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Copper (II) Complex with Albumin Ameliorates Male Rats from Bromobenzene-Induced Renal Toxicity

Research Authors
Ismaeil M. Ali, Nagwa M. El-Sawi, Ahmed Y. Nassar, Soad Shaker Ali, Ahmed G. Khamis
Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Sohag Journal of Sciences (SJS)
Research Member
Research Publisher
Sohag Journal of Sciences (SJS)
Research Vol
10 (3)
Research Website
https://doi.org/10.21608/sjsci.2025.373403.1264
Research Year
2025
Research_Pages
302-306
Research Abstract

Abstract

This study evaluates the nephroprotective effect of a copper (II)-albumin complex against bromobenzene (BB)-induced renal toxicity in male rats. BB (300 mg/kg twice weekly for 4 weeks) induced significant nephrotoxicity, evidenced by elevated serum creatinine (p< 0.01) and urea (p<0.001) versus controls. Histopathology revealed tubular necrosis and fibrosis. Co-treatment with the copper-albumin complex (400 mg/kg) reversed creatinine (p<0.05) and UA (p<0.05), demonstrating partial but significant recovery. This is the first report highlighting albumin’s dual role in enhancing copper bioavailability and renal protection. Animals (n=15/group) were divided into control, BB-only, and BB + copper-albumin groups. Serum biomarkers (urea, creatinine, and uric acid) and blinded histopathology (H&E, Sirius Red) were analyzed. The copper-albumin dose was selected based on prior efficacy studies without hepatotoxicity. Results confirm the complex’s therapeutic potential against BB-induced injury, likely via antioxidant mechanisms. The study aligns BB’s dosing with subacute toxicity models, emphasizing industrial relevance without overstating human exposure risks. In conclusion, the copper-albumin complex mitigates BB nephrotoxicity, underscoring its promise as a therapeutic agent. Further research is needed to elucidate molecular pathways and validate findings across sexes.