Summary:In the present study, phagocytosis and the oxidative metabolism of neutrophil granulocytes from five clinically healthy persons with different degrees of myeloperoxidase deficiency were investigated and compared to those of normal persons. The identification of individuals with myeloperoxidase deficiency was performed with the Bayer/Technicon H3 blood cell counter, which differentiates the leukocytes by measuring the peroxidase activity. Neutrophils of three out of five investigated myeloperoxidase deficient persons showed extremly low peroxidase indices (-53 and lower), but only the neutrophils of one person totally lacked myeloperoxidase. This was demonstrated by comparing myeloperoxidase mass concentration measured with an enzyme immunoassay, lack of HOC1 production, and was further confirmed by measuring luminol-and lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence. Characteristically, myeloperoxidase deficient granulocytes showed a strikingly decreased luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence while the lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence was significantly increased compared to normal granulocytes. Although there is a DNA sequence homology of about 70%, the activity of peroxidase in eosinophils was not affected in any myeloperoxidase deficient person investigated. Moreover, a person with a very rare defect of eosinophil peroxidase had completely normal myeloperoxidase activity. The lack of myeloperoxidase activity is compensated for by an increased phagocytic activity, an increased production of Superoxide anion (lucigeninchemiluminescence) and probably by an alternative metabolism of H 2 O 2 ; since persons lacking myeloperoxidase activity do not normally suffer from severe infections, H 2 O 2 is obviously metabolized to other reactive oxygen substrates than HOC1, e. g. to OH-radicals.
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