Abstract

The liver disease problem prompts investigators to search for new methods of liver treatment. Silymarin (Sil) protects the liver by reducing the concentration of free radicals and the extent of damage to the cell membranes. A particularly interesting method to increase the bioavailability of Sil is to use synthesized gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) as reagents. The study considered whether it was possible to use the silymarin-AuNP conjugate as a potential liver-protecting drug. AuNPs were conjugated to Sil and the liver-protecting activity of the conjugate was examined. Experimental hepatitis and hepatocyte cytolysis after carbon tetrachloride action were used as a model system, and the experiments were conducted with laboratory animals. For the first time, silymarin was conjugated to colloidal gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Electron microscopy showed that the resultant preparations were monodisperse and that the mean conjugate diameter was 18-30 nm ± 0.5 nm (mean diameter of the native nanoparticles, 15 ± 0.5 nm). In experimental hepatitis in mice, conjugate administration interfered with glutathione depletion in hepatocytes in response to carbon tetrachloride. It also was conducive to an increase in energy metabolism and stimulated the monocyte-macrophage function of the liver. The results were confirmed by the high respiratory activity of the hepatocytes in cell culture. We conclude that the silymarin-AuNP conjugate holds promise as a liver-protecting agent in acute liver disease caused by carbon tetrachloride poisoning.

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