Effect of dimethylsulphoxide on the functional characteristics of isolated perfused rat liver |
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Authors: | Anne K. Groufsky Robyn K. Holland D. Lee |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, University of Otago Medical School, P.O. Box 913, Dunedin, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Exposure of rat liver, perfused with 7% BSA in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate buffer, to 1.4 m Me2SO at 35 °C had no effect on the release of potassium from the livers, but the rate of urea synthesis fell from 0.6 to 0.1 μmol/min. Bile production also decreased and the total amount collected during perfusion was only half that produced by controls. After perfusion for 4 hr at 35 °C control livers and those exposed to Me2SO started to release GOT into the perfusate but livers exposed to the cryoprotective compound released the enzyme at a faster rate.Exposure of livers to Me2SO at 5 °C resulted in potassium being released at a slower rate (0.98 μmol/min) than from cooled controls (1.19 μmol/min) and urea synthesis was decreased from 0.8 to 0.2 μmol/min. Bile production also declined but, because bile flow normally ceases during hypothermia, the effect on this aspect of liver function was probably less than was found at 35 °C. Release of GOT from livers exposed to Me2SO at 5 °C was quite different from that observed at 35 °C; the enzyme appeared in the perfusate after about 8 hr and it was present in much lower concentration than was found with appropriately cooled controls which started to release the enzyme after 6 hr.Thus, exposure of rat liver to Me2SO at 5 °C appears to be slightly less damaging than exposure at 35 °C and it may even have a beneficial effect on some aspects of liver function in vitro. |
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