Studies in porphyria. I. A defect in the reductive transformation of natural steroid hormones in the hereditary liver disease, acute intermittent porphyria. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • A variety of 5beta steroid metabolites derived from hormones natural to man are potent inducers experimentally of delta-aminolevulinate synthetase, the rate-limiting enzyme in porphyrin-heme formation. This mitochondrial enzyme is found at high levels of activity in the livers of patients with the genetic disease, acute intermittent porphyria (AIP). In this study the metabolism of (14)C-labeled testosterone was examined in AIP patients to determine whether there was a disproportionate conversion of the hormone to its 5beta, compared to its 5alpha metabolite. The results indicate that AIP subjects do generate a substantially greater than normal fraction of 5beta metabolite from this steroid; the excessive degree of ring A reduction of testosterone taking place via the 5beta pathway in the porphyric patients averages 350% greater than in the nonporphyric subjects. In one asymptomatic AIP patient the disproportionate generation of 5beta metabolite from the hormone reached a level 10 times the normal mean. Studies with a second (14)C-labeled hormone, dehydroisoandrosterone, whose metabolism in man resembles that of testosterone, confirmed the derangement in reductive transformation of steroids found in the individuals carrying the genetic lesion of AIP. These findings define a new endocrine abnormality in AIP patients and raise the possibility that endogenously derived 5beta steroids may contribute by an induction mechanism to the increased levels of hepatic delta-aminolevulinate synthetase activity found in AIP patients.

publication date

  • November 1, 1972

Research

keywords

  • 5-Aminolevulinate Synthetase
  • Liver Diseases
  • Porphyrias
  • Testosterone

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2139305

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0015435370

PubMed ID

  • 4263649

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 136

issue

  • 5