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Threonine (Thr)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Essential Amino Acid - Important in Protein Synthesis, Intestinal Integrity & Inborn Metabolic Disorders)

Synonyms

  • Threonine
  • L-Threonine
  • Thr
  • 2-Amino-3-hydroxybutyric acid
  • Essential hydroxyl amino acid

Units of Measurement

  • µmol/L
  • mg/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100 mL
  • mg%
  • µg/mL

Unit Conversions

Molecular Weight of Threonine = 119.12 g/mol

µmol/L ↔ mg/L

1 µmol/L=0.119 mg/L1\ \text{µmol/L} = 0.119\ \text{mg/L}1 µmol/L=0.119 mg/L 1 mg/L=8.40 µmol/L1\ \text{mg/L} = 8.40\ \text{µmol/L}1 mg/L=8.40 µmol/L

mg/dL → mg/L

1 mg/dL=10 mg/L1\ \text{mg/dL} = 10\ \text{mg/L}1 mg/dL=10 mg/L

mg% = mg/dL

µg/mL ↔ mg/L

1 µg/mL=1 mg/L1\ \text{µg/mL} = 1\ \text{mg/L}1 µg/mL=1 mg/L

Description

Threonine is an essential amino acid, meaning it must be obtained through diet.
It plays major roles in:

  • Protein synthesis
  • Immune function
  • Intestinal mucin production (key for gut integrity)
  • One-carbon metabolism
  • Glycine and serine synthesis
  • Central nervous system development

Threonine is measured in plasma amino-acid panels to investigate inborn errors of metabolism, nutritional status, and liver disease.

Physiological Role

1. Intestinal Health

Threonine is a major component of:

  • Mucins
  • Glycoproteins
  • Immune IgA production

2. Protein & Collagen Synthesis

Required for structural proteins and tissue repair.

3. One-Carbon Metabolism

Threonine contributes carbons to:

  • Glycine
  • Serine
  • Metabolic intermediates

4. CNS Development

Important for brain maturation in newborns.

5. Immune Function

Supports antibody production and cytokine regulation.

Clinical Significance

HIGH THREONINE

1. Inborn Errors of Metabolism

Most clinically important cause.

  • Threonine dehydratase deficiency
  • Glycine cleavage system defects
  • Mitochondrial disorders
  • Propionic acidemia & methylmalonic acidemia (secondary elevation)
  • Phenylketonuria (PKU) – mild ↑
  • Maple syrup urine disease (MSUD) – moderate ↑ along with branched-chain AAs

2. Immature Liver Function

Transient elevation common.

3. Liver Disease

Portal hypertension, cirrhosis.

4. Parenteral Nutrition

High amino-acid infusion.

5. Catabolic Stress

Sepsis, trauma → altered amino-acid profile.

LOW THREONINE

Causes

  • Malnutrition
  • Malabsorption
  • Chronic illness
  • Severe liver disease
  • Increased threonine catabolism
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Low-protein diets
  • Some mitochondrial disorders

Symptoms

Often non-specific:

  • Poor growth
  • Muscle wasting
  • Low albumin
  • Fatigue
  • Poor immune response

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP + ACMG metabolic ranges)

Plasma Threonine

Age GroupReference Interval
Adults70 – 190 µmol/L
Children80 – 200 µmol/L
Newborns100 – 300 µmol/L (immature pathways → higher)

Clinical Flags

  • > 250 µmol/L → evaluate for metabolic disorder or liver disease
  • > 500 µmol/L → strong metabolic abnormality (organic acidemias / GCS defect)

Diagnostic Uses

1. Inborn Errors of Metabolism

  • Organic acidemias
  • MSUD
  • Threonine dehydratase defects
  • Mitochondrial disease
  • Glycine cleavage system defects

2. Nutritional Disorder Evaluation

Threonine reflects protein intake and catabolism.

3. Liver Disease

Altered clearance and amino-acid imbalance.

4. Neonatal Screening

Newborns often have elevated threonine; interpret age-appropriately.

5. Gut Mucosal Disorders

Low threonine may reflect heavy mucin turnover.

Analytical Notes

  • Fasting plasma preferred
  • Avoid hemolysis - alters amino-acid profile
  • Immediate deproteinization recommended for accurate results
  • Assays: HPLC, tandem MS/MS
  • Levels vary by age and nutritional status

Clinical Pearls

  • Newborn threonine values are naturally higher due to hepatic immaturity.
  • Very high threonine suggests possible glycine cleavage or organic acidemia disorders.
  • Interpret together with serine, glycine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, and lactate.
  • TPN often elevates threonine substantially.
  • Threonine is crucial for gut mucin - low levels may worsen IBD symptoms.

Interesting Fact

Threonine and isoleucine are the only two amino acids with two chiral centers, making them structurally unique.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Amino Acids
  2. ACMG Guidelines - Plasma Amino Acid Interpretation
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Amino Acid Panel
  4. ARUP Consult - Amino Acids
  5. NIH / MedlinePlus - Amino Acid Disorders

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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