Sulfur-Rich Garlic Extract (DNR) as a Promising Natural Therapeutic for Diabetic Nephropathy: Evidence from a db/db Mouse Model
Ju Hee Park, Byung Sik Cho, Xue Bi Zhou, Richard Kyung, Myong Jo Kim

TL;DR
A sulfur-rich garlic extract called DNR shows potential as a treatment for diabetic kidney disease in a mouse model, improving kidney health and function.
Contribution
This study provides preclinical evidence that a garlic-derived extract (DNR) has renoprotective effects in diabetic nephropathy.
Findings
DNR reduced serum creatinine, BUN, and urinary microalbumin in db/db mice.
DNR improved glomerular hypertrophy and mesangial matrix expansion in diabetic mice.
Allicin was identified as a key sulfur-containing compound in DNR.
Abstract
Diabetic nephropathy (DNR) remains a major complication of type 2 diabetes with limited options to halt progression. We evaluated whether DNR (a sulfur-rich extract from Hongsan garlic) confers renoprotection in a db/db mouse model. Seventy male C57BLKS/J mice were randomized into seven groups (db/m control, db/db control, metformin 250 mg/kg, DNR 100/300/900 mg/kg, and metformin 250 mg/kg + DNR 300 mg/kg) and treated orally for eight weeks. Physiological, biochemical, urinary, histological, and immunohistochemical(IHC) endpoints were assessed, including serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen(BUN), lipids, glucose, urinary microalbumin/albumin-to-creatinine ratio(ACR), glomerular area, mesangial expansion, and renal KIM-1 and TGF-β1 expression. Chemical profiling of the DNR extract by HPLC and LC–MS/MS identified allicin as a principal sulfur-containing constituent, exhibiting a distinct…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGarlic and Onion Studies · Cholesterol and Lipid Metabolism · Mast cells and histamine
