Exposure of Chlorella vulgaris to elevated concentrations of copper, chromium, nickel and zinc led to intracellular
accumulation of high concentrations of these metals. Concomitantly, accumulation of free proline occurred,
depending on the concentration of metals in the external medium or in the cell. The greater the toxicity or
accumulation of a metal, the greater the amount of intracellular proline in algal cells. However, higher
concentrations of copper and chromium were inhibitory to proline accumulation by the test organism. The
accumulation of proline was triggered within a few hours of metal treatment. Test metals also induced lipid
peroxidation; copper was the most efficient inducer whereas zinc was the least. Pretreatment of C. vulgaris with
proline counteracted metal-induced lipid peroxidation and potassium ion efflux. Thus the present work shows a
protective effect of proline on metal toxicity through inhibition of lipid peroxidation.