Literature DB >> 276529

ATP depletion, a possible role in the pathogenesis of hyperuricemia in glycogen storage disease type I.

H L Greene, F A Wilson, P Hefferan, A B Terry, J R Moran, A E Slonim, T H Claus, I M Burr.   

Abstract

Other investigators have shown that fructose infusion in normal man and rats acutely depletes hepatic ATP and P(i) and increases the rate of uric acid formation by the degradation of preformed nucleotides. We postulated that a similar mechanism of ATP depletion might be present in patients with glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency (GSD-I) as a result of ATP consumption during glycogenolysis and resulting excess glycolysis. The postulate was tested by measurement of: (a) hepatic content of ATP, glycogen, phosphorylated sugars, and phosphorylase activities before and after increasing glycolysis by glucagon infusion and (b) plasma urate levels and urate excretion before and after therapy designed to maintain blood glucose levels above 70 mg/dl and thus prevent excess glycogenolysis and glycolysis. Glucagon infusion in seven patients with GSD-I caused a decrease in hepatic ATP from 2.25 +/- 0.09 to 0.73 +/- 0.06 mumol/g liver (P <0.01), within 5 min, persisting in one patient to 20 min (1.3 mumol/g). Three patients with GSD other than GSD-I (controls), and 10 normal rats, showed no change in ATP levels after glucagon infusion. Glucagon caused an increase in hepatic phosphorylase activity from 163 +/- 21 to 311 +/- 17 mumol/min per g protein (P <0.01), and a decrease in glycogen content from 8.96 +/- 0.51 to 6.68 +/- 0.38% weight (P <0.01). Hepatic content of phosphorylated hexoses measured in two patients, showed the following mean increases in response to glucagon; glucose-6-phosphate (from 0.25 to 0.98 mumol/g liver), fructose-6-phosphate (from 0.17 to 0.45 mumol/g liver), and fructose-1,6-diphosphate (from 0.09 to 1.28 mumol/g) within 5 min. These changes, except for glucose-6-phosphate, returned toward preinfusion levels within 20 min. Treatment consisted of continuous intragastric feedings of a high glucose dietary mixture. Such treatment increased blood glucose from a mean level of 62 (range 28-96) to 86 (range 71-143) mg/dl (P <0.02), decreased plasma glucagon from a mean of 190 (range 171-208) to 56 (range 30-70) pg/ml (P <0.01), but caused no significant change in insulin levels. Urate output measured in three patients showed an initial increase, coinciding with a decrease in plasma lactate and triglyceride levels, then decreased to normal within 3 days after treatment. Normalization of urate excretion was associated with normalization of serum uric acid. We suggest that the maintenance of blood glucose levels above 70 mg/dl is effective in reducing serum urate levels and that transient and recurrent depletion of hepatic ATP due to glycogenolysis is contributory in the genesis of hyperuricemia in untreated patients with GSD-I.

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Year:  1978        PMID: 276529      PMCID: PMC371769          DOI: 10.1172/JCI109132

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Invest        ISSN: 0021-9738            Impact factor:   14.808


  38 in total

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5.  Studies on carbohydrate metabolism in rat liver slices. III. Utilization of glucose and fructose by liver from normal and diabetic animals.

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8.  Hepatic ATP concentrations and glycolytic enzyme activities in Reye syndrome.

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10.  The pathogenesis of hyperuricemia in glycogen storage disease, type I.

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4.  Basis for the control of purine biosynthesis by purine ribonucleotides.

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6.  Hyperuricemia in glycogen storage disease type I. Contributions by hypoglycemia and hyperglucagonemia to increased urate production.

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7.  Elevated glucose represses liver glucokinase and induces its regulatory protein to safeguard hepatic phosphate homeostasis.

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8.  Untargeted plasma metabolomics identifies broad metabolic perturbations in glycogen storage disease type I.

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Review 10.  Sugar, uric acid, and the etiology of diabetes and obesity.

Authors:  Richard J Johnson; Takahiko Nakagawa; L Gabriela Sanchez-Lozada; Mohamed Shafiu; Shikha Sundaram; Myphuong Le; Takuji Ishimoto; Yuri Y Sautin; Miguel A Lanaspa
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