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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Galactose metabolism in transferase-deficient galactosaemic and normal long-term lymphoid cell lines.

The activity (mean +/- SD) of galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase in two long-term lymphoid cell lines from Caucasian patients with transferase deficiency galactosaemia, a heterozygote, and eight normal subjects was 0, 78 and 168 +/- 55 nmol UDPG consumed (mg protein)-1h-1, respectively. Also, no activity was found in erythrocytes and cultured fibroblasts from the patients. A small number of cells of the galactosaemic lines cultured in medium, in which galactose was substituted for glucose, survived for 37 days. Normal and galactosaemic lines incubated with D-galactose-[1-14C] liberated 218.2 +/- 65.6 and 18.1 pmol 14CO2 (mg cellular protein)-1 (6h)-1, respectively. The evolution of 14CO2 from D-glucose-[1-14C] was similar in normal and galactosaemic lines. In the presence of [3H]galactose the radioactivity incorporated into TCA-precipitated material of the galactosaemic lines was 6.8% of the normal lines. Approximately 26% and 1.3% of the total radioactivity was incorporated into molecular species with a molecular weight greater than 400,000 daltons in normal and galactosaemic cells, respectively. Similar molecules were identified in the cell-free medium of both normal and deficient cells except for an 18,000 daltons molecule identified only in the medium of the normal cells. These findings indicate that a small amount of galactose is metabolized in galactosaemic lines with no transferase activity.[1]

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