| Literature DB >> 28412962 |
Jackson M Muema1, Joel L Bargul2,3, Sospeter N Njeru4,5, Joab O Onyango6, Susan S Imbahale7.
Abstract
Malaria presents an overwhelming public health challenge, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa where vector favourable conditions and poverty prevail, potentiating the disease burden. Behavioural variability of malaria vectors poses a great challenge to existing vector control programmes with insecticide resistance already acquired to nearly all available chemical compounds. Thus, approaches incorporating plant-derived compounds to manipulate semiochemical-mediated behaviours through disruption of mosquito olfactory sensory system have considerably gained interests to interrupt malaria transmission cycle. The combination of push-pull methods and larval control have the potential to reduce malaria vector populations, thus minimising the risk of contracting malaria especially in resource-constrained communities where access to synthetic insecticides is a challenge. In this review, we have compiled information regarding the current status of knowledge on manipulation of larval ecology and chemical-mediated behaviour of adult mosquitoes with plant-derived compounds for controlling mosquito populations. Further, an update on the current advancements in technologies to improve longevity and efficiency of these compounds for field applications has been provided.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheline mosquitoes; Integrated vector management; Larval habitat manipulation; Malaria; Mosquito functional ecology; Plant-derived compounds; Vector control
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28412962 PMCID: PMC5392979 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-017-2122-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Mosquito olfactory-driven behavioral responses. Physiological status such as circadian-regulated appetitive stimulus or gonotrophic status activates olfaction in search of nutritional sources, mates and oviposition sites. On binding to odorant chemoreceptors and subsequent flight orientation, mosquitoes follow the source of the chemical cues for behavioral response depending on brain odor coding. Reproduced with permission of Wageningen Academic Publishers. Citation: Bohbot JD, et al. (2010) Molecular regulation of olfaction in mosquitoes. In: Takken W, Knols BGJ, editors. Olfaction in vector-host interactions. Wageningen, Netherlands: Wageningen Academic Publishers 2010; p. 17–38 [38]
Fig. 2Plant-derived insect repellent compounds: a Citral, b Geraniol, c Citronellal, d Citronellol e Myrcene, f α-pinene, g β-pinene, h p-menthane-3,8-diol (PMD), i linalool, j Thymol, k Eugenol, l Carvacrol, and m Caryophyllene
A summary of some repellent plant derivatives against anopheline mosquitoes
| Plant | Major repellent compounds | Mode of testing | Repellency efficacy | Study type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Perillyl alcohol, perillaldehyde, geraniol | Topical application | 100% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Linalool, camphor, 4-isopropylbenzenemethanol, carvone, caryophyllene oxide | Topical application | RC50 9.21 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Terpene-4-ol, fenchone, γ-terpinene, terpinolene | Topical application | RC50 1.52 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Eugenol, terpinolene, β-myrcene | Topical application | RC50 0.67 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Fenchone, camphor,α-pinene, β-myrcene | Topical application | RC50 1 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Carvacrol, caryophyllene oxide, terpene-4-ol, β-myrcene, γ-terpinene, α-terpinene | Topical application | RC50 1.93 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Linalool, caryophyllene oxide,γ-terpinene, 1-methylpyrrole | Topical application | RC50 3.74 × 10-5 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Caryophyllene, nepetalactone | Topical application | RC50 0.081-0.091 mg cm-2 | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Caryophyllene | Direct burning | 27.22–43% protection | Field study | [ |
|
| α-terpinene, thymol, linalool, geraniol, carvacrol, | Topical application | > 80% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Azadirachtin, saponins | Direct burning | 25–94% protection | Field study | [ |
|
|
| Topical application | 48–100% protection | Field study | [ |
|
| Camphor, 1,8-cineole, | Topical application | 100% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Camphene, α-pinene, α-fenchyl alcohol, 1,8-cineole, α-terpeneol, | Topical application | 99% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Fenchone, limonene, 1,8-cineole | Topical application | 80% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Myrcene, linalool, α-pinene, eucalyptol, camphor, camphene, 1,8-cineole | Topical application | 84% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Allopurinol, camphor, limonene, verbenone, α-terpeneol, limonene oxide, | Topical application | 90% protection | Laboratory study | [ |
|
| Ocimene, dihydrotagetone, tagetones, ocimenones, piperitenone, 3,9-epoxy-p-metha-1,8(10)diene, β-caryophyllene, bicyclogermacrene, AR-turmerone | Topical application | > 80% protection | Laboratory and semi-field studies | [ |
A summary of some larvicidal compounds derived from plants
| Plant | Active compound | Dosage at LC50 | Mosquito species | Published source | Mode of action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non volatiles | |||||
|
| Pyridone alkaloids | 0.18 mg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Sesquisterpene lactones | 0.33 mg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Plumbagin, β-sitosterol | 4.1 μg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Azadirachtin, salanin, deacetylgedunin | 0.014–0.078 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
|
| Mzikonone, 1α-12α- diacetoxy-1,2-dihydro-7-deacetyl-3β-7α-dihydroxyazadiron, 12-α-acetoxy-7-deacetylazadiron | 265 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Mzikonone, 1α-12α- diacetoxy-1,2-dihydro-7-deacetyl-3β-7α-dihydroxyazadiron, 12-α-acetoxy-7-deacetylazadiron | 202 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Salannin, volkensin | 5.4 mg/l |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| 3β,24,25-trihydroxycycloartane | 2.5–6.5 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
|
| Beddomeilactone | 2.5–6.5 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
|
| Stigmasterol, 20-hydroxyecdysone, γ-sitosterol | 0.25–10 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
|
| Stigmasterol, 20-hydroxyecdysone, γ-sitosterol | 0.25–10 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
|
| Proanthocyanidins | 5.52 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity and growth disruption |
| Essential oils | |||||
| Neem oil | Azadirachtin | 11 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Kau-16-rene, β-elemol | 5.55–134.84 μg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| δ-3-carene | 202.15–2,625.20 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Thymol, carvacrol | 55.20 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Tannins, phenol, saponin, alkaloid, steroid, flavonoids, triterpenoid | 49.51 × 10−3 mg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Trans-cinnamaldehyde | 11.91–63.63 μg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Monoterpenes | 58 ppm |
| [ | Toxicity |
|
| Thymol | 80 mg/ml |
| [ | Toxicity |
Fig. 3Plant-based insect growth regulators with potential for control of mosquito larvae. The structural similarity of the above compounds with endogenous insect hormones dysregulate normal physiology and development culminating to death or impaired morphology