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Lead poisoning. Further observations on erythrocyte pyrimidine-nucleotidase deficiency and intracellular accumulation of pyrimidine nucleotides.
D E Paglia, … , W N Valentine, K Fink
D E Paglia, … , W N Valentine, K Fink
Published December 1, 1977
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1977;60(6):1362-1366. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI108896.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 6

Lead poisoning. Further observations on erythrocyte pyrimidine-nucleotidase deficiency and intracellular accumulation of pyrimidine nucleotides.

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Abstract

Pyrimidine nucleotides, detectable in normal erythrocytes only in trace quantities if at all, were found to comprise 7-80% of the intracellular nucleotide pools in nine subjects with severe lead over-burden. Blood lead concentrations ranged from approximately equal to 200- to 400-microgram/dl packed cells, and the greatest accumulations of pyrimidine-containing nucleotides occurred in the two subjects with the highest blood lead levels. Most of the patients had mild or moderate anemia and moderate basophilic stippling evident in Wright's-stained peripheral smears. Pyrimidine nucleotidase activities were inhibited to 13-28% of the mean activity in normal control erythrocytes and even more so (5-15%) when compared to specimens with increased reticulocytes and young cells. Reticulocytosis was absent in two subjects and modest to moderate in the remainder, but erythrocyte assays revealed the substantial elevations in populations of young mean cell age. Inappropriately low reticulocyttial elevations in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase expected in populations of young mean cell age. Inappropriately low reticulocyte responses may reflect hematopoietic suppressive effects of lead at a variety of metabolic loci.

Authors

D E Paglia, W N Valentine, K Fink

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