Magnetic nanoparticles are highly toxic to chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum, dengue virus (DEN-2), and their mosquito vectors

01 Pubblicazione su rivista
Murugan Kadarkarai, Wei Jiang, Alsalhi Mohamad Saleh, Nicoletti Marcello, Paulpandi Manickam, Samidoss Christina Mary, Dinesh Devakumar, Chandramohan Balamurugan, Paneerselvam Chellasamy, Subramaniam Jayapal, Vadivalagan Chithravel, Wei Hui, Amuthavalli Pandiyan, Jaganathan Anitha, Devanesan Sandhanasamy, Higuchi Akon, Kumar Suresh, Aziz Al Thabiani, Nataraj Devaraj, Vaseeharan Baskaralingam, Canale Angelo, Benelli Giovanni
ISSN: 0932-0113

A main challenge in parasitology is the development of reliable tools to prevent or treat mosquito-borne diseases. We investigated the toxicity of magnetic nanoparticles (MNP) produced by Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense (strain MSR-1) on chloroquine-resistant (CQ-r) and sensitive (CQ-s) Plasmodium falciparum, dengue virus (DEN-2), and two of their main vectors, Anopheles stephensi and Aedes aegypti, respectively. MNP were studied by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. They were toxic to larvae and pupae of An. stephensi, LC50 ranged from 2.563 ppm (1st instar larva) to 6.430 ppm (pupa), and Ae. aegypti, LC50 ranged from 3.231 ppm (1st instar larva) to 7.545 ppm (pupa). MNP IC50 on P. falciparum were 83.32 ?g ml?1 (CQ-s) and 87.47 ?g ml?1 (CQ-r). However, the in vivo efficacy of MNP on Plasmodium berghei was low if compared to CQ-based treatments. Moderate cytotoxicity was detected on Vero cells post-treatment with MNP doses lower than 4 ?g ml?1. MNP evaluated at 2–8 ?g ml?1 inhibited DEN-2 replication inhibiting the expression of the envelope (E) protein. In conclusion, our findings represent the first report about the use of MNP in medical and veterinary entomology, proposing them as suitable materials to develop reliable tools to combat mosquito-borne diseases.

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