Title of article :
Protective Effects of Vitamin C and NAC on the Toxicity of Rifampin on Hepg2 Cells
Author/Authors :
Vahdati-Mashhadian, Nasser Department of Pharmacodynamy and Toxicology - Faculty of Pharmacy - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Jafari, Mahmoud Reza Biotechnology Research Center - Nanotechnology Research Center - School of Pharmacy - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Sharghi, Nasim Faculty of Pharmacy - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Sanati, Toktam Faculty of Pharmacy - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
Pages :
6
From page :
141
To page :
146
Abstract :
Rifampin, an antibiotic widely used for the treatment of mycobacterial infections, produces hepatic, renal and bone marrow toxicity in human and animals. In this study, the protective effects of vitamin C and n-acetylcysteine (NAC) on the toxicity of rifampin on HepG2 cells were investigated. Human hepatoma cells (HepG2) were cultured in 96-well M of rifampin in the presence of microplate and exposed to 10, 20, 50 and 100 vitamin C (0.1 mg/mL) and NAC (0.2 mg/mL). Protective effect of the two drugs against rifampin toxicity was assessed by MTT assay. Results show that both vitamin C and NAC significantly inhibited HepG2 cellular damage due to rifampin, and vitamin C was relatively more potent than NAC. Rifampin is metabolized by the liver and its toxic metabolites are responsible for the drug›s hepatic toxicity. Based on our results, it seems that reactive metabolites are the main agents responsible for rifampin hepatotoxicity. The importance of this finding is that if vitamin C or NAC do not affect the antibacterial activity of rifampin, they could be used as preventive agents in rifampin users.
Keywords :
HepG2 , Cell toxicity , MTT assay , Vitamin C , NAC
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year :
2013
Record number :
2414921
Link To Document :
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