| dc.description.abstract |
Diphenyl diselenide (DPDSe) has demonstrated promising pharmacological properties against
pathologies that are intrinsically linked to radical-mediated oxidative stress such as diabetes.
However, the possible influence of DPDSe to mitigate the diverse metabolic assaults associated
with diabetes progression at biochemical and molecular levels have not been fully explored.
Herein, the effect of single oral dose administration of DPDSe (10 mg/kg bw) in simulated
postprandial and fasting hyperglycemia was tested in naïve and diabetic male Wistar rat. Besides,
alterations in some redox indices, toxicological markers, biochemical and molecular parameters
associated with diabetes progression were evaluated. Moreover, the influence of DPDSe on the
expression of mRNA associated with pathways that are linked to glucose metabolism, redox
system, and inflammatory process, cardiac, renal and testicular functions were also determined.
The effect of DPDSe treatment on the possible histopathological changes associated with
prolonged STZ induction was assessed in the brain, heart, liver, pancreas, kidney and testes. The
results revealed that single oral dose of DPDSe attenuated high glucose level in both postprandial
and fasting hyperglycemia. This hypo- and anti-hyperglycemic effects were accompanied with
improved redox indices. Also, derangement in the expression of mRNAs that characterize glucose
metabolism (glucagon like protein-1, Insulin, peroxisome proliferative activated receptor-γ, Glut-
2, Glut-4), inflammatory processes (interlukin-1β, interleukin -6, tumor necrotic factor-α,
adiponectin, adipsin, leptin), redox system (nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2, kelch-like
protein-1, heamoxygenase-1), lipid metabolism (Sterol element binding proptein-2), renal
(renalase, kidney induced molecule, neutrophil gelatinase activated lipocalin, proprotein
convertase subtilisin 9), cardiac (rhokinase-1, rhokinase-2, troponin-c) and testicular functions
(17-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, 3-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase) were observed on day 3 of the diabetes progression. Similarly, the activities of purine-dependent enzymes (E-
NTPDase, 5′-nucleotidase) signaling cascades were markedly increased on the third day of diabetic
progression. Conversely, diabetic progression evoked a profound alteration in redox,
hematological and toxicological indices as well as activities of redox sensitive sulfhydryl (Na + /K +
ATPase and δ-ALA D) enzymes on day 7 of untreated STZ-induced persistent hyperglycemia in
the rats. Interestingly, DPDSe reversed diabetes-induced alteration in the expression of mRNAs
that are linked with glucose metabolism, adipokines, pro-inflammatory responses as well as
markers of renal, cardiac and testicular functions. In addition, DPDSe restored altered cellular
architectural integrity of brain, liver, heart and pancreas, occasioned by diabetes progression.
These results suggest that molecular markers that characterize diabetic progression may be a
reliable diagnostic tool in monitoring the disease progression. In conclusion, aside its known anti-
hyperglycemic properties coupled with its ability to reverse altered biochemical processes in
diabetic condition, DPDSe may also be exerting diverse pharmacological potentials in
ameliorating the deranged molecular events that are linked with the disease progression. |
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