Keith R A, Van Loon J, Wussow L F, Weinshilboum R M
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1983 Oct;34(4):521-8. doi: 10.1038/clpt.1983.208.
Thiol methylation of aliphatic sulfhydryl drugs is catalyzed by thiol methyltransferase (TMT), an enzyme activity that can be measured in the human erythrocyte (RBC) membrane. As a first step toward determining the possible role of inheritance in the regulation of individual variations in the S-methylation of drugs in man, the heritability of human RBC membrane TMT activity was determined. RBC TMT activity was measured in blood samples from 231 first-degree relatives in 47 randomly selected families. The frequency distribution of enzyme activities was unimodal, with a fivefold variation within +/- 2 SDs. RBC TMT activity did not correlate with either age or sex. Heritability in the "narrow" sense (h2) was estimated by comparing correlations of RBC TMT activities in first-degree relatives with theoretical values expected for a trait under total additive genetic control. The correlation between RBC TMT activities in mothers and fathers in these families was only 0.04, a finding that made shared environment a less likely explanation for significant correlations among other family members. However, sibling-sibling (S-S), parent-offspring (P-O), and midparent (average of two parental values)-offspring (M-O) correlations were 0.49, 0.49, and 0.69.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)