In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis

Parasitic diseases represent a significant global public health concern. Two clinically important parasites of high prevalence rates are Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides stercoralis. However, the limitations of currently used nematocidal drugs highlight the urgent need for novel treatment appr...

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Autores principales: Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith, Gomez Flores, Ricardo, Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro, Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio, Romo Sáenz, César Iván, Marín, Miguel, Sánchez Montejo, Javier, Muro, Antonio, Peláez, Rafael, López Abán, Julio
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:inglés
Publicado: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024
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Acceso en línea:http://eprints.uanl.mx/28931/7/28931.pdf
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author Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith
Gomez Flores, Ricardo
Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro
Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio
Romo Sáenz, César Iván
Marín, Miguel
Sánchez Montejo, Javier
Muro, Antonio
Peláez, Rafael
López Abán, Julio
author_facet Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith
Gomez Flores, Ricardo
Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro
Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio
Romo Sáenz, César Iván
Marín, Miguel
Sánchez Montejo, Javier
Muro, Antonio
Peláez, Rafael
López Abán, Julio
author_sort Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith
collection Repositorio Institucional
description Parasitic diseases represent a significant global public health concern. Two clinically important parasites of high prevalence rates are Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides stercoralis. However, the limitations of currently used nematocidal drugs highlight the urgent need for novel treatment approaches. The present study investigated the in vitro nematocidal activity of methanol extracts from Amphipterygium adstringens, Artemisia ludoviciana, Cymbopogon citratus, Heterotheca inuloides, Jatropha dioica, Justicia spicigera, Larrea tridentata, Mimosa tenuiflora, Psacalium decompositum, Ruta chalepensis, Semialarium mexicanum, and Smilax aspera against T. spiralis L1 and S. venezuelensis L3 (model for S. stercoralis). Most of the plants showed antiparasitic activity, but R. chalepensis crude methanol extract showed the most potent nematocidal activity against both parasites, with a mean lethal concentration (LC50) of 28.2 μg/mL and a selectivity index (SI) of 22.4 for T. spiralis and an LC50 of 244.8 μg/mL and SI of 2.58 for S. venezuelensis. This extract was further separated into n-hexane, chloroform, and methanol partitions by continuous Soxhlet extractions. The n-hexane partition demonstrated the strongest activity against both parasites, with an LC50 of 147.6 μg/mL and an SI of 7.77 against T. spiralis and an LC50 of 39.2 μg/mL and an SI of 3.77 against S. venezuelensis. LC-MS/MS analysis identified coumarins as the main chemical class (53%), and chalepin represented this partition’s most abundant compound (29.9%). Overall, this study confirmed the antiparasitic potential of medicinal plants commonly used in Mexico. In addition, it highlights the possibility of obtaining bioactive compounds from plants like R. chalepensis, or the other plants evaluated in this study, as novel treatments against parasitic diseases.
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spelling eprints-289312025-02-18T19:50:11Z http://eprints.uanl.mx/28931/ In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith Gomez Flores, Ricardo Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio Romo Sáenz, César Iván Marín, Miguel Sánchez Montejo, Javier Muro, Antonio Peláez, Rafael López Abán, Julio Biología y Química Parasitic diseases represent a significant global public health concern. Two clinically important parasites of high prevalence rates are Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides stercoralis. However, the limitations of currently used nematocidal drugs highlight the urgent need for novel treatment approaches. The present study investigated the in vitro nematocidal activity of methanol extracts from Amphipterygium adstringens, Artemisia ludoviciana, Cymbopogon citratus, Heterotheca inuloides, Jatropha dioica, Justicia spicigera, Larrea tridentata, Mimosa tenuiflora, Psacalium decompositum, Ruta chalepensis, Semialarium mexicanum, and Smilax aspera against T. spiralis L1 and S. venezuelensis L3 (model for S. stercoralis). Most of the plants showed antiparasitic activity, but R. chalepensis crude methanol extract showed the most potent nematocidal activity against both parasites, with a mean lethal concentration (LC50) of 28.2 μg/mL and a selectivity index (SI) of 22.4 for T. spiralis and an LC50 of 244.8 μg/mL and SI of 2.58 for S. venezuelensis. This extract was further separated into n-hexane, chloroform, and methanol partitions by continuous Soxhlet extractions. The n-hexane partition demonstrated the strongest activity against both parasites, with an LC50 of 147.6 μg/mL and an SI of 7.77 against T. spiralis and an LC50 of 39.2 μg/mL and an SI of 3.77 against S. venezuelensis. LC-MS/MS analysis identified coumarins as the main chemical class (53%), and chalepin represented this partition’s most abundant compound (29.9%). Overall, this study confirmed the antiparasitic potential of medicinal plants commonly used in Mexico. In addition, it highlights the possibility of obtaining bioactive compounds from plants like R. chalepensis, or the other plants evaluated in this study, as novel treatments against parasitic diseases. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024-12-12 Article PeerReviewed text en cc_by_nc_nd http://eprints.uanl.mx/28931/7/28931.pdf http://eprints.uanl.mx/28931/7.haspreviewThumbnailVersion/28931.pdf Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith y Gomez Flores, Ricardo y Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro y Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio y Romo Sáenz, César Iván y Marín, Miguel y Sánchez Montejo, Javier y Muro, Antonio y Peláez, Rafael y López Abán, Julio (2024) In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis. Plants, 13. pp. 1-14. ISSN 2223-7747 https://www.mdpi.com/2223-7747/13/24/3484
spellingShingle Biología y Química
Rodríguez Garza, Nancy Edith
Gomez Flores, Ricardo
Quintanilla Licea, Ramiro
Elizondo Luévano, Joel Horacio
Romo Sáenz, César Iván
Marín, Miguel
Sánchez Montejo, Javier
Muro, Antonio
Peláez, Rafael
López Abán, Julio
In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
thumbnail https://rediab.uanl.mx/themes/sandal5/images/online.png
title In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
title_full In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
title_fullStr In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
title_full_unstemmed In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
title_short In Vitro Anthelmintic Effect of Mexican Plant Extracts and Partitions Against Trichinella spiralis and Strongyloides venezuelensis
title_sort in vitro anthelmintic effect of mexican plant extracts and partitions against trichinella spiralis and strongyloides venezuelensis
topic Biología y Química
url http://eprints.uanl.mx/28931/7/28931.pdf
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