Publication | Closed Access
Inhibition of lactate-dehydrogenase by cisplatin and other platinum-compounds: enzyme leakage of LDH is not a suitable method to measure platinum-compound-induced kidney cell damage in vitro.
11
Citations
0
References
1988
Year
Other Platinum-compoundsUrologyBiochemistryEnzyme LeakageMedicineBioanalysisRat Kidney CellsSuitable MethodHog Muscle Lactate-dehydrogenaseRenal PathophysiologyClinical ChemistryMetabolismPharmacologyKidney ResearchKidney CellsOxidative Stress
The effects of three platinum-compounds on the activity of hog muscle lactate-dehydrogenase (LDH), cytosolic LDH released from rat renal cortical slices and cytosolic LDH isolated from rat kidney cells were investigated. In vitro, cisplatin inhibited the activity of LDH in a concentration-dependent manner. At a concentration of 0.25 mg/ml, cisplatin, transplatin and cisplatin-hydrolysis-products inhibited the activity of LDH time-dependently. These observations make it doubtful to use LDH-enzyme leakage experiments to demonstrate damage of kidney cells by platinum-compounds. The nonnephrotoxic compound transplatin had an enhanced inhibitory effect on the activity of LDH compared to the nephrotoxic compounds cisplatin or cisplatin-hydrolysis-products (transplatin greater than cisplatin greater than cisplatin-hydrolysis-products). Thus, LDH-enzyme inhibition seems not to be related to the nephrotoxicity of cisplatin.