| Literature DB >> 19233877 |
Hana Drobiova1, Martha Thomson, Khaled Al-Qattan, Riitta Peltonen-Shalaby, Zainab Al-Amin, Muslim Ali.
Abstract
Oxidative damage by free radicals has been implicated in the pathogenesis of vascular disease in diabetes and hypertension. In the present study, the total antioxidant status in diabetic and hypertensive rats before and after treatment with garlic (Allium sativum) was determined. The total serum antioxidants were measured by a modified method reported earlier by Miller and coworkers. The reproducibility of the assay was confirmed by determining standard curves for the known antioxidants: trolox (a stable analog of vitamin E), glutathione and vitamin C with interassay correlation coefficients (R(2), n = 10 in triplicate) of 0.9984, 0.9768 and 0.987, respectively, confirming the reliability and reproducibility of the assay. This assay was then used to determine total serum antioxidant levels of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats and two-kidney one-clip hypertensive rats both before and after 3 weeks of treatment with an aqueous extract of garlic (500 mg/kg IP daily). The serum antioxidant levels of rats after 3 weeks of treatment were significantly higher (P < .001) than the pretreatment levels in both diabetic and hypertensive rats. The increased serum antioxidant levels were paralleled by a decrease in serum glucose in the garlic-treated diabetic rats and lowered systolic blood pressure in the garlic-treated hypertensive rats. We conclude from our study that (i) total antioxidants can be measured by a simple, reproducible, reliable assay and (ii) the total antioxidant status can be significantly improved by treatment with garlic.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 19233877 PMCID: PMC3137236 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nep011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Protocol for the antioxidant assay.
| Solution | Blanka ( | Sample ( |
|---|---|---|
| PBS (5 mM, pH 7.4, 138 mM NaCl) | 1000 – (105 + | 1000 – (115 + |
| MetMb (as determined above) |
|
|
| Sample (serum or antioxidant) | — | 10 |
| ABTS (5 mM) | 30 | 30 |
| Equilibrate for 3 min at 30°C | ||
| H2O2 (10 mM) | 75 | 75 |
| Incubate for 6 min at 30°C | ||
| Read absorbance at 734 nm after exactly 15 s of incubation period completionc |
a Read against PBS buffer.
b MeMb concentration is determined experimentally and the required volume (x) is added to obtain 2.5 μM final concentration in the assay. The volume of PBS buffer is adjusted accordingly.
c Only six samples can be run at a time to fit the timing protocol.
Figure 1Standard curves for inhibition of ABTS+• absorbance at 734 nm with (a) glutathione, (b) ascorbic acid (vitamin C) and (c) trolox. Glutathione concentrations were between 0.5 and 2.5 mM. Ascorbic acid concentrations were between 0.005 and 0.02 mM. Trolox concentrations were between 0.005 and 0.02 mM. All assays were done in triplicate.
Figure 2Antioxidant levels in diabetic rats. Normal, untreated (control) diabetic and garlic-treated diabetic (diabetic garlic) rats were assessed for antioxidant status (TEAC) 1 week after STZ-injection (Post-STZ) and 3 weeks after treatment. (1) Total antioxidants in normal rats are significantly hgher than in diabetic rats 3 days after induction of diabetes with STZ (P < .05). (2) Total antioxidants in normal rats are significantly higher than in diabetic control rats after 3 weeks (P < .05). (3) Total antioxidants in diabetic control rats are significantly lower than in garlic-treated diabetic rats after 3 weeks of garlic treatment (P < .05).
Serum glucose concentration in different animal groups.
| Initial serum glucose (mg/dL) | Final serum glucose (mg/dL) | |
|---|---|---|
| Normala (saline treated) | — | 129 ± 9 |
| Diabetic controla (Saline treated) | 400 ± 9 | 431 ± 13b |
| Garlic-treated diabetica (500 mg/kg garlic) | 400 ± 9c | 237 ± 8c |
a n = 10 for all groups.
b Significally different compared to normal (P < .05).
c Significally different compared to initial and final diabetic controls (P < .001).
Figure 3Antioxidant levels in hypertensive rats. Normal, untreated (control) hypertensive and garlic-treated hypertensive rats were assessed for antioxidant status (TEAC) before and 3 weeks after treatment. (1) Total antioxidants in normotensive rats are significantly higher than in hypertensive rats (P < .05). (2) Total antioxidants in hypertensive rats at time zero are significantly higher than hypertensive rats after 3 weeks (P < .05). (3) Total antioxidants in untreated hypertensive rats are significantly lower than garlic-treated hypertensive rats after 3 weeks of garlic treatment (P < .05).