Abstract

Propionyl-CoA carboxylase and combined methylmalonyl-CoA (MMA-CoA) racemase and -mutase activities were studied in liver and fibroblasts of two patients with the acute neonatal form of nonketotic hyperglycemia. In all experiments, these enzyme activities studied in tissues of the patients were within the range of healthy control subjects, whereas no propionyl-CoA carboxylase activity was measurable in the fibroblasts of a patient with propionic acidemia. Subcellular fractionation of liver and fibroblasts indicated that the normal amounts of MMA-CoA found after incubation of whole tissue homogenate were formed by propionyl-CoA carboxylase, a mitochondrial enzyme, and not be acetyl-CoA carboxylase, which theoretically could also be involved in the carboxylation of propionyl-CoA. From the above data as well as from clinical and biochemical observations in three patients, it was concluded that there exists a true nonketotic hyperglycinemia which is not related etiologically to the different disorders of the ketotic hyperglycinemia syndrome. True nonketotic hyperglycinemia is not associated with ketoacidosis even after loading with propionate- and MMA precursors. It must be distinguished by exclusion from mild forms of the ketotic hyperglycinemia syndrome which may present clinically as hyperglycinemia without ketosis.

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