Abstract

The incorporation of radioactivity from [1-14C]-galactose into TCA-precipitable material was determined in skin fibroblasts derived from 11 galactosemic patients deficient in galactose 1-phosphate uridyl transferase (GALT-). "R" ratios (designated the R phenotype) were defined as the ratio between [14C]galactose incorporation and [3H]leucine incorporation. Results were expressed as a percentage of the controls. In the GALT-strains this ratio varied from strain to strain, presumably depending on the efficiency of the secondary route via the UDP-galactose pyrophosphorylase pathway. In 10 GALT-patients without late serious clinical manifestations, the R phenotype varied from 37 to 57% of the control value. In the 11th patient, the R phenotype was only 20% of the control. Thus, we obtained a significantly lower R phenotype in one patient who was distinguished from the others by having very severe delayed neurological complications, although compliance to galactose-free diet was good. We suggest that, in this patient, the development of the UDP-galactose pyrophosphorylase pathway was not sufficient to ensure the availability of enough galactose for the necessary synthesis of glycoproteins and glycolipids. Thus the R phenotype may be an indicator of the risk of late neurological complications. The determination of the R phenotype of GALT-patients may therefore be valuable. However, further investigations of galactosemic patients with neurological complications are required to confirm this relationship.

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