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Antioxidant and immunomodulatory activity induced by stevioside in liver damage: In vivo, in vitro and in silico assays

  • Sael Casas-Grajalesb(Autor)
    ,
  • Erika Ramos-Tovarb(Autor)
    ,
  • Esmeralda Chávez-Estradab(Autor)
    ,
  • Diana Alvarez-Suarezb(Autor)
    ,
  • ,
  • Karina Reyes-Gordilloa(Autor)
  • aGeorge Washington University
    ,
  • bCentro de Investigacion y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional
Research Output: Contribución a una revista Artículo Revisión por expertos

Acceso abierto

Publication Information

Tipo de resultado

Research Output: Contribución a una revista Artículo Revisión por expertos

Idioma original

Inglés

Páginas desde-hasta (Número de páginas)

Páginas 187-196 (10 páginas)

Revista (Volumen, Número de Edición)

Life Sciences (Volumen 224)

Hitos de publicación

  • Publicada - 01/05/2019

Estado de publicación

Publicada - 01/05/2019

ISSN

0024-3205

ID de publicación externa

  • Scopus: 85063439394
  • PubMed: 30890404

Abstract

Aims: Stevioside is a diterpenoid obtained from the leaves of Stevia rebaudiana (Bertoni) that exhibits antioxidant, antifibrotic, antiglycemic and anticancer properties. Therefore, we aimed to study whether stevioside has beneficial effects in liver injury induced by long-term thioacetamide (TAA) administration and investigated the possible underlying molecular mechanism using in vivo, in vitro and in silico approaches. Main methods: Liver injury was induced in male Wistar rats by TAA administration (200 mg/kg), intraperitoneally, three times per week. Rats received saline or stevioside (20 mg/kg) twice daily intraperitoneally. In addition, cocultures were incubated with either lipopolysaccharide or ethanol. Liver injury, antioxidant and immunological responses were evaluated. Key findings: Chronic TAA administration induced significant liver damage. In addition, TAA upregulated the protein expression of nuclear factor (NF)-κB, thus increasing the expression of proinflammatory cytokines and decreasing the antioxidant capacity of the liver through downregulation of nuclear erythroid factor 2 (Nrf2). Notably, stevioside administration prevented all of these changes. In vitro, stevioside prevented the upregulation of several genes implicated in liver inflammation when cocultured cells were incubated with lipopolysaccharide or ethanol. In silico assays using tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)-1 and Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4-MD2 demonstrated that stevioside docks with TNFR1 and TLR4-MD2, thus promoting an antagonistic action against this proinflammatory mediator. Significance: Collectively, these data suggest that stevioside prevented liver damage through antioxidant activity by upregulating Nrf2 and immunomodulatory activity by blocking NF-κB signaling.