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LeucineAminopeptidase

LeucineAminopeptidase
Method: Colorimetric kinetic method using L-leucyl-p-nitroanilide
(LAP)
Liquid reagent: R1: R2=3:1
(LAP)

Clinical Significance of Leucine Aminopeptidase

Leucine Aminopeptidase (LAP) is a proteolytic enzyme that hydrolyzes amino acids (especially leucine) from the N-terminal end of peptides.
It is mainly present in:

  • Liver (bile canalicular membrane)
  • Biliary epithelium
  • Placenta
  • Intestine

Clinically, it is used as a marker of hepatobiliary disease.

1️⃣ Obstructive (Cholestatic) Liver Disease – Most Important

LAP is markedly elevated in:

  • Obstructive jaundice
  • Intrahepatic cholestasis
  • Bile duct obstruction
  • Carcinoma head of pancreas

🔎 Its rise parallels ALP in biliary obstruction.

👉 Therefore, it is useful in diagnosing cholestasis.

2️⃣ Differentiation from Bone Disease

Unlike ALP:

LAP is not elevated in bone diseases.

Condition ALP LAP
Liver disease ↑ ↑
Bone disease ↑ Normal

👉 Helps confirm that raised ALP is of hepatic origin, not bone.

3️⃣ Pregnancy

  • LAP is increased during normal pregnancy
  • Due to placental production

Hence, pregnancy must be considered while interpreting results.

4️⃣ Hepatocellular Disease

Moderate elevation seen in:

  • Hepatitis
  • Cirrhosis
  • Fatty liver

But levels are more markedly raised in cholestasis.

5️⃣ Limited Use Today

  • Largely replaced by GGT and 5′-nucleotidase
  • Still historically important in liver function testing

Normal Reference Range

Approximately 15–60 IU/L
(May vary by laboratory)

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