Partial block of glycolysis in late-onset phosphofructokinase deficiency myopathy.
Overview
abstract
A late-onset, myopathic variant of phosphofructokinase (PFK) deficiency has been previously described in two patients of Ashkenazic descent. We report here on a non-Ashkenazic woman with the onset, at the age of 48 years, of a progressive limb girdle myopathy that was not preceded by a history of exercise intolerance. Muscle biopsy findings at the age of 58 years showed deposition of amylopectin-like material in muscle fibers and the absence of histochemical PFK activity. Enzymatic PFK activity in vitro was only 4% of normal. Since the forearm ischemic exercise test induced a sub-normal production of serum lactate, the patient underwent phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS), a non-invasive method that allows in vivo assessment of the functional status of the glycolytic pathway and mitochondrial oxidative metabolism by measuring the high-energy phosphates and cytosolic pH. In vivo, 31P-MRS disclosed a residual glycolytic flux and a normal rate of ATP production both at rest and during exercise. These results suggest that, in some patients, muscle PFK deficiency may be partial in vivo, and more severe in vitro, possibly due to protein or mRNA instability rather than absence. The presence of these findings in a patient with the late-onset myopathic form is compatible with a distinct pathogenetic mechanism, relying on progressive polysaccharide accumulation, rather than on acute energetic shortage in muscle fibers.