4.3 Article

Carbon tetrachloride-induced nephrotoxicity and DNA damage in rats: Protective role of vanillin

Journal

HUMAN & EXPERIMENTAL TOXICOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 8, Pages 844-852

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0960327111429140

Keywords

carbon tetrachloride; vanillin; antioxidant system; nephropathy

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Funding

  1. DGRST (Appui a la Recherche Universitaire de base), Tunisia [ARUB 99/UR/08-73]

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In this study, the protective effects of vanillin were evaluated against carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced kidney damages in Wistar albino rats. CCl4 (1 ml/kg, intraperitoneally [i.p.]) caused a significant induction of renal disorder, oxidative damage and DNA fragmentation as evidenced by increased plasma creatinine, urea and uric acid levels, increased lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde [MDA]) and protein carbonyl. Furthermore, glutathione levels, catalase, superoxide dismutase, glutathione transferase and glutathione peroxidase activities were significantly decreased. A smear without ladder formation on agarose gel was also shown, indicating random DNA degradation. Pretreatment of rats with vanillin (150 mg/kg/day, i.p.), for 3 consecutive days before CCl4 injection, protected kidney against the increase of MDA and degradation of membrane proteins compared to CCl4-treated rats and exhibited marked prevention against CCl4-induced nephropathology, oxidative stress and DNA damage. Kidney histological sections showed glomerular hypertrophy and tubular dilatation in CCl4-treated rats, however, in vanillin pretreated rats, these histopathological changes were less important and present a similar structure to that of control rats. These data indicated the protective role of vanillin against CCl4-induced nephrotoxicity and suggested its significant contribution of these beneficial effects.

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