4.6 Article

Debelalactone Prevents Hepatic Cancer via Diminishing the Inflammatory Response and Oxidative Stress on Male Wistar Rats

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27144499

Keywords

hepatic cancer; debelalactone; oxidative stress; Phyllanthus debilis

Funding

  1. RFBR
  2. DST
  3. CNPq
  4. SAMRC [20-53-80002]

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The study demonstrates that debelalactone can protect tissues, alleviate chronic hepatic inflammation and oxidative stress induced by diethyl nitrosamine in Wistar rats. It significantly reduces parameters associated with liver and non-liver functions, and improves body weight of treated animals. Moreover, debelalactone restores antioxidant markers and inflammatory mediators to normal levels, reduces liver tissue abnormalities and inflammation, and inhibits precancerous cells.
The current study was conducted to exemplify the effect of debelalactone on tissue protection, chronic hepatic inflammation, hepatic protection and oxidative stress induced by diethyl nitrosamine in Wistar rats. Therefore, DEN (200 mg/kg) was used for the induction the hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and the level of serum alpha fetoprotein was used for the estimation and confirmation of HCC. The study illustrated that debelalactone (DL) significantly downregulated the hepatic, non-hepatic parameters such as aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, alpha fetoprotein, NO levels, total protein, albumin, blood urea nitrogen, total bilirubin, and direct bilirubin in dose dependent manner, as well as noticeably improving the body weight, of treated animals. The macroscopically observation of DEN-induced rat liver showed the formation of informalities in liver tissue, which was reduced with treatment of DL at dose dependent manner. However, antioxidant markers and inflammatory mediators such as lipid peroxidation, catalase, superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase and transferase, TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, and NF-kB restored up to the normal level by DL. The histopathology studies showed that the treated group of animals returned to a normal status. Collectively, it can be concluded that debelalactone mediated chemoprevention in the DEN-induced rats via an increase in the activities of endogenous enzymes and/or inhibition the precancerous cells.

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