Abstract

Erythrocytes from 11 patients with presumptive diagnoses of transient erythroblastopenia of childhood were evaluated retrospectively (six) or prospectively (five) for a possible relationship between erythrocyte adenosine 5′-monophosphate aminohydrolase, adenylic acid deaminase (AMP deaminase) activity and intracellular concentrations of adenine nucleotides. Older red blood cell (RBC) cohorts in these patients consistently exhibited significantly decreased activities of AMP deaminase (approximately 5% to 70% of normal control mean) in association with increased concentrations (up to threefold) of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and total adenine nucleotides. We postulate that the latter is a direct consequence of the former, since diminishing AMP deaminase activity in aging cells should reduce the drain on the adenine nucleotide pool imposed by irreversible deamination of AMP to inosine 5′-monophosphate. Consistent reductions in AMP deaminase activity indicate that this enzyme should also serve as a reliable marker of mean RBC age useful in diagnostic confirmation of transient erythroblastopenia. The observed increases in ATP and total adenine nucleotides in older RBCs require a reevaluation of the traditional view that age-related losses of these compounds mediate the ultimate demise of senescent erythrocytes. Similar alterations in the balance of degradative and salvage pathways in RBC nucleotide metabolism may also underlie certain cases of so-called “high ATP syndrome.”

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