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  • Title: Gaucher disease: accurate identification of asymptomatic French-Canadian carrier using nonlabeled authentic sphingolipid substrate N-palmitoyl dihydroglucocerebroside.
    Author: Choy FY, Bouillon L, Laurin CA.
    Journal: Am J Med Genet; 1987 Aug; 27(4):895-905. PubMed ID: 3425599.
    Abstract:
    Gaucher disease is an autosomal recessive sphingolipidosis associated with deficient glucocerebroside beta-glucosidase activity. It is a panethnic metabolic disorder, but the carrier frequency is particularly high among Ashkenazi Jews (estimated between 1:12-1:25). In order to establish a reliable and convenient biochemical assay method for differentiating asymptomatic Gaucher carriers from normal individuals, glucocerebroside beta-glucosidase activity was determined in peripheral blood lymphocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts of 11 Gaucher obligate heterozygotes using the authentic nonlabeled sphingolipid substrate N-palmitoyl dihydroglucocerebroside and the artificial fluorogenic substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside (4MUGP). The level of lymphocyte beta-glucosidase activity on the glucocerebroside substrate was observed to range from 42-65% of that of the control mean, and there was no overlap of enzyme activity between the Gaucher heterozygotes and controls. However, when the artificial fluorogenic substrate 4MUGP was used, the level of beta-glucosidase activity in 2 of the Gaucher obligate heterozygotes was noted to overlap with that of the control individuals. Contrary to findings in the lymphocytes, cultured skin fibroblasts appear to be a reliable enzyme source for Gaucher carrier detection even when the artificial fluorogenic 4MUGP substrate was used, as the level of beta-glucosidase activity in all of the Gaucher obligate heterozygotes tested was intermediate and distinctly separated from that of the control persons. Using the lymphocyte glucocerebroside beta-glucosidase assay and fibroblast 4MUGP beta-glucosidase assay methods, we identified the carrier status in 3 other relatives and ruled it out in 4 others. These data suggest that nonlabeled glucocerebroside is a reliable and highly specific substrate for either lymphocyte or fibroblast beta-glucosidase activity assay in identifying asymptomatic Gaucher carriers. Use of the 4MUGP substrate for differentiating Gaucher heterozygotes from control persons, on the other hand, should be restricted to the fibroblast enzyme assay method, as considerable overlap of enzyme activity was noted in lymphocytes.
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