Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum

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Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum. / Williams, Andrew Richard; Fryganas, Christos; Ramsay, Aina; Mueller-Harvey, Irene; Thamsborg, Stig Milan.

In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 9, No. 5, e97053, 2014.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Williams, AR, Fryganas, C, Ramsay, A, Mueller-Harvey, I & Thamsborg, SM 2014, 'Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum', PLoS ONE, vol. 9, no. 5, e97053. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097053

APA

Williams, A. R., Fryganas, C., Ramsay, A., Mueller-Harvey, I., & Thamsborg, S. M. (2014). Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum. PLoS ONE, 9(5), [e97053]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097053

Vancouver

Williams AR, Fryganas C, Ramsay A, Mueller-Harvey I, Thamsborg SM. Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum. PLoS ONE. 2014;9(5). e97053. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097053

Author

Williams, Andrew Richard ; Fryganas, Christos ; Ramsay, Aina ; Mueller-Harvey, Irene ; Thamsborg, Stig Milan. / Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum. In: PLoS ONE. 2014 ; Vol. 9, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{653dea4b5eb54c559bc64cd4807b1442,
title = "Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum",
abstract = "Ascaris suum is one of the most prevalent nematode parasites in pigs and causes significant economic losses, and also serves as a good model for A. lumbricoides, the large roundworm of humans that is ubiquitous in developing countries and causes malnutrition, stunted growth and compromises immunity to other pathogens. New treatment options for Ascaris infections are urgently needed, to reduce reliance on the limited number of synthetic anthelmintic drugs. In areas where Ascaris infections are common, ethno-pharmacological practices such as treatment with natural plant extracts are still widely employed. However, scientific validation of these practices and identification of the active compounds are lacking, although observed effects are often ascribed to plant secondary metabolites such as tannins. Here, we extracted, purified and characterised a wide range of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources and investigated anthelmintic effects against A. suum in vitro. We show that condensed tannins can have potent, direct anthelmintic effects against A. suum, as evidenced by reduced migratory ability of newly hatched third-stage larvae and reduced motility and survival of fourth-stage larvae recovered from pigs. Transmission electron microscopy showed that CT caused significant damage to the cuticle and digestive tissues of the larvae. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the strength of the anthelmintic effect is related to the polymer size of the tannin molecule. Moreover, the identity of the monomeric structural units of tannin polymers may also have an influence as gallocatechin and epigallocatechin monomers exerted significant anthelmintic activity whereas catechin and epicatechin monomers did not. Therefore, our results clearly document direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins against Ascaris and encourage further in vivo investigation to determine optimal strategies for the use of these plant compounds for the prevention and/or treatment of ascariosis.",
author = "Williams, {Andrew Richard} and Christos Fryganas and Aina Ramsay and Irene Mueller-Harvey and Thamsborg, {Stig Milan}",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0097053",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources against Ascaris suum

AU - Williams, Andrew Richard

AU - Fryganas, Christos

AU - Ramsay, Aina

AU - Mueller-Harvey, Irene

AU - Thamsborg, Stig Milan

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Ascaris suum is one of the most prevalent nematode parasites in pigs and causes significant economic losses, and also serves as a good model for A. lumbricoides, the large roundworm of humans that is ubiquitous in developing countries and causes malnutrition, stunted growth and compromises immunity to other pathogens. New treatment options for Ascaris infections are urgently needed, to reduce reliance on the limited number of synthetic anthelmintic drugs. In areas where Ascaris infections are common, ethno-pharmacological practices such as treatment with natural plant extracts are still widely employed. However, scientific validation of these practices and identification of the active compounds are lacking, although observed effects are often ascribed to plant secondary metabolites such as tannins. Here, we extracted, purified and characterised a wide range of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources and investigated anthelmintic effects against A. suum in vitro. We show that condensed tannins can have potent, direct anthelmintic effects against A. suum, as evidenced by reduced migratory ability of newly hatched third-stage larvae and reduced motility and survival of fourth-stage larvae recovered from pigs. Transmission electron microscopy showed that CT caused significant damage to the cuticle and digestive tissues of the larvae. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the strength of the anthelmintic effect is related to the polymer size of the tannin molecule. Moreover, the identity of the monomeric structural units of tannin polymers may also have an influence as gallocatechin and epigallocatechin monomers exerted significant anthelmintic activity whereas catechin and epicatechin monomers did not. Therefore, our results clearly document direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins against Ascaris and encourage further in vivo investigation to determine optimal strategies for the use of these plant compounds for the prevention and/or treatment of ascariosis.

AB - Ascaris suum is one of the most prevalent nematode parasites in pigs and causes significant economic losses, and also serves as a good model for A. lumbricoides, the large roundworm of humans that is ubiquitous in developing countries and causes malnutrition, stunted growth and compromises immunity to other pathogens. New treatment options for Ascaris infections are urgently needed, to reduce reliance on the limited number of synthetic anthelmintic drugs. In areas where Ascaris infections are common, ethno-pharmacological practices such as treatment with natural plant extracts are still widely employed. However, scientific validation of these practices and identification of the active compounds are lacking, although observed effects are often ascribed to plant secondary metabolites such as tannins. Here, we extracted, purified and characterised a wide range of condensed tannins from diverse plant sources and investigated anthelmintic effects against A. suum in vitro. We show that condensed tannins can have potent, direct anthelmintic effects against A. suum, as evidenced by reduced migratory ability of newly hatched third-stage larvae and reduced motility and survival of fourth-stage larvae recovered from pigs. Transmission electron microscopy showed that CT caused significant damage to the cuticle and digestive tissues of the larvae. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the strength of the anthelmintic effect is related to the polymer size of the tannin molecule. Moreover, the identity of the monomeric structural units of tannin polymers may also have an influence as gallocatechin and epigallocatechin monomers exerted significant anthelmintic activity whereas catechin and epicatechin monomers did not. Therefore, our results clearly document direct anthelmintic effects of condensed tannins against Ascaris and encourage further in vivo investigation to determine optimal strategies for the use of these plant compounds for the prevention and/or treatment of ascariosis.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0097053

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0097053

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24810761

VL - 9

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 5

M1 - e97053

ER -

ID: 111032283