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Clinical Chemistry 48: 835-843, 2002;
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(Clinical Chemistry. 2002;48:835-843.)
© 2002 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.

5,10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (MTHFR) Assay in the Forward Direction: Residual Activity in MTHFR Deficiency

Terttu Suormalaa1, Gertraud Gamse1 and Brian Fowler1

1 University Children’s Hospital, CH-4005 Basel, Switzerland.

aAddress correspondence to this author at: Enzyme Laboratory, University Children’s Hospital, Basel, Römergasse 8, CH-4005 Basel, Switzerland. Fax 41-61-685-6556; e-mail terttu.suormala{at}unibas.ch.

Background: Assay of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR), a key enzyme in homocysteine metabolism, is important for the study of severe and mild deficiency states. Because the conventional assay measures in the reverse direction, lacks sensitivity, and uses nonphysiologic substrates, the exact measurement and characterization of residual activity in easily accessible tissues have been difficult.

Methods: To measure MTHFR in the physiologic direction, we determined the NADPH-dependent conversion of 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate to 5-methyltetrahydrofolate by use of HPLC with fluorescence detection.

Results: MTHFR activity in control fibroblast in the presence of FAD was maximal between pH 6.3 and 6.9, increased linearly up to 40 min and 80 µg protein/assay, and showed Kms of 30 µmol/L for NADPH and 26 µmol/L for 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate. Intraassay variation (CV) was 10%, interassay variation was 7.2%, and variation among 10 subcultures of the same cell line was 18%. Mean (SD) control activity was 431 (150) µU/mg protein (range, 242–910; n = 75), which is 2.5-fold higher than that with the reverse assay. After heat treatment (46 °C for 5 min), the activity showed a trimodal distribution corresponding to the 677TT (thermolabile; 15%), 677CT (35%), and 677CC (51%) genotypes. We found clearly measurable activity ranging from 2.6% to 25.6% of the mean control value in 15 patients with MTHFR deficiency, including 11 cell lines with zero activity in the reverse assay. Ten patients had complete enzyme deficiency.

Conclusion: This assay allows reliable determination of residual activity in mutant fibroblasts and characterization of kinetic parameters for natural substrates.




The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:


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The cblD Defect Causes Either Isolated or Combined Deficiency of Methylcobalamin and Adenosylcobalamin Synthesis
J. Biol. Chem., October 8, 2004; 279(41): 42742 - 42749.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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