The T-cell immunodeficiency associated with purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) deficiency in man is believed to be due to the accumulation of dGTP which may be preferentially formed from deoxyguanosine in T-lymphocytes or their precursor cells. We found no evidence for dGTP accumulation in thymocytes or spleen leucocytes, < 1 nmol/10(9) cells, nor in erythrocytes, < 0.05 nmol/10(9) cells, of the B6-NPE- or B6-NPF PNP-deficient mice strains. There were no changes in purine or pyrimidine ribonucleotide pools. As these mice had been previously shown to excrete PNP nucleoside substrates, we examined the metabolism of deoxyguanosine. Deoxyguanosine kinase activity as compared to control mice was 6 to 52% for the B6-NPE mutant, 2 to 22% for the B6-NPF mutant. Fractionation of erythrocyte and liver lysates from the F mutation and the background strain, C57BL/6J, by anion exchange chromatography confirmed the secondary deficiency of deoxyguanosine kinase and demonstrated that this activity was distinct from adenosine kinase and two major peaks of deoxycytidine kinase activity. Mouse PNP, expressed and purified as a fusion protein, did not show evidence of being bifunctional and having deoxyguanosine kinase activity. Metabolic modelling revealed that the ratio of deoxyguanosine phosphorylation versus phosphorolysis was < 0.06 in control mice, and < or = 0.3 in lymphocytes of PNP-deficient mice. Were deoxyguanosine kinase not reduced in the PNP-deficient mice, all tissues of the B6-NPF mutant would preferentially phosphorylate deoxyguanosine at low substrate concentrations.