Immunogold studies of normal human
kidney and common human kidney cancers were
performed using polyclonal antibodies to antioxidant
enzymes, including antibodies to copper, zinc and
manganese superoxide dismutases, catalase, glutathione
peroxidase, and glutathione S-transferases and their
subunits. Normal tissue adjacent to human renal tumors
had the same antioxidant enzyme immunoreactive
protein profiles as normal human kidney, thus
establishing that the presence of tumor does not alter the
levels of antioxidant enzyme immunoreactive proteins in
adjacent kidney tissue. Levels of immunoreactive
protein for antioxidant enzymes were determined in four
common types of malignant renal cancer. In general,
tumors had low levels of antioxidant enzymes; however,
certain histologic types of renal tumors had high levels
of immunoreactive protein for glutathione S-transferase
subunits, which could affect their susceptibility to
chemotherapy. Studies of transitional carcinoma of the
renal pelvis were especially informative since it was
possible to compare levels of antioxidant enzyme
immunoreactive protein with adjacent normal
transitional epithelium; the majority of antibodies
resulted in lower levels of immunoreactive protein in
transitional cell carcinoma than in adjacent normal
transitional epithelium. Our results are discussed in
relation to the response of renal tumors to therapy