Effects of Tissue Protectants on the Kinetics of Lactate Dehydrogenase in Cells
We studied the effects of two tissue protectants, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and agarose gel, on a kinetic parameter of lactate dehydrogenase LDH that is assumed to be related to the extent of diffusion of the enzyme out of tissue sections during its histochemical assay. The kinetics of the enzyme in m...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry 1997-10, Vol.45 (10), p.1417-1425 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We studied the effects of two tissue protectants, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and agarose gel, on a kinetic parameter of lactate dehydrogenase LDH that is assumed to be related to the extent of diffusion of the enzyme out of tissue sections during its histochemical assay. The kinetics of the enzyme in mouse gastrocnemius (skeletal) muscle fibers and periportal hepatocytes were determined in unfixed sections incubated either on substrate (l-lactate)-containing agarose gel films or in aqueous assay media in the presence or absence of 18% PVA. The absorbances of the formazan final reaction products at their isobestic point were measured continuously in the cytoplasm of individual cells as a function of incubation time, using a real-time image analysis system. Whichever incubation medium was used, the absorbances in the two cell types increased nonlinearly during the first minute of incubation but linearly for incubation times between 1 and 3 min. The nonlinearity of the LDH reaction was analyzed using the equation v
i - v = a°A, where v
i is the observed initial velocity determined from the absorbance changes during the first 10 sec of incubation and v and °A are respectively the gradient and intercept on the absorbance axis of the linear regression line of the absorbance on incubation times between 1 and 3 min. The plots of the observed (v
i - v) against °A were linear. Their gradients a were characteristic for each cell type and tissue protectant. The a values for skeletal muscle fibers were 12–43% lower than those for hepatocytes. The a value for hepatocytes obtained with the PVA method was 32% lower than that determined with the gel film method. For skeletal muscle fibers, the a values determined by the two methods were almost the same. Addition of excess pyruvate to the aqueous assay medium had no effects on a for either muscle fibers or hepatocytes. In contrast, a was zero for sections of polyacrylamide gels containing purified enzyme, whether incubated on agarose films or in PVA media. These data confirmed that the constant a is related to the extent to which the enzyme diffuses out of sections during incubation but not to product inhibition of LDH by pyruvate. PVA was more effective for protecting diffusion of LDH from hepatocytes than from skeletal muscle fibers, possibly because hepatocytes contain a greater proportion of diffusable (unbound) LDH than skeletal muscle fibers. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1554 1551-5044 |
DOI: | 10.1177/002215549704501010 |