Effect of Changtong oral liquid on fibroblast proliferation in normal and adhesive rat peritoneal tissues.
- Author:
Chun-xia WANG
1
;
Xu-xin ZENG
;
Le-song HUANG
;
Lian-bing HOU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adhesiveness; Administration, Oral; Animals; Cell Proliferation; drug effects; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drugs, Chinese Herbal; administration & dosage; pharmacology; Fibroblasts; cytology; drug effects; Male; Peritoneum; cytology; Rats
- From: Journal of Southern Medical University 2009;29(8):1541-1544
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of Changtong oral liquid (CTOL) on the proliferation of cultured fibroblasts derived from normal peritoneum (NFs) and adhesive peritoneum (AFs) of rats.
METHODSTwenty male SD rats were randomized into 4 groups, including a normal serum group and 3 CTOL groups with CTOL treatment at low, medium or high doses. Serum samples were obtained from the abdominal arteries of the rats after oral treatment with CTOL for 7 days. The fibroblasts were isolated from the peritoneum by means of tissue culture, and the passage 3-8 cells were cultured with the sera of the normal control and CTOL groups for 24, 48, 72 and 96 h. MTT assay was used to observe the proliferation of the fibroblasts.
RESULTSThe dose of CTOL was inversely correlated to the absorbance but positively to the growth inhibition rates. Compared with the NFs cultured in normal control rat serum, the NFs in serum from CTOL groups showed no obviously changes in the absorbance at 24 and 48 h, but displayed significant reduction at 72 and 96 h (P<0.01). Compared with the AFs in normal rat serum, the AFs in the 3 CTOL groups all showed significantly decreased absorbance at 24, 48, 72 and 96 h (P<0.05). At the same time point, the inhibition rate of AFs in low-dose CTOL group showed no significant difference from that in the normal control group, but CTOL at a medium dose resulted in a significantly higher inhibition rate of AFs at 72 h (P<0.05). High-dose CTOL produced significant differences in the inhibition rates of AFs and NFs (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONCTOL can inhibit the proliferation of AFs and NFs in vitro. AFs appear to be more sensitive to CTOL, which has a dose-dependent inhibitory effect of AF proliferation.