| Literature DB >> 10736194 |
A Sarkar1, S Pradhan, I Mukhopadhyay, S K Bose, S Roy, M Chatterjee.
Abstract
The underlying molecular mechanisms of the antihepatotoxic activity of Trianthema portulacastrum by monitoring its effect on mouse liver DNA-chain break, sugar-base damage and chromosomal aberrations, during chronic or acute treatment with carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)) have been studied. Daily oral feeding with the ethanolic extract (150 mg/kg basal diet, per os) was given 2 weeks before CCl(4)treatment and continued until the end of the experiment (13 weeks). T. portulacastrum extract offer unique protection (P< 0.05-0. 001) against the induction of liver-specific structural-type chromosomal anomalies 15, 30 or 45 days after the last CCl(4)insult, compared to control mice. This was further evidenced by extract-mediated protection (15 days prior feeding following a single necrogenic dose of CCl(4)) of the generation of DNA chain-break and Fe-sugar-base damage assays. The observed hepatoprotective mechanism could be due to its ability to counteract oxidative injury to DNA in the liver of mouse. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10736194 DOI: 10.1006/cbir.1999.0439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biol Int ISSN: 1065-6995 Impact factor: 3.612