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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The overactivity of
PRPP synthetase
is transmitted as a sex-linked abnormality, being characterized by uric acid overproduction and, in some patients, by muscular hypotonia, neurosensitive deafness and/or ataxia. The pathogenesis of these neurologic abnormalities is not yet known. The CSF concentrations of end products of the neuronal metabolism of purines--hypoxanthine for the adenine nucleotides and xanthine for guanine nucleotides--have not been previously studied in patients with overactivity of
PRPP synthetase
. We have evaluated the plasma and CSF levels of hypoxanthine and xanthine in a 8-year-old male with tophaceous gout and neurosensitive deafness and in his mother, who had gout without neurological involvement.
PRPP synthetase
overactivity was demonstrated in fibroblast culture; the male was hemizygote and his mother was heterozygotic. In 4 normal individuals, the plasma levels of hypoxanthine and xanthine were 1.7 +/- 0.4 microM and 0.9 +/- 0.2 microM (mean +/-
SEM
), respectively, while in in CSF they were 3.3 +/- 1.1 microM and 2.0 +/- 0.2 microM. The hemizygote male showed a considerable increase in hypoxanthine level (5.6 microM in plasma and 22.1 microM in CSF); the plasma and CSF xanthine levels were 1.8 and 4.5 microM, respectively. The heterozygotic female showed moderately increased plasma hypoxanthine levels (3.9 and 10.6 microM) and normal xanthine levels (1.3 and 1.8 microM). These results suggest an increase in the degradation of purine nucleotides in the central nervous system of patients with
PRPP synthetase
overactivity and neurological symptoms. The predominance of hypoxanthine over xanthine may indicate a greater increase of the degradation of adenine rather than guanine nucleotides.
...
PMID:[Metabolism of purine nucleotides in the central nervous system in patients with phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase hyperactivity and neurosensory deafness]. 216 66
A series of compounds that induce depletion of ATP and Pi when added to isolated rat hepatocytes were found to cause a remarkable, although transient, elevation in the concentration of phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) in these cells. After the addition of 5 mM fructose, xylitol, tagatose, or D-xylulose, PRPP increased from a basal value of 6 +/- 1 nmol/g of cells to, respectively, 68 +/- 11, 42 +/- 11, 67 +/- 22, and 530 +/- 50 nmol/g of cells (means +/-
SEM
of 3-9 experiments). In each case, the increase in PRPP was preceded by a latency period of 5-10 min. PRPP reached maximal levels 15 min after the addition of fructose and 30 min after that of xylitol and D-xylulose, but continued to increase for as long as 60 min after the addition of tagatose. Most striking was that the increase in PRPP closely paralleled the restoration of intracellular Pi. Ribose 5-P increased about two- to fivefold after the addition of fructose, xylitol, and tagatose, and approximately 12-fold after D-xylulose. The mechanism by which ATP- and Pi-depleting compounds stimulate the activity of
PRPP synthetase
in isolated rat hepatocytes is discussed.
...
PMID:Increase in phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate induced by ATP and Pi depletion in hepatocytes. 246 15