| Literature DB >> 30134991 |
Miguel Peña-Espinoza1, Angela H Valente2, Stig M Thamsborg2, Henrik T Simonsen3, Ulrik Boas4, Heidi L Enemark5, Rodrigo López-Muñoz6, Andrew R Williams2.
Abstract
Increasing drug resistance in gastrointestinal (GI) parasites of livestock and concerns about chemical residues in animal products and the environment are driving the development of alternative control strategies that are less reliant on the use of synthetic drugs. An increasingly investigated approach is the use of bioactive forages with antiparasitic properties as part of the animal's diet (nutraceuticals) or as potential sources of novel, natural parasiticides. Chicory (Cichorium intybus) is a multi-purpose crop and one of the most promising bioactive forages in temperate regions, and numerous in vivo trials have explored its potential against parasitic nematodes in livestock. However, it is unclear whether chicory can induce a direct and broad activity against various GI parasites in different livestock species, and the levels of chicory in the diet that are required to exert an efficient antiparasitic effect. Moreover, the mechanisms leading to the reported parasiticidal activity of chicory are still largely unknown, and its bioactive phytochemicals have only recently been investigated. In this review, we summarise the progress in the study of the antiparasitic activity of chicory and its natural bioactive compounds against GI parasites in livestock, through examination of the published literature. The available evidence indicates that feeding chicory can reduce faecal egg counts and/or worm burdens of abomasal nematodes, but not infections with intestinal worms, in ruminants. Highly chicory-rich diets (≥ 70% of chicory dry matter in the diet) may be necessary to directly affect abomasal parasitism. Chicory is known to synthesise several bioactive compounds with potential antiparasitic activity, but most research has been devoted to the role of sesquiterpene lactones (SL). Recent in vitro studies have confirmed direct and potent activity of SL-rich extracts from chicory against different GI helminths of livestock. Chicory SL have also been reported to exhibit antimalarial properties and its potential antiprotozoal activity in livestock remains to be evaluated. Furthermore, the detailed identification of the main antiparasitic metabolites of chicory and their pharmacokinetics need further confirmation. Research gaps and perspectives on the potential use of chicory as a nutraceutical forage and a source of bioactive compounds for parasite control in livestock are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Antiparasitic; Bioactive compounds; Chicory; Helminths; Livestock; Nutraceutical; Protozoa; Sesquiterpene lactones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30134991 PMCID: PMC6106872 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-3012-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Summary of peer-reviewed in vivo experiments studying the anthelmintic effects of dietary chicory in ruminants
| Livestock species | Chicory DMa (%) | Chicory cv. (sown) | Bioactive compounds in chicory (% DM)b | Nematode infection and experimental designc | Anthelmintic effects in chicory-fed animalsd | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep | 91 | ni (pure) | Total CT = 0.83% | Exp. | Lower numbers of mid/late L4 and L5/adult worms from the challenge infection. No effect on FEC while grazing on chicory and trickle infected | [ |
| 87 | ni (pure) | Total CT = 0.05%; total phenolics = 26.2% | Exp. | Reduction in adult male worms and lower total adult counts by 43% (ns). No effect on FEC, female per capita fecundity or immature worm counts | [ | |
| 80 | Grasslands Puna (pure) | nr | Exp. | Reduced FEC and | [ | |
| 80 | ni (pure) | Total CT = 0.05%; total phenolics = 26.2% | Exp. | No effect on FEC, adult or immature worm counts | [ | |
| 80 | Grasslands Puna (pure) | Total CT = 0.31% | Exp. | Reduced total egg output and FECDM of | [ | |
| 50 | Puna II (pure) | nr | Exp. | Reduced FEC in lambs and ewes on chicory and lower | [ | |
| nr | Grasslands Puna (pure) | nr | Natural infection | Reduced abomasal adult counts by 41% and abomasal L4 by 60%. No effect on FEC or intestinal worm counts | [ | |
| nr | Grasslands Puna (pure) | Total phenolics = 1.8–2.7% | Natural infections in ewes and their lambs. Ewes were either treated or not treated with anthelmintics | Lower FEC in lambs from untreated ewes on chicory. No effect on FEC of undrenched ewes or on adult worm burden in lambs | [ | |
