Litman D A, Correia M A
Science. 1983 Dec 2;222(4627):1031-3. doi: 10.1126/science.6648517.
Hepatic porphyrias are disorders of heme synthesis characterized by genetically determined lesions of one of the key enzymes of heme synthesis. In carriers of such lesions, several factors (drugs, environmental chemicals, or diet) precipitate acute and often fatal attacks of neurologic dysfunction, which are promptly relieved by intravenous infusion of heme. However, the mechanism of such heme-induced amelioration remains elusive. To probe this mechanism, the biochemical events triggered by acute hepatic heme deficiency were examined in an animal model of chemically induced porphyria. Acute hepatic heme depletion in porphyric rats was found to impair hepatic tryptophan pyrrolase activity which, in turn, elevated tryptophan and 5-hydroxytryptamine turnover in the brain. These alterations in porphyric rats were dramatically reversed by parenteral heme administration. These findings suggest that increased tryptophan and 5-hydroxytryptamine in the nervous system may be responsible for the neurologic dysfunctions observed in humans with acute attacks of hepatic porphyria.
肝性卟啉症是血红素合成障碍性疾病,其特征是血红素合成关键酶之一发生基因决定的损伤。在有此类损伤的携带者中,多种因素(药物、环境化学物质或饮食)会引发急性且往往致命的神经功能障碍发作,静脉输注血红素可迅速缓解这些发作。然而,这种血红素诱导的病情改善机制仍不清楚。为探究这一机制,在化学诱导卟啉症的动物模型中研究了急性肝血红素缺乏引发的生化事件。结果发现,卟啉症大鼠的急性肝血红素耗竭会损害肝色氨酸吡咯酶活性,进而提高大脑中色氨酸和5-羟色胺的周转率。卟啉症大鼠的这些改变通过胃肠外给予血红素得到显著逆转。这些发现表明,神经系统中色氨酸和5-羟色胺增加可能是导致人类急性肝卟啉症发作时出现神经功能障碍的原因。