| Literature DB >> 36080466 |
Alessandra R Lima1,2, Cicera M Silva1, Lucas M da Silva3, Amilcar Machulek3, Antônio P de Souza4, Kleber T de Oliveira5, Larissa M Souza2, Natalia M Inada2, Vanderlei S Bagnato2, Samuel L Oliveira1, Anderson R L Caires1.
Abstract
This study reports curcumin as an efficient photolarvicide against Aedes aegypti larvae under natural light illumination. Larval mortality and pupal formation were monitored daily for 21 days under simulated field conditions. In a sucrose-containing formulation, a lethal time 50 (LT50) of 3 days was found using curcumin at 4.6 mg L-1. This formulation promoted no larval toxicity in the absence of illumination, and sucrose alone did not induce larval phototoxicity. The photodegradation byproducts (intermediates) of curcumin were determined and the photodegradation mechanisms proposed. Intermediates with m/z 194, 278, and 370 were found and characterized using LC-MS. The ecotoxicity of the byproducts on non-target organisms (Daphnia, fish, and green algae) indicates that the intermediates do not exhibit any destructive potential for aquatic organisms. The results of photodegradation and ecotoxicity suggest that curcumin is environmentally safe for non-target organisms and, therefore, can be considered for population control of Ae. aegypti.Entities:
Keywords: non-toxic; photodegradation; photodynamic control; photosensitizer; vector
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36080466 PMCID: PMC9457702 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27175699
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Representative confocal microscopy images of Ae. aegypti larvae: (A) non-subjected to synthetic curcumin with sucrose SCS (control) and exposed to SCS with curcumin, (B) attached to the larval body surface (arrow), and (C) located in the midgut. Scale bars represent 1 mm.
Figure 2Pupal formation and larval mortality rate in the (A) control group submitted to sucrose formulation and (B) experimental group with curcumin/sucrose formulation as a function of the number of days in the field. Arrows indicate the y-axis for mortality (black) and pupal formation (red).
Proposed structures of the produced byproducts obtained from direct photolysis of curcumin, molecular formulas with the respective m/z, and retention time.
| Compound | Accurate Mass [M+H]+ | Retention Time (min) | Molecular Formula | Proposed Structure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 172 | 173.0103 | 1 | C7H8O5 |
|
| 194 | 194.9671 | 1.1 | C10H10O4 |
|
| 200 | 201.0466 | 1 | C8H8O6 |
|
| 212 | 212.9753 | 1.1 | C10H8O6 |
|
| 226 | 226.9489 | 1 | C10H10O6 |
|
| 242 | 242.9826 | 1.1 | C10H10O7 |
|
| 278 | 279.0721 | 1 | C13H10O7 |
|
| 290 | 290.9712 | 1 | C10H10O10 |
|
| 370 | 370.9319 | 1.1 | C20H18O7 |
|
| 402 | 402.8989 | 1.1 | C20H18O9 |
|
| 418 | 418.8622 | 1.1 | C20H18O10 |
|
| 434 | 434.8924 | 1.1 | C20H18O11 |
|
Figure 3Proposal for formation of curcumin photodegradation byproducts.
Predicted acute toxicity to Daphnia, fish, and green algae for some intermediates of curcumin photodegradation: , , , water-solubility, acute toxic unit (TU), and toxicity classification.
| Compound | 2 (194 | 13 (278 | 9 (370 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organism | Structure |
|
|
|
|
| 287.5 | 2.3 × 104 | 988.16 | |
| TU | 3.5 × 10−3 | 4.3 × 10−5 | 1.2 × 10−3 | |
| Fish | 534.4 | 7.3 × 103 | 1.9 × 103 | |
| TU | 1.9 × 10−3 | 1.4 × 10−4 | 5.3 × 10−4 | |
| Green algae | 171.3 | 1.8 × 104 | 525.5 | |
| TU | 5.8 × 10−3 | 5.4 × 10−5 | 1.9 × 10−3 | |
| Toxicity | Non-toxic | Non-toxic | Non-toxic | |
|
| 1.42 | −1.93 | 1.12 |
Figure 4(A) Water tanks; (B) tank cover illustration.