Abstract

The inheritance of a deficient delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase (ALA-D; synonym: porphobilinogen synthase; EC 4.2.1.24) was studied in blood samples of two families over three generations. The propositus in each family was a young male acute hepatic porphyria patient with an almost complete ALA-D deficiency in the homozygous state (ALA-D activity less than 2% of controls). Heterozygotes are clinically non-affected (mean ALA-D 36% of controls). The mode of transmission could be traced by enzyme activity and electrophoretic polymorphism studies. Heterozygotes are detected by the demonstration of enzyme activity in the gel. The notation D was used for the gene expressing the defective enzyme. The "phenotype" D-1 was observed in six, the "phenotype" D-2 in three of all heterozygotes studied. These results are compatible with a single normal allele in heterozygotes responsible for enzyme activity. Quantitative assays and the segregation pattern in both families suggest a 3-allele-system for the inheritance of ALA-D deficiency.

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