Abstract
Cultured human skin fibroblasts from 9 patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and 8 normal age- and sex-matched controls were examined for creatine kinase (CK) activity. Both the normal and the DMD fibroblasts were found to have significant levels of CK activity (approximately 10 x 10(-3) IU per milligram of fibroblast protein). The control cells had slightly higher CK activity than the DMD lines, but this difference was not significant (0.2 less than P less than 0.1). The MM (muscle) isozyme, the BB (brain) isozyme, and the MB (hybrid) isozyme, of CK were found to be present in fibroblasts. The isozymes were separated by electrophoresis and the relative amount of each was determined for both normal and DMD cells. In normal fibroblasts, approximately 48% of the total CK activity was of the MM type, 40% was of the BB type, and 12% was of the MB type with no significant differences apparent between normal and DMD groups. The presence in human fibroblasts of significant levels of CK activity with a characteristic isozyme profile is an important consideration for studies of this "marker" enzyme in the pseudohypertrophic muscle of DMD.
Published Version
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