The antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects of Eremina desertorum snail mucin on experimentally induced intestinal inflammation and testicular damage.
Amina M IbrahimMostafa Y MoradManal Fawzy ElkhadragyOlfat A HammamPublished in: Bioscience reports (2022)
Eremina desertorum snail mucin antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects were investigated against carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-intestinal inflammation and testes damage. Male albino mice were intraperitoneally injected with 0.5 ml/kg b.wt of 40% CCl4, twice a week for 8 weeks. The treated groups were treated orally with mucin (after 8 weeks of CCl4 intoxication, twice a week for 4 weeks). CCl4 caused significant increases in C-reactive protein, lipid peroxidation, interleukin-2 levels and caspase-3, while decreasing the total proteins levels, activities of catalase, superoxide dismutase, and glutathione reductase contents, testosterone and 17β estradiol levels compared with the control mice. The improvements of these parameters occurred after treatment with E. desertorum mucin, where all the biochemical measurements tended to restore to the normal values. Histopathologically, CCl4 caused ulceration in the columnar mucin secreting cells that lined the ileal mucosa, partial loss of goblet cells, abnormal villous/crypt ratio, and submucosal infiltrate of the inflammatory cells. Also, sections of testis showed alterations in the developmental spermatogenic arrangement of the same seminiferous tubules, with no spermatozoa in the center. Improvements in these architectures occurred after administration of mucin, where sections showed almost normal histological structure. In conclusion, E. desertorum mucin could be used as a supplementary material as it has antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects; besides it has low cost.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- liver injury
- drug induced
- cell cycle arrest
- diabetic rats
- liver fibrosis
- low cost
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- randomized controlled trial
- gestational age
- high fat diet induced
- hydrogen peroxide
- skeletal muscle
- cell proliferation
- replacement therapy
- endothelial cells
- stress induced
- newly diagnosed
- placebo controlled