to be effective, although not completely specific, inhibitors of glycine oxidation by the isolated glycine decarboxylase multienzyme complex, mitochondria, protoplasts, and leaf discs from peas. The inhibition probably results from a reaction between these compounds and the pyridoxal 5-phosphate cofactor of the enzyme.The glycine decarboxylase multienzyme complex is a mitochondrial enzyme that is responsible for the photorespiratory oxidation of glycine. The enzyme complex is composed of at least four subunits: The P protein3 (PLP binding); the H protein (lipoamide containing); the T protein (THF binding); and the L protein (dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase) according to the nomenclature of Kikuchi (5). The enzyme complex has been solubilized from pea leaf mitochondria in an active form (1 1) and purified to near homogeneity (12). The complex catalyzes the release of "'CO2 from [1-"'C]glycine dependent on the addition of PLP, THF, and NAD. It also catalyzes the exchange of "'CO2 with the carboxyl carbon of glycine and the synthesis of glycine from methylene THF, NADH, CO2, and NH4,. The isolated enzyme complex has a mol wt of about 290,000 and shows a strong dependence on the addition of DTT for full activity.Because of the unique role of this enzyme in photorespiration, substantial effort has been directed towards the identification of inhibitors of this enzyme. To date, three classes of inhibitors have been found: (a) compounds that react with PLP bound to the P protein, e.g. INH and cyanide; (b) compounds that react with the lipoamide cofactor of the H protein, like arsenite (1 1); and (c) structural analogs of glycine, such as aminoacetonitrile (16) and glycine hydroxamate (6). INH was the first reported inhibitor of glycine decarboxylase (10). It inhibits glycine oxidation by reacting with the PLP cofactor of the enzyme and is reasonably specific in that it shows little inhibition of photosynthesis under nonphotorespiratory conditions (13). INH, however, has limited usefulness because of the high concentrations (13) or '