masterThesis
Efeito do alcalóide indólico Caulerpina nos modelos murinos de peritonite e edema de orelha
Fecha
2020-08-28Registro en:
SILVA, Ana Beatriz Ramalho da. Efeito do alcalóide indólico Caulerpina nos modelos murinos de peritonite e edema de orelha. 2020. 61f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Biologia Parasitária) - Centro de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2020.
Autor
Silva, Ana Beatriz Ramalho da
Resumen
The appearance of adverse effects associated with the use of corticosteroids has
driven the search for compounds derived from natural products with pharmacological
properties, so that they can be used as an alternative anti-inflammatory therapy. Thus,
the present study sought to assess the anti-inflammatory potential of caulerpin (CLP),
an alkaloid derived from algae of the genus Caulerpa, in murine models of zimosaninduced peritonitis and xylene-induced ear edema. For this, mice were orally treated
with CLP at doses of 4, 2, 1 mg/kg and dexamethasone (1 mg/kg) and 1 hour later
received zymosan (40 mg/kg) intraperitoneally. After 24 hours, the peritoneal lavage
was collected and the number of cells was determined. The same procedure was
repeated to assess the migration kinetics and presence of cytokines in the peritoneal
lavage at 6, 24 and 48 hours. For ear edema, the animals were treated with the same
different doses of CLP, followed by topical application of xylene (40μL) in the right
ears, 1 hour after treatment. The level of edema was determined by calculating the
percentage of inhibition and morphological analysis evaluated in equal sections of the
removed ears. In the peritonitis model, pre-treatment with CLP was able to reduce cell
migration to the peritoneal cavity at doses of 4, 2 and 1 mg/kg, with the dose of 2
mg/kg being the one that showed results more expressive in inhibiting cell migration.
In the cell migration kinetics, using the dose of 2 mg/kg of CLP, it was observed that
this dose was able to inhibit this event in the three evaluated times, after the
administration of zymosan. And this effect was related to the decrease in the levels of
IL-1β and IL-6 in the peritoneal lavage, during the studied kinetics. In the edema
model, it was observed that the three CLP doses tested acted by inhibiting the
formation of xylene-induced ear edema, which was demonstrated by the high
percentages of inhibition of the process (based on the weight of the ear sections) and
in the preservation of the tissue morphology of the ears in the animals that received
the treatments, with the dose of 2 mg/kg being the most efficient in this inhibition. Thus,
the CLP has anti-inflammatory activity in the models studied and the dose of 2 mg/kg
is an optimal dose in controlling inflammation in the models of peritonitis induced by
zimosan and xylol-induced ear edema.