Electrophoretic and functional variants of NADH-methemoglobin reductase in hereditary methemoglobinemia

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

The electrophoretic mobility and activity of NADH-methemoglobin reductase in erythrocytes of patients with hereditary methemoglobinemia, obligatory heterozygotes, and normal subjects were examined. Six distinct electrophoretic variants were found in studies of erythrocytes from members of ten different families. Five variants (Boston Slow, Duarte, Princeton, Puerto Rico, and California) were associated with significant methemoglobinemia and moderate to marked decreases in enzymic activity. Precise correlations between levels of NADH-methemoglobin reductase activity, electrophoretic mobility, and clinical severity of methemoglobinemia, however, could not be drawn. One variant (Boston Fast) was associated with almost normal activity and very minimal methemoglobinemia. Nine members from three generations of two Italian families were found to have two bands with NADH-methemoglobin reductase activity in their erythrocytes, one with normal mobility and one with a mobility identical with that of Boston Fast. No functional or clinical impairment could be attributed to this abnormality. The observations made in this investigation were consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance of multiple alleles for NADH-methemoglobin reductase. As has been shown to be true for hemoglobin and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, multiple aberrations in the NADH-methemoglobin reductase of human erythrocytes apparently exist, some with and some without functional consequences.

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