Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora

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Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora. / Peña-Espinoza, Miguel; Williams, Andrew R; Thamsborg, Stig M; Simonsen, Henrik T; Enemark, Heidi L.

I: Veterinary Parasitology, Bind 243, 2017, s. 204-207.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Peña-Espinoza, M, Williams, AR, Thamsborg, SM, Simonsen, HT & Enemark, HL 2017, 'Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora', Veterinary Parasitology, bind 243, s. 204-207. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008

APA

Peña-Espinoza, M., Williams, A. R., Thamsborg, S. M., Simonsen, H. T., & Enemark, H. L. (2017). Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora. Veterinary Parasitology, 243, 204-207. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008

Vancouver

Peña-Espinoza M, Williams AR, Thamsborg SM, Simonsen HT, Enemark HL. Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora. Veterinary Parasitology. 2017;243:204-207. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008

Author

Peña-Espinoza, Miguel ; Williams, Andrew R ; Thamsborg, Stig M ; Simonsen, Henrik T ; Enemark, Heidi L. / Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora. I: Veterinary Parasitology. 2017 ; Bind 243. s. 204-207.

Bibtex

@article{f884d822f82a4819b5354c7c9b84d47d,
title = "Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora",
abstract = "Chicory shows great promise as an anthelmintic forage for grazing ruminants that can reduce reliance on anti-parasitic drugs. Recently, we reported potent anthelmintic effects of chicory-based diets in infected cattle with significant reductions in worm burdens of the abomasal nematode Ostertagia ostertagi, whilst no apparent activity was observed against the small intestinal parasite Cooperia oncophora. To explore this discrepancy, we investigated direct anthelmintic effects of forage chicory against C. oncophora in vitro. Chicory leaves (cultivar 'Spadona') were extracted with methanol in a Soxhlet apparatus and the resulting extract was purified by solid-phase extraction to concentrate bioactive phytochemicals such as sesquiterpene lactones. C. oncophora eggs and adult worms from mono-infected donor calves were exposed to decreasing concentrations of the chicory extract. In an egg hatch assay, the chicory extract induced a marked and dose-dependent inhibition of egg hatching, with 95% inhibition at 2500μg extract/mL (EC50=619 [95% CI: 530-722] μg extract/mL). In the adult motility inhibition assays, the chicory extract induced a potent and dose-dependent worm paralysis. At 12h of incubation, worms exposed to chicory showed a total paralysis at ≥500μg extract/mL, while after 48h of incubation a complete inhibition of worm motility was observed at ≥250μg extract/mL (EC50=80 [95% CI: 67-95] μg extract/mL). We have demonstrated that forage chicory can induce potent inhibitory effects on the egg hatching and exert direct anthelmintic activity against parasitic stages of C. oncophora. These results suggest that the previously reported absence of in vivo effects of chicory towards C. oncophora in infected animals may be related with host-mediated factors and/or inhibitory digestive conditions, rather than an inherent inactivity of chicory and its bioactive phytochemicals.",
author = "Miguel Pe{\~n}a-Espinoza and Williams, {Andrew R} and Thamsborg, {Stig M} and Simonsen, {Henrik T} and Enemark, {Heidi L}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008",
language = "English",
volume = "243",
pages = "204--207",
journal = "Veterinary Parasitology",
issn = "0304-4017",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Anthelmintic effects of forage chicory (Cichorium intybus) against free-living and parasitic stages of Cooperia oncophora

AU - Peña-Espinoza, Miguel

AU - Williams, Andrew R

AU - Thamsborg, Stig M

AU - Simonsen, Henrik T

AU - Enemark, Heidi L

N1 - Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Chicory shows great promise as an anthelmintic forage for grazing ruminants that can reduce reliance on anti-parasitic drugs. Recently, we reported potent anthelmintic effects of chicory-based diets in infected cattle with significant reductions in worm burdens of the abomasal nematode Ostertagia ostertagi, whilst no apparent activity was observed against the small intestinal parasite Cooperia oncophora. To explore this discrepancy, we investigated direct anthelmintic effects of forage chicory against C. oncophora in vitro. Chicory leaves (cultivar 'Spadona') were extracted with methanol in a Soxhlet apparatus and the resulting extract was purified by solid-phase extraction to concentrate bioactive phytochemicals such as sesquiterpene lactones. C. oncophora eggs and adult worms from mono-infected donor calves were exposed to decreasing concentrations of the chicory extract. In an egg hatch assay, the chicory extract induced a marked and dose-dependent inhibition of egg hatching, with 95% inhibition at 2500μg extract/mL (EC50=619 [95% CI: 530-722] μg extract/mL). In the adult motility inhibition assays, the chicory extract induced a potent and dose-dependent worm paralysis. At 12h of incubation, worms exposed to chicory showed a total paralysis at ≥500μg extract/mL, while after 48h of incubation a complete inhibition of worm motility was observed at ≥250μg extract/mL (EC50=80 [95% CI: 67-95] μg extract/mL). We have demonstrated that forage chicory can induce potent inhibitory effects on the egg hatching and exert direct anthelmintic activity against parasitic stages of C. oncophora. These results suggest that the previously reported absence of in vivo effects of chicory towards C. oncophora in infected animals may be related with host-mediated factors and/or inhibitory digestive conditions, rather than an inherent inactivity of chicory and its bioactive phytochemicals.

AB - Chicory shows great promise as an anthelmintic forage for grazing ruminants that can reduce reliance on anti-parasitic drugs. Recently, we reported potent anthelmintic effects of chicory-based diets in infected cattle with significant reductions in worm burdens of the abomasal nematode Ostertagia ostertagi, whilst no apparent activity was observed against the small intestinal parasite Cooperia oncophora. To explore this discrepancy, we investigated direct anthelmintic effects of forage chicory against C. oncophora in vitro. Chicory leaves (cultivar 'Spadona') were extracted with methanol in a Soxhlet apparatus and the resulting extract was purified by solid-phase extraction to concentrate bioactive phytochemicals such as sesquiterpene lactones. C. oncophora eggs and adult worms from mono-infected donor calves were exposed to decreasing concentrations of the chicory extract. In an egg hatch assay, the chicory extract induced a marked and dose-dependent inhibition of egg hatching, with 95% inhibition at 2500μg extract/mL (EC50=619 [95% CI: 530-722] μg extract/mL). In the adult motility inhibition assays, the chicory extract induced a potent and dose-dependent worm paralysis. At 12h of incubation, worms exposed to chicory showed a total paralysis at ≥500μg extract/mL, while after 48h of incubation a complete inhibition of worm motility was observed at ≥250μg extract/mL (EC50=80 [95% CI: 67-95] μg extract/mL). We have demonstrated that forage chicory can induce potent inhibitory effects on the egg hatching and exert direct anthelmintic activity against parasitic stages of C. oncophora. These results suggest that the previously reported absence of in vivo effects of chicory towards C. oncophora in infected animals may be related with host-mediated factors and/or inhibitory digestive conditions, rather than an inherent inactivity of chicory and its bioactive phytochemicals.

U2 - 10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008

DO - 10.1016/j.vetpar.2017.07.008

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28807295

VL - 243

SP - 204

EP - 207

JO - Veterinary Parasitology

JF - Veterinary Parasitology

SN - 0304-4017

ER -

ID: 182162778