Hepatoprotective effect of germanium-containing Spirulina in rats with d-galactosamine-and lipopolysaccharide-induced hepatitis

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Abstract

In the present study, the protective effects of dietary Spirulina (SP) and germanium-containing Spirulina (GeSP) were compared in rats with liver injury induced by an intraperitoneal injection of d-galactosamine and lipopolysaccharide (GalN/LPS). Wistar rats were fed one of the following diets: the basal diet (GalN/LPS-CON group; n 6), the basal diet supplemented with 5% SP or GeSP (GalN/LPS-SP and GalN/LPS-GeSP group, respectively; n 7 each). After administering these diets for 7d, each rat was intraperitoneally injected with GalN/LPS. Increases in plasma alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activities were suppressed in the GalN/LPS-GeSP group (GalN/LPS-CON v. GalN/LPS-GeSP: ALT 1052 (sem 187) v. 509 (sem 88)IU/l and AST 2183 (sem 368) v. 1170 (sem 196)IU/l) following the injection of GalN/LPS. Plasma levels of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and TNF-α in GeSP-fed rats were significantly lower when compared with those in the GalN/LPS-CON group (GalN/LPS-CON v. GalN/LPS-GeSP: IFN-γ 142·8 (sem 17·5) v. 66·8 (sem 9·7)pg/ml and TNF-α 72·3 (sem 15·4) v. 31·2 (sem 6·8)pg/ml). However, the decrease in these levels observed in the GalN/LPS-SP group was not as prominent as those observed in the GalN/LPS-GeSP group. Furthermore, the increase in liver catalase (CAT) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) activities, as well as the level of oxidised glutathione (GSSG), was more suppressed in GeSP-fed rats (GalN/LPS-CON v. GalN/LPS-GeSP: CAT 457 (sem 47) v. 262 (sem 54)U/mg liver protein; GPx 1·30 (sem 0·11) v. 0·53 (sem 0·09)U/mg liver protein; GSSG 2·18 (sem 0·33) v. 1·31 (sem 0·24)mmol/kg liver) after the injection of GalN/LPS. These changes were more pronounced in the GalN/LPS-GeSP group than in the GalN/LPS-SP group. These results suggest that GeSP could afford a significant protective effect in the alleviation of GalN/LPS-induced hepatic damage. In addition, the results indicate that GeSP is more effective than SP. © 2013 The Authors.

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APA

Yoshinari, O., Shiojima, Y., & Igarashi, K. (2014). Hepatoprotective effect of germanium-containing Spirulina in rats with d-galactosamine-and lipopolysaccharide-induced hepatitis. British Journal of Nutrition, 111(1), 135–140. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114513001943

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