Activity levels and properties of acid alpha-glucosidase from liver and neutral alpha-glucosidase from sera of cystic fibrosis patients and controls.
Publication/Presentation Date
12-9-1981
Abstract
The average activity levels of acid alpha-glucosidase are comparable in liver supernatant fluids for 15 cystic fibrosis patients and 12 controls (401 +/- 131 and 347 +/- 109 nmol/h/mg protein, respectively) and no significant differences were found for the cystic fibrosis and control liver acid alpha-glucosidases in their (a) apparent Km values for the 4-methylumbelliferyl substrate (1.1 mmol/l), (b) pH optima (4.2) and thermostability curves and (c) isoelectric profiles (one form with an isoelectric point of 4.5 +/- 0.2). In contrast, average neutral alpha-glucosidase activity levels were significantly increased (p less than 0.0002) in sera from 21 cystic fibrosis patients compared to 15 controls (10.7 and 2.7 nmol/h/ml). This increased activity is not due to (a) different stability upon storage at --20 degrees C, (b) the presence of activators in cystic fibrosis sera or inhibitors in normal sera (as determined by mixing studies), (c) altered Km values or (d) altered pH optima curves. Cystic fibrosis serum neutral alpha-glucosidase appears to be more thermostable and has a consistently altered isoelectric profile (greater percentage of activity above pI 4.8) when compared to the normal serum enzyme. This altered isoelectric composition may reflect changes in neutral alpha-glucosidase which contribute to its increased activity in cystic fibrosis sera.
Volume
117
Issue
2
First Page
227
Last Page
237
ISSN
0009-8981
Published In/Presented At
Alhadeff, J. A., Thom, D., & Holzinger, R. T. (1981). Activity levels and properties of acid alpha-glucosidase from liver and neutral alpha-glucosidase from sera of cystic fibrosis patients and controls. Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry, 117(2), 227–237. https://doi.org/10.1016/0009-8981(81)90042-5
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
7030525
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article