The protective potential of Blighia sapida on the behavioural and hematobiochemical disruption in kerosene-exposed Clarias gariepinus: In Vivo and In Silico evaluation
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Date
2025
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Elsevier
Abstract
Introduction: The discharge of petroleum products poses significant toxicological risks to aquatic life and the
environment, undermining Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 14). Members of the Sapindaceae family, to
which Blighia sapida belongs, have been utilized for the treatment of blood, heart, urinary and mental disorders.
The study investigated the protective effects of ethanol extract (EE) from Blighia sapida stem-bark on Clarias
gariepinus sub-adults using their behavioral, biochemical, hematological parameters, as well as in silico
evaluation.
Methods: The study randomly divided 189 Clarias gariepinus into nine groups (G) in triplicates with seven fish to
make 27 treatment tanks. The groups were G1: control, G2: 100 mL kerosene, G3: 200 mL kerosene, G4: 100 mL
kerosene + 50 mg/kg bwt.EE, G5: 100 mL kerosene + 100 mg/kg bwt.EE, G6: 100 mL kerosene + 150 mg/kg
bwt.EE, G7: 200 mL kerosene + 50 mg/kg bwt.EE, G8: 200 mL kerosene + 100 mg/kg bwt.EE, G9: 200 mL
kerosene + 150 mg/kg bwt.EE. The experimental setup was repeated every other day for 28 days in a 30 L plastic
aquaria. Behavioral parameters such as active swimming, aggression, jumping, air gulping, slothful movement,
and feed response were recorded before and during the treatment using the focal sampling technique. Gas
chromatography- mass spectrometry (GC-MS) of the ethanol extract was analyzed. In silico molecular docking
studies were used to analyze the binding interactions with CYP
450
2E1.
Results: The observed behavioral alterations were normalized in a dose-dependent manner at the end of the
experiment, the extract mitigated kerosene-induced biochemical disruptions, reducing ALT, AST, and creatinine
levels. The levels of disruptions in hematology at 100- and 200-mL kerosene exposure was restored close to
control values. However, the EE displayed amelioration on the effects of kerosene. In silico analysis revealed high
negative binding interactions between compounds identified in the extract and CYP 450 2E1. Better docking
scores further validate the protective potential of the top three compounds [9-Octadecenoic acid (-7.9 kCal/
mol.), (E)-, Hexadecanamide (-7.5 kCal/mol.), 9-Octadecenamide, (Z)- (-7.8 kCal/mol.)] identified in B. sapida
ethanol extract against the molecular protein target compared with ademethionine, the standard drug (-6.6 kCal/
mol.). The study concluded that Blighia sapida extract shows promises as a sustainable intervention against
kerosene-induced toxicity in aquatic organisms. Also, the top three compounds fingerprinted from the extract of
this plant, unlike the standard compound, exhibited adequate drug-like properties.
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Adekola, M. B., Ojelade, O. C., Olurode, S. A., Adebowale, T. O., Akinde, A. O., Apata, J. T., ... & Ajala, O. T. (2025). The protective potential of Blighia sapida on the behavioural and hematobiochemical disruption in kerosene-exposed Clarias gariepinus: In Vivo and In Silico evaluation. Pharmacological Research-Reports, 3, 100036.