Level of residual enzyme activity modulates the phenotype in phosphoglycerate kinase deficiency

John Vissing, H Orhan Akman, Jan Aasly, Stephen G Kahler, Carlos A Bacino, Salvatore DiMauro, Ronald G Haller

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the variable clinical picture and exercise tolerance of patients with phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) 1 deficiency and how it relates to residual PGK enzyme activity.

METHODS: In this case series study, we evaluated 7 boys and men from 5 families with PGK1 deficiency. Five had pure muscle symptoms, while 2 also had mild intellectual disability with or without anemia. Muscle glycolytic and oxidative capacities were evaluated by an ischemic forearm exercise test and by cycle ergometry.

RESULTS: Enzyme levels of PGK were 4% to 9% of normal in red cells and 5% to10% in muscle in pure myopathy patients and 2.6% in both muscle and red cells in the 2 patients with multisystem involvement. Patients with pure myopathy had greater increases in lactate with ischemic exercise (2-3 mmol/L) vs the 2 multisystem-affected patients (<1 mmol/L). Myopathy patients had higher oxidative capacity in cycle exercise vs multisystem affected patients (≈30 vs ≈15 mL/kg per minute). One multisystem-affected patient developed frank myoglobinuria after the short exercise test.

CONCLUSIONS: This case series study of PGK1 deficiency suggests that the level of impaired glycolysis in PGK deficiency is a major determinant of phenotype. Lower glycolytic capacity in PGK1 deficiency seems to result in multisystem involvement and increased susceptibility to exertional rhabdomyolysis.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNeurology
Volume91
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)e1077-e1082
ISSN0028-3878
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

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