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Research Article

Nitraria retusa fruit prevents penconazole-induced kidney injury in adult rats through modulation of oxidative stress and histopathological changes

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Pages 1061-1073 | Received 22 May 2016, Accepted 29 Dec 2016, Published online: 15 Feb 2017
 

Abstract

Context: Nitraria retusa (Forssk.) Asch. (Nitrariaceae) is a medicinal plant which produces edible fruits whose antioxidant activity has been demonstrated.

Objective: The current study elucidates the potential protective effect of N. retusa fruit aqueous extract against nephrotoxicity induced by penconazole, a triazole fungicide, in the kidney of adult rats.

Materials and methods: Adult Wistar rats were exposed either to penconazole (67 mg/kg body weight), or to N. retusa extract (300 mg/kg body weight) or to their combination. Penconazole was administered by intra-peritoneal injection every 2 days from day 7 until day 15, the sacrifice day, while N. retusa extract was administered daily by gavage during 15 days. Oxidative stress parameters, kidney biomarkers and histopathological examination were determined.

Results: Nitraria retusa extract administration to penconazole treated rats decreased kidney levels of malondialdehyde (−10%), hydrogen peroxide (−12%), protein carbonyls (PCOs, −11%) and advanced oxidation protein products (AOPP, −16%); antioxidant enzyme activities: catalase (−13%), superoxide dismutase (−8%) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx, −14%), and the levels of non-enzymatic antioxidants: non-protein thiols (−9%), glutathione (−7%) and metallothionein (−12%). Furthermore, this plant extract prevented kidney biomarker changes by reducing plasma levels of creatinine, urea, uric acid and LDH and increasing those of ALP and GGT. Histopathological alterations induced by penconazole (glomeruli fragmentation, Bowman’s space enlargement, tubular epithelial cells necrosis and infiltration of inflammatory leucocytes) were attenuated following N. retusa administration.

Discussion and conclusion: Our results indicated that N. retusa fruit extract had protective effects against penconazole-induced kidney injury, which could be attributed to its phenolic compounds.

Acknowledgements

Our grateful thanks were addressed to Professors Mohamed Chaieb and Ferjani Ben Abdallah who have identified the plant.

The authors are grateful to Mr. Chedli Tmar for the laboratory animal’s maintenance and Mrs Raoudha Ben Amar Abdennadher for her skillful technical assistance.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no declarations of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research [04/UR/09-04], Tunisia.