Disparate Enzyme Activity in Erythrocytes and Leukocytes. A VARIANT OF HYPOXANTHINE PHOSPHORIBOSYL-TRANSFERASE DEFICIENCY WITH AN UNSTABLE ENZYME
Open Access
- 1 August 1973
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 52 (8) , 2068-2074
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci107391
Abstract
A family is reported in which each of two sisters has a son with no detectable hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) (EC 2. 4. 2. 8) in his erythrocytes, a finding considered pathognomonic of Lesch-Nyhan disease. However, neither has the stigmata of the disease. One boy is neurologically normal, and the other is moderately retarded. There was only a slight increase in urinary uric acid, but the amounts of hypoxanthine and xanthine, and their ratios, were similar to those found in Lesch-Nyhan disease, strongly indicating that excesses of these last two oxypurines are not responsible for the symptomatology in that disease. In contrast to the nondetectable HPRT activity in the red blood cells, leukocyte lysates from the two boys have 10-15% of normal activity, possibly reflecting continuing synthesis of an unstable enzyme. This hypothesis is supported by the demonstration that at 4 degrees C HPRT activity was rapidly lost in the propositus while the activity increased in control subjects. The mother's cells were intermediate between the two. The intact and disrupted leukocytes of the hemizygote, in the absence of added phosphoribosyl converted as much hypoxanthine to inosinate as the normal cell, and appropriate tests indicated that under these circumstances enzyme concentration is not rate limiting whereas the concentration of the cosubstrate, phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate, is. The capacity for normal function in the intact mutant cell is more representative of in vivo conditions than the lysate, which may explain the important modification of clinical symptomatology, the relatively mild hyperuricosuria, and the presence of mosaicism in the circulating blood cells of the heterozygotes. A similar explanation may apply to other genetic diseases in which incomplete but severe enzyme deficiencies are found in clinically normal individuals. An associated deficiency in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in this family permitted confirmation of previous observations on linkage with hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hemizygous Expression of Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase in Erythrocytes of Heterozygotes for the Lesch-Nyhan SyndromeProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1970
- Elevated AMP pyrophosphorylase activity in congenital IMP pyrophosphorylase deficiencey (Lesch-Nyhan disease).1969
- Familial hyperlysinemia with lysine-ketoglutarate reductase insufficiencyJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969
- Hypoxanthine-Guanine Phosphoribosyltransferase Deficiency in GoutAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1969
- Absence of mosaicism in the lymphocyte in X-linked congenital hyperuricosuriaLife Sciences, 1968
- Kinetic Studies of Hypoxanthine-Guanine PhosphoribosyltransferaseJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1968
- In vivo lability of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in GdA- and Gdmediterranean deficiencyJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1968
- Diagnostic test for congenital hyperuricemia with central nervous system dysfunction.1968
- Determination of uric acid. An adaptation of the Archibald method on the autoanalyzer.1967
- SOME STUDIES OF ENZYMES IN CULTIVATED HUMAN CELLS.1964