Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is an enzyme () present in a wide variety of organisms, including plants and animals. It catalyses the interconversion of pyruvate and lactate with concomitant interconversion of NADH and NAD+. As it can also catalyze the oxidation of hydroxybutyrate, it is occasionally called Hydroxybutyrate Dehydrogenase (HBD).
Enzyme isoforms
Usually LDH-2 is the predominant form in the serum. An LDH-1 level higher than the LDH-2 level (a "flipped pattern"), suggests myocardial infarction (damage to heart tissues releases heart LDH, which is rich in LDH-1, into the bloodstream). The use of this pheonomenon to diagnose infarction has been largely superseded by the use of Troponin I or T measurement.
Genetics in Humans
The M and H subunits are encoded by two different
genes:
- The M subunit is encoded by LDHA, located on chromosome 11p15.4 ()
- The H subunit is encoded by LDHB, located on chromosome 12p12.2-p12.1 ()
- A third isoform, LDHC or LDHX, is expressed only in the testis (); its gene is likely a duplicate of LDHA and is also located on the eleventh chromosome (11p15.5-p15.3)
Mutations of the M subunit have been linked to the rare disease exertional myoglobinuria (see OMIM article), and mutations of the H subunit have been described but do not appear to lead to disease.
Medical use
Hemolysis
In
medicine, LDH is often used as a marker of tissue breakdown. As LDH is abundant in
red blood cells and can function as a marker for
hemolysis. A blood sample that has been handled incorrectly can show false-positively high levels of LDH due to
erythrocyte damage.
It can also be used as a marker of
myocardial infarction. Following a myocardial infarction, levels of LDH peak at 3-4 days and remain elevated for up to 10 days. In this way, elevated levels of LDH can be useful for determining if a patient has had a myocardial infarction if they come to doctors several days after an episode of chest pain.
Tissue turnover
Other uses are assessment of
tissue breakdown in general; this is possible when there are no other indicators of
hemolysis. It is used to follow-up
cancer (especially
lymphoma) patients, as
cancer cells have a high rate of turnover, with destroyed cells leading to an elevated LDH activity.
Exudates and transudates
Measuring LDH in fluid aspirated from a
pleural effusion (or
pericardial effusion) can help in the distinction between
exudates (actively secreted fluid, e.g. due to
inflammation) or
transudates (passively secreted fluid, due to a high
hydrostatic pressure or a low
oncotic pressure). LDH is elevated (>200 U/l) in an exudate and low in a transudate. In
empyema, the LDH levels generally will exceed 1000 U/l.
Meningitis and encephalitis
The
enzyme is also found in
cerebrospinal fluid where high levels of lactate dehydrogenase in cerebrospinal fluid are often associated with
bacterial
meningitis. High levels of the enzyme can also be found in cases of
viral meningitis, generally indicating the presence of
encephalitis and poor
prognosis.
Chemical pathology | Tumor markers | EC 1.1.1
Laktat-Dehydrogenase | Lactato deshidrogenasa | Lactate déshydrogénase | LDH | 乳酸脱氢酶