Inflammation and compromised immune responses often increase colorectal cancer (CRC) risk. The immune-modulating effects of limonin on carcinogen/inflammation-induced colorectal cancer (CRC) were studied in mice. Male Balb/c mice were randomly assorted into three groups (n = 6): healthy control, non-treated CRC-induced (azoxymethane/dextran-sulfate-sodium AOM/DSS) control, and CRC-induced + 50 mg limonin/kg body weight. The CRC developments were monitored via macroscopic, histopathological, ELISA, and mRNA expression analyses. Limonin downregulated inflammation (TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α), enhanced the adaptive immune responses (CD8, CD4, and CD19), and upregulated antioxidant defense (Nrf2, SOD2) mRNA expressions. Limonin reduced serum malondialdehyde (MDA, lipid peroxidation biomarker), prostaglandin E2, and histopathology inflammation scores, while increasing reduced glutathione (GSH) in CRC-induced mice. Limonin significantly (p
Diabetes mellitus (DM) often causes ocular disorders leading to vision loss. Metformin is commonly prescribed for type 2 diabetes. This study assessed the effect of metformin on hyperglycemic histopathological eye abnormalities and some possible pathways involved. Male rats were divided into 3 groups (N = 6), namely, healthy control, hyperglycemic non-treated control, and hyperglycemic rats treated with 200 mg/kg metformin. Two weeks after diabetes induction by an intraperitoneal streptozotocin (60 mg streptozotocin (STZ)/kg) injection, the rats develop ocular abnormalities, and metformin (200 mg/kg) treatment was administered daily. Rats underwent dilated retinal digital ophthalmoscope examination and graded for diabetic retinopathy. Rats were sacrificed at 12 weeks, and the cornea, lens, sclera, ciliary body, iris, conjunctiva, retinal, and optic nerve were examined histologically. Rats' fasting blood glucose and body weight were monitored. Serum tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), claudin-1, and glutathione/malondialdehyde ratios were analyzed. Metformin significantly attenuated diabetes-related histopathological ocular deteriorations in the cornea, lens, sclera, ciliary body, iris, conjunctiva, retina, and optic nerve partly by restoring serum TNF-α, VEGF, claudin-1, and glutathione/malondialdehyde ratios without significantly affecting the fasting blood glucose levels or body weight in these hyperglycemic rats. Metformin attenuated hyperglycemia-associated histopathological eye deteriorations, possibly partly by ameliorating vascular leakage, oxidative stress, inflammation, and neovascularization, without affecting the fasting blood glucose levels or body weights in these STZ-induced diabetic rats.