| Literature DB >> 27059702 |
Ahmed H Arbab1, Mohammad K Parvez2, Mohammed S Al-Dosari1, Adnan J Al-Rehaily1, Khalid E Ibrahim3, Perwez Alam1, Mansour S Alsaid1,4, Syed Rafatullah4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Liver diseases, the fifth most common cause of global death, can be metabolic, toxin-induced, or infective. Though approximately 35 Saudi medicinal plants are traditionally used to treat liver disorders, the hepatoprotective potential of Aerva javanica has not been explored.Entities:
Keywords: Aerva javanica; CCl4; DCFH; hepatoprotection; liver diseases; oxidative stress; rutin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27059702 PMCID: PMC4826463 DOI: 10.3402/fnr.v60.30864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Nutr Res ISSN: 1654-661X Impact factor: 3.894
Fig. 1MTT-cell proliferation assay showing hepatoprotective effect of A. javanica total ethanolic extract against DCFH-induced hepatotoxicity in cultured HepG2 cells.
Effect of A. javanica total ethanolic extract on CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity-related parameters in rats
| Treatment group | SGOT | SGPT (U/l) | ALP (U/l) | GGT (U/l) | Bilirubin (mg/dl) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 107.45±5.31 | 28.83±2.20 | 321.66±13.88 | 4.06±0.32 | 0.54±0.01 |
| CCl4 | 294.83±8.33 | 230.83±9.62 | 515.16±13.70 | 12.85±0.98 | 2.16±0.08 |
|
| 279.33±7.81 | 174.33±6.13 | 437.00±8.66 | 10.28±0.43 | 1.81±0.05 |
|
| 246.00±3.74 | 140.16±4.04 | 412.66±8.84 | 6.86±0.33 | 1.54±0.02 |
| Silymarin (10 mg) + CCl4 | 136.66±6.00 | 85.66±4.31 | 396.33±7.62 | 5.58±0.28 | 1.06±0.06 |
All values represent mean±SEM
P<0.05
P<0.01
P<0.001; ANOVA, followed by Dunnet's multiple comparison test
As compared with normal group.
As compared with CCl4-only group.
Effects of A. javanica total ethanolic extract on CCl4-induced lipid profile changes in rats
| Treatment group | TC (mg/dl) | TG (mg/dl) | HDL (mg/dl) | LDL (mg/dl) | VLDL (mg/dl) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 109.83±3.94 | 59.01±2.74 | 55.18±2.40 | 42.84±3.22 | 11.80±0.54 |
| CCl4 | 206.00±4.53 | 151.16±4.61 | 26.25±1.79 | 149.51±4.28 | 30.23±0.92 |
|
| 163.33±5.28 | 105.85±5.20 | 29.76±1.02 | 112.39±6.82 | 21.17±1.04 |
|
| 143.66±5.47 | 82.61±3.65 | 35.41±2.26 | 91.72±6.25 | 16.52±0.70 |
| Silymarin (10 mg) + CCl4 | 147.66±4.88 | 110.16±5.26 | 40.41±2.97 | 85.21±5.98 | 22.02±1.05 |
All values represent mean±SEM
P<0.05
P<0.01
P<0.001; ANOVA, followed by Dunnet's multiple comparison test.
As compared with normal group.
As compared with CCl4-only group.
Biochemical parameters of rat liver tissues treated with A. javanica total ethanolic extract
| Treatment group | MDA (nmol/g) | NP-SH (nmol/g) | TP (g/l) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 0.50±0.02 | 7.39±0.53 | 113.76±2.81 |
| CCl4 | 4.82±0.29 | 3.86±0.44 | 49.11±1.82 |
| 2.77±0.10 | 5.67±0.47 | 67.86±2.94 | |
| 1.79±0.14 | 6.16±0.40 | 82.23±4.44 | |
| Silymarin (10 mg) + CCl4 | 1.37±0.16 | 6.52±0.31 | 91.81±4.08 |
All values represent mean±SEM
P<0.05
P<0.01
P<0.001; ANOVA, followed by Dunnet's multiple comparison test.
As compared with normal group.
As compared with CCl4-only group.
Fig. 2The histopathology of experimental rat liver at 100×, 200×, and 400× magnifications. Histograms showing the following: (a) healthy tissues with normal hepatocytes and central vein; (b) CCl4-injured tissue with necrosis and fatty degenerative changes; (c) tissue with congested central vein with necrosis and fatty changes after A. javanica (100 mg) + CCl4 treatment; (d) liver with normal hepatocytes and central vein with full recovery after A. javanica (200 mg) + CCl4 treatment; and (e) liver with normal hepatocytes and fully recovered central vein after silymarin (10 mg) + CCl4 treatment.
Fig. 3DPPH radical-scavenging activity of different concentrations (31.25–500 µg/ml) of total ethanolic extract of A. javanica and standard antioxidant (ascorbic acid).
Fig. 4Antioxidative activity of A. javanica total ethanolic extract assayed by the β-carotene bleaching method. (a) β-carotene bleaching rate in the presence of 500 µg/ml of the extract, gallic acid (reference antioxidant), or blank control. (b) % inhibition of lipid peroxidation by different concentrations (31.25–500 µg/ml) of the extract and gallic acid.
Fig. 5Quantification of rutin in A. javanica total ethanolic extract by HPTLC. (a) Pictogram of developed RP-HPTLC plate at 254 nm; mobile phase – acetonitrile: water (4:6, v/v). (b) Chromatogram of standard rutin (1,000 ng spot−1), peak 1 (Rf=0.65) scanned at 360 nm; mobile phase – acetonitrile: water 4:6, v/v). (c) Chromatogram of the extract containing rutin (peak 6) scanned at 360 nm; mobile phase – acetonitrile: water 4:6, v/v).