This test is most often performed when porphyria or other disorders that can cause abnormal urine porphyrins is suspected.
The most important function of porphyrins is as components of heme. Heme is made from iron + protoporphyrin. Hemoglobin is made up of four globin proteins + 4 heme groups. Oxygen binds to the iron in the heme molecules.
Various kinds of porphyrins exist with the same basic structure, but with slightly different chemical appearance.
The major biochemical pathway includes conversions from porphyrins to delta-ALA, then to PBG, then uroporphyrin, then coproporphyrin, then protoporphyrin, and finally into the end product -- heme.
Each step requires the presence of a specific enzyme. If any of the enzymes are deficient (because of a genetic disease or inhibition by a toxic substance), these intermediates build up, and a type of porphyria results.
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