“…The subsequent conversion of 2-ketoadipic acid to glutaryl-CoA, which is common to all three pathways and has long been assumed to involve a multienzyme complex similar to those that act on pyruvate, branched-chain keto acids and 2-ketoglutarate; indeed, the activities of the 2-ketoglutarate and 2-oxoadipic dehydrogenases in porcine heart could not be separated (Hirashima et al 1967). Several subjects have been described with 2-ketoadipic aciduria, including a 14-month-old girl with hypotonia, intermittent metabolic acidosis, and developmental delay (Przyrembel et al 1975), a 14-year-old retarded boy and his intellectually normal sister (Wilson et al 1975), a 9-yearold boy with a mild learning disability and his normal brother (Fischer et al 1974;Fischer and Brown 1980), a 10-year-old retarded girl (Casey et al 1978), a 9-year-old retarded boy with a history of seizures (Duran et al 1984), a 7-year-old girl with cerebellar ataxia (Vianey-Liaud et al 1985), two unrelated children with developmental delay (Danhauser et al 2012), and three apparently normal siblings detected by a newborn screening program in Australia (Wilcken et al 1980;Wilcken 2014, personal communication), whose genetic findings and outcome are presented here. Evidence for defects in the metabolism of 2-ketoadipic acid in these patients have included increased excretion of 2-ketoadipic and/or 2-hydroxyadipic acid in urine, often together with 2-aminoadipic acid, and delayed clearance of 2-aminoadipic and 2-hydroxyadipic after an oral lysine load.…”