Abstract

Lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) concentration of rabbit serum and leukocytes was followed during the course of an acute infection with Diplococcus pneumoniae. Control values were obtained prior to infection, and again 4, 24, and 48 hr later. LDH isozymes were characterized by acrylamide gel electrophoresis and quantitated by densitometry. An increase in serum LDH was observed as early as 4 hr after infection. These levels returned to normal in 24 hr and rose again 48 hr after infection. The LDH level of leukocytes, from 10 of 12 infected rabbits, rose rapidly during the 24-hr period after exposure. The levels were two to three times the original preinoculation level for that animal. In six of these rabbits, this LDH elevation occurred 4 hr after inoculation and preceded the onset of fever. Change in the type of leukocyte did not account for the increase in cellular LDH. All infected rabbits showed approximately the same increase in polymorphonuclear leukocytes, but not all developed comparable increases in LDH. The isozyme patterns obtained, when defined amounts of enzyme were applied to the gel for electrophoresis, were characterized for the most part by a three-enzyme pattern. Increasing amounts of enzyme occasionally revealed a fourth, more cathodal, enzyme. The more cathodic enzymes appear to be the most responsive when sudden shifts in enzyme concentration occur within the cell.

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