Abstract

Plasma carnosinase deficiency was discovered in a 12-yr-old male with profound mental retardation, severe athetoid spastic quadriparesis, optic atrophy, sensory peripheral neuropathy, and suprabulbar signs. Amino acid analysis revealed persistent carnosinuria but no detectable carnosinemia. After ingestion of L-carnosine (100 mg/kg), the patient had carnosine in his plasma and excreted 28% of the administered load as carnosine (an agematched control excreted 1.3% as carnosine). Urinary 1-methylhistidine was measurable in the patient and increased greatly during a high anserine diet. Plasma carnosinase activity in the patient was 0.28 mumoles per ml plasma per hr (control mean, 2.00; range, 1.10--2.85), his parents had activity of 1.36 and 1.30, and 2 sibs had activities of 1.10 and 1.86. Carnosinase activity in liver from the patient was 43% of control liver. We have demonstrated that carnosinase activity is present in human nerve and that sural nerve from the patient had activity that was 46% of control nerve. Histopathologic examination of the patient's nerve showed axonal degeneration. Histidine levels in the patient's liver and nerve were normal, and neither beta-alanine nor carnosine was detectable. The unusually high residual carnosinase activity in plasma and tissues from this patient may explain his apparent ability to metabolize anserine and would suggest that this represents a new variant form of carnosinase deficiency. Speculation. Carnosinuria due to plasma carnosinase deficiency may be merely associated with the strinking neurologic findings that have been reported rather than causally related.

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