Abstract

A Japanese drug containing glycine, glycyrrhizin, and cysteine (Stronger Neo-Minophagen C ®) has been reported to protect against chronic cadmium (Cd) toxicity. The present study was conducted to evaluate which of the three constituents of this drug was the main antagonist for Cd toxicity and whether the mechanism of protection involved antioxidant action. Adult female Sprague–Dawley rats were injected sc with 5 μmol CdCl 2/kg per day, five times per week, for 15 weeks. Four groups of Cd-injected animals received co-treatments with either 10 mg glycyrrhizin/kg, 100 mg glycine/kg, 5 mg cysteine/kg, or with a mixture of all three compounds, five times per week, starting from week 7. An additional Cd-injected group was co-treated with vitamin E (100 mg/kg, five times per week, starting from week 7) as a positive control. Only those animals that received vitamin E, Minophagen mixture, or glycine were protected against Cd-induced hepatotoxicity as well as nephrotoxicity. All three co-treatments suppressed Cd-induced hepatic and renal lipid peroxidation. We conclude that the reported beneficial effects of Stronger Neo-Minophagen C ® are due to glycine, which appears to protect against chronic Cd toxicity by reducing oxidative stress.

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