Título
Anthelmintic effect of Psidium guajava and Tagetes erecta on wild-type and Levamisole-resistant Caenorhabditis elegans strains
11627/511611627/5116
Autor
Piña Vázquez, Denia María
Mayoral Peña, Zyanya
Gómez Sánchez, Maricela
Salazar Olivo, Luis Antonio
Arellano Carbajal, Fausto
Resumen
"Ethnopharmacological relevance
Psidium guajava and Tagetes erecta have been used traditionally to treat gastrointestinal parasites, but their active metabolites and mechanisms of action remain largely unknown.
Aim of the study
To evaluate the anthelmintic potential of Psidium guajava and Tagetes erecta extracts on Levamisole-sensitive and Levamisole-resistant strains of the model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.
Materials and methods
Aqueous extracts of Psidium guajava (PGE) and Tagetes erecta (TEE) were assayed on locomotion and egg-laying behaviors of the wild-type (N2) and Levamisole-resistant (CB193) strains of Caenorhabditis elegans.
Results
Both extracts paralyzed wild-type and Levamisole-resistant nematodes in a dose-dependent manner. In wild-type worms, TEE 25 mg/mL induced a 75% paralysis after 8 h of treatment and PGE 25 mg/mL induced a 100% paralysis after 4 h of treatment. PGE exerted a similar paralyzing effect on N2 wild-type and CB193 Levamisole-resistant worms, while TEE only partially paralyzed CB193 worms. TEE 25 mg/mL decreased N2 egg-laying by 65% with respect to the untreated control, while PGE did it by 40%.
Conclusions
Psidium guajava leaves and Tagetes erecta flower-heads possess hydrosoluble compounds that block the motility of Caenorhabditis elegans by a mechanism different to that of the anthelmintic drug Levamisole. Effects are also observable on oviposition, which was diminished in the wild-type worms. The strong anthelmintic effects in crude extracts of these plants warrants future work to identify their active compounds and to elucidate their molecular mechanisms of action."
Fecha de publicación
2017Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jep.2017.03.004Área de conocimiento
FARMACOLOGÍAColecciones
Editor
ElsevierPalabras clave
AnthelminticPsidium guajava
Tagetes erecta
Caenorhabditis elegans
Levamisole-resistance