Abstract

Using 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy, energy metabolism in calf muscles of two patients with biochemically and genetically proven muscular phosphofructokinase deficiency, and an asymptomatic heterozygote was monitored during isometric foot plantarflexion performed under aerobic and anaerobic conditions and in the aerobic recovery phases. In the heterozygote only a moderate alteration from normal was found in terms of an elevated ATP demand during exercise. In the homozygote, hexose phosphates, indicated as phosphomonoesters, increased dramatically during contraction. Phosphomonoester accumulation resulted in consumption of free inorganic phosphate (P i). During ischemic exercise the absence of glycolytic ATP formation resulted in a linear time course of phosphocreatine breakdown and a moderate alkalinization. During the recovery, phosphocreatine resynthesis showed a biphasic time course, indicating that mitochondrial function itself was not directly affected. At first glance, the early depletion of P i below initial resting levels and the rate of phosphate splitting from sugar phosphates seemed to become the limiting factor for the rate of the oxidative phosphorylation and creatine kinase reaction. However, the actual concentrations of P i and ADP estimated at the onset of delay were too high to exclusively explain the dramatic delay in PCr resynthesis. For this reason, a reduced turnover of the citric acid cycle was assumed, which was caused by the complete absence of glycolysis in PFK deficiency patients. Furthermore, results from PFK deficiency patients were compared with previous findings from myophosphorylase deficiency patients in the literature.

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