Abstract

Male Wistar rats each received an i.p injection of the ribosome-inactivating proteins ricin or saporin, or a Ber-H2 (anti-CD30)-saporin immunotoxin at a dose corresponding to three times the LD50 calculated for mice. Animals were killed 24, 48 or 72 h after treatment. Histological examination showed hepatic necrosis in all treated animals, although the sinusoidal lining was affected only in ricin-poisoned rats. The activities of xanthine dehydrogenase (D-form) and oxidase (O-form) were determined spectrophotometrically in liver and serum samples. In ricin-treated animals the liver enzyme was progressively converted from the D- to the O-form, which accounted for more than 60% of total activity after 48 h of poisoning, whilst no change in the xanthine oxidase activity was found in the serum. In the liver of rats treated with free or Ber-H2-conjugated saporin, the D-form was more than 75%, as in normal animals. In the same animals the serum xanthine oxidase activity was up to three-fold control values. The determination of serum xanthine oxidase may prove helpful in the evaluation of liver damage in patients treated with immunotoxins. It may become a diagnostic tool for the differential diagnosis of liver diseases.

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