Protective role of fucoxanthin from Dilophys fasciola on the kidneys against the detrimental effect of fast green pigment in albino rats | ||||
Egyptian Journal of Chemistry | ||||
Volume 67, Issue 10, October 2024, Page 405-411 PDF (399.6 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ejchem.2024.274249.9405 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Karem Fouda 1; Walid E. Abdallah 2; Rasha S. Mohamed 1; Alaa A. Gaafar 3; Soha A. Murad 3; Eman A. Ibrahim 3 | ||||
1Nutrition and Food Sciences Department, National Research Centre, 33 El Bohouth St.(former El Tahrir St.), Dokki, Giza, 12622, Egypt. | ||||
2Chemistry of Medicinal Plants Department,National Research Centre, 33 El Bohouth St.(former El Tahrir St.), Dokki, Giza, 12622, Egypt. | ||||
3Plant Biochemistry Department, National Research Centre, 33 El Buhouth St., Dokki, Giza, 12622, Egypt. | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Synthetic fast green pigment (FG) is widely used worldwide as a food color for children, and it also promotes oxidative stress, attention deficit, and hyperactivity disorder in mammals. This experiment aims to evaluate oxidative stress and kidney function of rats exposed to Fast Green dye and the protective effects of algal fucoxanthin as an antioxidant and anti-inflammatory. Fucoxanthin was identified by HPLC. Antioxidant activity was determined by ferrous chelating and reducing power activities assays. Fucoxanthin showed potent antioxidant activity against Fe2+ chelating (IC50= 820.48 ± 1.79 μg/ml ) and reducing power (EC50 37.3± 1.09 μg/ml). Fast green dye treatment resulted in significant renal insufficiency in rats after 28 days of treatment. This was demonstrated by elevated kidney levels of albumin, creatinine, urea, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and lipid peroxidation. It's interesting to note that urea, creatinine, lipid peroxidation, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) levels all dramatically dropped in rats given algal fucoxanthin treatment. This demonstrates that fucoxanthin is essential in preventing kidney damage while undergoing therapy. Our results indicate that fucoxanthin shields rats' kidneys from oxidative damage brought on by the fast green pigment. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Marine algae; fucoxanthin; synthetic pigment; kidney function; oxidative stress | ||||
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