Abstract

The activity of adenine deaminase (ADA) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) as potential nutritional markers was analyzed in an experimental model. Weanling Wistar rats were fed a protein-free diet ad libitum to obtain a severe degree of wasting. An age-matched control group received a stock diet. At the end of the experiment, body weight (BW) and thymus weight (TW) were determined. Activity of ADA and PNP was determined on thymocytes of protein-deprived and control rats; the results, expressed as micromoles of uric acid × 10 −1/W (W = TW/BW 0.75), were 17.0 ± 2.6 versus 9.1 ± 3.0 for ADA and 11.5 ± 4.2 versus 3.9 ± 1.0 for PNP ( P < 0.01). These results suggest that the nutritional stress provoked by the administration of a protein-free diet from weaning onward affects the development of thymocytes. Moreover, the increase in the activity of ADA and PNP would be an alternative mechanism to avoid the accumulation of high levels of deoxynucleotides, which would be toxic for T lymphocytes. However, some investigators have observed an increase of ADA activity in human serum under some adverse conditions; for this reason and taking into account the present findings, it would be interesting to determine the relation between the actvity of ADA and PNP in thymocytes and serum in experimental models to analyze and propose these biochemical parameters as potential and useful markers of nutritional status; it also would be interesting to test this relation in human studies.

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