| nr | Oasis (pure) | nr | Natural infection | Reduced FEC. Chicory-fed lambs had lower FAMACHA scores and required less anthelmintic treatments | [ | |
| 3–6 | Grasslands Puna (mixed with RG/WC) | nr | Natural infection | No effect on FEC | [ | |
| nr | Grasslands Puna (nr) | nr | Exp. | Reduced FEC and serum pepsinogen levels at Day 42 p.i. | [ | |
| Cattle | 90 | Spadona (pure) | Total CT = ni; total SL = 1.7–2.3% | Exp. | Reduced worm burdens by 66%. Reduced FEC from Day 21 p.i. onwards | [ |
| 70 | Spadona (pure) | Total CT = ni; total SL = 1.2% | Exp. | Reduced | [ | |
| 24 | Puna II (mixed with RG) | nr | Natural infection | No effect on FEC, proportion of | [ | |
| Deer | 56–71 | Grasslands Puna (pure) | Total CT = 0.17–0.26% | Natural infection | Fewer clinical signs associated with parasitism, requiring less anthelmintic treatment. No effect on FEC or lungworm L1 counts | [ |
aIn sward/diet
bDetection of bioactive compounds were performed with different methodologies and are not comparable between studies
cAll studies were grazing experiments, unless otherwise indicated (stabled animals). In all the trials ryegrass or ryegrass/white clover were used as diets for control animals, with the exception of Heckendorn et al. [53] who fed control lambs with ryegrass/lucerne fresh-cut and Miller et al. [55] who used Bermuda grass
dIn comparison to infected animals fed with control diets
Abbreviations: cv cultivar, ns not significant, DM dry matter, exp. experimental, p.i. post-infection, CT condensed tannins, SL sesquiterpene lactones, FEC faecal egg counts, FECDM FEC adjusted per g of faecal DM, L1 first-stage larvae, L3 third-stage larvae (free-living), L4 fourth-stage larvae (immature), L5 fifth-stage larvae, nr not reported, ni not identified
Bioactive phytochemicals in chicory (Cichorium intybus) and their reported bioactivity
| Bioactive compounds | Molecular formula | Reported bioactivity | Model | Reference for bioactivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guaianolide sesquiterpene lactones | ||||
| Lactucin | C15H16O5 | antiprotozoal |
| [ |
| 11,13-dihydrolactucin | C15H18O5 | nr | ||
| 8-deoxylactucin | C15H16O4 | anti-inflammatory | HT29 cells | [ |
| insecticidal |
| [ | ||
| 11,13-dihydro-8-deoxylactucin | C15H18O4 | nr | ||
| Lactucopicrin | C23H22O7 | antiprotozoal |
| [ |
| insecticidal |
| [ | ||
| 11,13-dihydrolactucopicrin | C23H24O7 | nr | ||
| Hydroxycinnamic acids | ||||
| Monocaffeoyl tartaric acid (Caftaric acid) | C13H12O9 | nr | ||
| Chlorogenic acid | C16H18O9 | antibacterial | [ | |
| Caffeic acid | C9H8O4 | anticancer | Fibrosarcoma (HT-1080) | [ |
| acaricidal |
| [ | ||
| Chicoric acid | C22H18O12 | insecticidal |
| [ |
| | C9H8O3 | anti-inflammatory | Female albino rats of Wistar strain ( | [ |
| Caffeoylmalic acid | C13H12O8 | nr | ||
| Ferulic acid | C10H10O4 | nr | ||
| Flavonoids | ||||
| Quercetin 3-O-glucuronide + Luteolin 7-O-glucuronide | C21H18O13 | acaricidal |
| [ |
| Quercetin malonyl glucoside | C24H22O15 | nr | ||
| Apigenin glucuronide | C21H18O11 | nr | ||
| Kaempferol glucuronide | C21H18O12 | anticancer and anti-inflammatory | Human pancreatic cancer cells | [ |
| Isorhamnetin 3-glucuronide | C22H20O13 | nr | ||
| Kaempferol-7-O-(6″-O-malonyl)-glucoside | C24H22O14 | nr | ||
| Anthocyanins | ||||
| Cyanidin 3-O-glucoside | C21H21O11+ | nr | ||
| Cyanidin 3-O-(6-malonyl)-glucoside | C24H23O14+ | anti-inflammatory | Lipid peroxidation and cyclooxygenase (COX-1 and -2) inhibition assay | [ |
| Coumarins | ||||
| Cichoriin | C18H20O3 | insecticidal |
| [ |
Notes: p-Coumaric acid, p-Coumaric acid, Ferulic acid, Isorhamnetin 3-glucuronide and kaempferol-7-O-(6″-O-malonyl)-glucoside were purified and identified by Papetti et al. [74]. Cichorin A was detected and identified by Rees & Harboure [68]. The remaining compounds were identified by Ferioli et al. [73]. All studies reporting bioactivity were performed in vitro, unless otherwise indicated (in vivo)
Abbreviations: nr not reported
Fig. 1Structures of the guaianolide sesquiterpene lactones reported in chicory
In vitro activity of purified chicory extracts (cv. Spadona) against parasitic stages of gastrointestinal nematodes of livestock
| Nematode species | Life-stage | Incubation period with extract (h) | EC50 μg/ml | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Adults | 24 | 80 | [ |
|
| Adults | 24 | 150 | [ |
|
| L3/L4 | 16/12 | 81/116 | [ |
|
| Adults/L4 | 24/36 | 305/372 | [ |
Abbreviation: EC50, effective concentration of purified chicory extracts able to inhibit the motility in 50% of exposed nematodes
Fig. 2Structures of the sesquiterpene lactones costunolide (a) and artemisinin (b)