Testosterone with Silymarin Improves Diabetes-obesity Comorbidity
Complications by Modulating Inflammatory Responses and CYP7A1/ACC
Gene Expressions in Rats
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Published:2023-11-08
Issue:
Volume:27
Page:
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ISSN:1386-2073
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Container-title:Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening
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language:en
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Short-container-title:CCHTS
Author:
Zhou Dongli1, Du Yuanyuan1, Zhou Lili2, Alahmadi Tahani Awad3, Hussein-Al-Ali Samer Hasan4, Wang Qinhu5
Affiliation:
1. Department of Endocrinology, Daqing Oilfield General Hospital, Daqing, Heilongjiang Province, 163000, China 2. Department of Endocrinology, Yantai Penglai People's Hospital,Yantai, Shandong Province, 265600, China 3. Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine and King Khalid University Hospital, King Saud University, Medical
City, Riyadh -11461, Saudi Arabia 4. Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Isra University, Amman, 11622, Jordan 5. Department of Endocrinology, The Third People's Hospital of Gansu Province, Lanzhou, Gansu Province,
730000, China
Abstract
Background::
The co-morbidity of DMOB has become increasingly problematic
among the world's population because of a high-calorie diet and sedentary lifestyle. DMOB is
associated with lower testosterone (TN) levels, the male sex hormone. The phytochemical compound
silymarin (SN) exerts antidiabetic activity by modifying β-cells and anti-obesity activity
by inhibiting adipogenesis by methylxanthine.
Aim::
The goal of this study was to find out how well testosterone (TN) with silymarin (SN) protects
against oxidative stress and inflammation in the liver of the experimental rats with type 2
diabetes (T2D) and obesity (DMOB).
Objectives::
The present study evaluates the efficacy of TN and SN combination (TNSN) on the
levels of the potential parameters, such as body mass, serum marker enzymes, fasting glucose
levels, HbA1c levels, lipid profile, enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants, proinflammatory
cytokines, gene expression pathways, and histopathology in a DMOB comorbidity rat model.
Methods::
Male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 20 weeks with an
administration of a single dose of streptozotocin (STZ) i.p. injection (30 mg/kg) on the 9th week
of the study. The procedure was to develop the DMOB co-morbidity model in the experimental
animals. Co-treatment of TN and SN administration were followed throughout the experiment.
Rats were sacrificed after overnight fasting to collect serum and liver tissue samples. Samples
were analyzed using a clinical chemistry automated analyzer, spectrophotometry, and quantitative
real-time PCR (qPCR) methods and protocols.
result:
Analyses of body mass changes, serum marker enzymes, fasting glucose levels, HbA1c levels, lipid profile, enzymatic antioxidants, non-enzymatic antioxidants, TNF-alpha, IL-6, adiponectin, CYP7A1 and ACC expression pathways and histopathology were done. Significant levels (P ≤ 0.05) of abnormalities noticed in the pathological group were efficiently treated to normalcy with the administration of TN and SN in combination.
Results::
Analyses of body mass changes, serum marker enzymes, fasting glucose levels, HbA1c
levels, lipid profiles, enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants, TNF-α, IL-6, adiponectin,
CYP7A1, ACC expression pathways, and histopathology showed significant abnormal levels (P
≤ 0.05) in the pathological group. These were efficiently treated to normal by the administration
of TNSN.
Conclusion::
These results concluded that TNSN exerted protective efficacy against the liver
abnormalities in the co-morbidity of the DMOB rat model.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Organic Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Drug Discovery,General Medicine
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