Bioscientia Medicina : Journal of Biomedicine and Translational Research
Vol. 10 No. 7 (2026): Bioscientia Medicina: Journal of Biomedicine & Translational Research

Dose-Dependent Anti-Fibrotic Effect of Thymoquinone on Renal TGF-β1 Expression in Wistar Rats with Unilateral Ureteral Obstruction

M Zulfikar Abadi (Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, Dr. Mohammad Hoesin General Hospital/Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sriwijaya, Palembang, Indonesia)
Suprapti (Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, Dr. Mohammad Hoesin General Hospital/Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sriwijaya, Palembang, Indonesia)
Muhammad Irsan Saleh (Division of Biomedics, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sriwijaya, Palembang, Indonesia)
Zulkhair Ali (Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, Dr. Mohammad Hoesin General Hospital/Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sriwijaya, Palembang, Indonesia)
Novadian (Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, Dr. Mohammad Hoesin General Hospital/Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sriwijaya, Palembang, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
15 May 2026

Abstract

Background: Renal fibrosis is the final common pathway of chronic kidney disease (CKD), regulated by the pro-fibrotic cytokine Transforming Growth Factor-β1 (TGF-β1). Thymoquinone, the principal bioactive constituent of Nigella sativa, has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic activity in pre-clinical models, but its dose-response profile in obstructive nephropathy is incompletely characterised. Methods: This in-vivo experimental study used a post-test-only with control-group design in 30 male Wistar rats (200–250 g) randomised into six groups (n=5): sham + olive-oil; UUO + olive-oil; UUO without olive-oil; and UUO with intra-peritoneal thymoquinone at 5, 10 or 20 mg/kg body-weight daily for 14 days. The primary outcome was renal cortical TGF-β1 mRNA expression by RT-PCR; secondary outcomes were IL-6 expression, serum urea and creatinine, Sirius-red percentage of positively-stained area (PSA) and a PAS-stained tubular injury score. Results: UUO produced renal injury: urea rose from 41.3 ± 6.2 to 57.7 ± 7.6 mg/dL (p=0.003) and TGF-β1 expression rose from 473,500 ± 32,797 to 679,922 ± 27,998 densitometric units (p=0.001). Thymoquinone reduced TGF-β1 dose-dependently to 644,571 ± 25,457, 612,143 ± 23,822 and 581,571 ± 24,128 a.u. at 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg (ANOVA p=0.004); the 20 mg/kg dose was superior to lower doses (p<0.05). PSA and tubular injury improved in parallel and correlated strongly with TGF-β1 (r=0.85). Conclusion: Thymoquinone exerts a dose-dependent anti-fibrotic effect via TGF-β1 down-regulation in obstructive nephropathy, supporting its evaluation as a complementary anti-fibrotic adjunct in CKD.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

bsm

Publisher

Subject

Biochemistry, Genetics & Molecular Biology Immunology & microbiology Medicine & Pharmacology Neuroscience

Description

This journal welcomes the submission of articles that offering a sensible transfer of basic research to applied clinical medicine. BioScientia Medicina covers the latest developments in various fields of biomedicine with special attention to : 1.Rhemumatology 2.Molecular aspect of Indonesia ...