Abstract

Acute tumour-lysis syndrome (ATLS) is a frequently fatal complication after cytoreductive leukaemia therapy. Lactic acidosis is associated with ATLS and its extent is correlated with the severity of ATLS. In the course of cytoreductive therapy, apoptosis is induced in tumour cells, which results in loss of mitochondrial function. We hypothesize that loss of mitochondrial function leads to compensatory glycolysis, which is the main cause of lactate accumulation and acidosis. We tested this hypothesis using the model of glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis in the human acute lymphoblastic leukaemia cell line CCRF-CEM. After induction of glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis, a biphasic course of lactate production was observed. Prior to the onset of apoptosis, i.e. prior to the loss of membrane potential, lactate production was reduced. However, subsequent to loss of mitochondrial membrane potential a massive increase in lactate production was observed (15.5 +/- 0.5 versus 10.17 +/- 0.09 mmol/10(6) cells, P = 0.001). We also demonstrated that inhibition of respiratory chain activity by antimycin A resulted in excess lactate production. In the model cell line used, conditional bcl-2 expression delayed glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis by protecting against loss of mitochondrial membrane potential; bcl-2 expression delayed the increase in lactate production and had no effect on the pre-apoptotic drop in lactate production. Apoptosis-induced lactate production was also observed in other cell lines (HL60, THP1 and OPM2) with various cytotoxic agents [doxorubicin, gemcitabine and vumon (VM26)]. Thus, the data suggest that lactate acidosis can be caused by apoptotic loss of mitochondrial function and massive apoptosis of a tumour mass via lactic acidosis may be the essential pathological event in ATLS.

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