1. Antiparasitic efficacy of curcumin from Curcuma longa against Ichthyophthirius multifiliis in grass carp.
- Author
-
Liu YM, Zhang QZ, Xu DH, Fu YW, Lin DJ, Zhou SY, and Li JP
- Subjects
- Animals, Antiprotozoal Agents adverse effects, Ciliophora Infections drug therapy, Ciliophora Infections parasitology, Curcumin adverse effects, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Fish Diseases parasitology, Hymenostomatida physiology, Random Allocation, Antiprotozoal Agents pharmacology, Carps, Ciliophora Infections veterinary, Curcumin pharmacology, Fish Diseases drug therapy, Hymenostomatida drug effects
- Abstract
Ichthyophthirius multifiliis is a ciliated parasite that elicits great economic losses in aquaculture. In the present study, a polyphenol compound, curcumin, was obtained from the rhizome of Curcuma longa by bioassay-guided isolation based on the efficacy of anti-I. multifiliis theronts. Anti-I. multifiliis efficacy of curcumin was evaluated in vitro and in vivo. Curcumin resulted in 100% mortality of I. multifiliis theronts at a concentration of 1mg/L within 21.7±1.2min and killed all tomonts at 8mg/L within 31.0±1.0min. Curcumin at 4mg/L for 16h exposure can completely terminate the reproduction of tomonts. The pretreatment with curcumin at concentrations of 0.5, 0.25, and 0.125mg/L for 2h significantly reduced the infectivity of I. multifiliis theronts. Curcumin at 4mg/L completely cured the infected grass carp and protected naive fish from I. multifiliis infection after 10days exposure. The 4h median effective concentration (EC
50 ) of curcumin to I. multifiliis theronts and the 5h EC50 of curcumin to I. multifiliis tomonts were 0.303mg/L and 2.891mg/L, respectively. The 96h median lethal concentration (LC50 ) of curcumin to grass carp was 56.8mg/L, which was approximately 187.4 times EC50 of curcumin to theronts and 19.6 times EC50 of curcumin to tomonts. The results demonstrated that curcumin has the potential to be a safe and effective therapeutant for controlling ichthyophthiriasis in aquaculture., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF