A 10-year-old boy with juvenile metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) presented with the 459 + 1G-->A arylsulfatase A (ASA) mutation on one allele. To detect his complete genotype, the other ASA allele was sequenced and a T-to-C transition at nucleotide 376 in exon 2 was identified. This missense mutation results in a substitution of leucine 76 by proline. Of 20 MLD unrelated controls, 18 carried the L/P76 mutation either in the homozygous (n = 6) or heterozygous (n = 12) state. The presence or absence of L/P76 did not influence leukocyte ASA activity or urinary sulfatide excretion. Apparently, the substitution of leucine 76 by proline is a common ASA polymorphism, neither being related to MLD nor creating ASA pseudodeficiency. However, because of its frequency and location, L/P76 may be of particular importance in genetic studies requiring the differentiation of the ASA alleles within a kindred. Further studies are directed to the as yet unresolved genotype of the index case with juvenile MLD.