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magazine
story to find out more.
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ARS microbiologist Anthony De Lucca has found that
a compound in cayenne peppers holds promise for dual use as an antifungal
treatment in both agriculture and medicine. Click the image for more
information about it.
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Antifungal Pepper Compound Has Potential in Agriculture
and Medicine
By Rosalie Marion
Bliss
July 9, 2009 Dried, ground cayenne peppers have been
spicing up cuisine for thousands of years. Now,
Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientists and colleagues have found that a patented antifungal plant compound
in cayenne, called CAY-1, holds promise for dual use as an antifungal in both
agriculture and medicine.
The substance is believed to work by attaching to fungal membranes, where it
causes cell components to leak, eventually killing the cell. CAY-1 may also
enter fungal cells, and adversely affect certain signaling pathways that, in
turn, damage the mitochondriathe powerhouses for several cellular
processesin cells.
Anthony De
Lucca, a microbiologist with the
Food
and Feed Safety Research Unit at the ARS
Southern
Regional Research Center (SRRC) in New Orleans, La., led a study in which
he and colleagues isolated 10 fungieither primary or secondary grape
pathogensfrom diseased grapes grown in a hot, humid environment. Primary
pathogens directly cause infection, whereas secondary pathogens infect after
the hosts's defenses have been compromised by stress, injury, or other
infection.
They tested CAY-1 against these fungi in the laboratory. CAY-1 was lethal
during the early spore germination cycle of seven of the fungi, but was
inactive against dormant spores. While CAY-1 was lethal to the grape pathogens,
additional research is required to indicate if, and how, the compound could be
used safely on grapes. This work was published in the
American Journal of Enology and
Viticulture.
The SRRC researchers also have collaborated with physician Thomas Walsh and
others at the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) in Bethesda, Md., to study CAY-1 activity against Microsporum
canis and Trichophyton rubrum, which are skin fungal pathogens that
infect immune-compromised individuals. The study showed that CAY-1 is active in
the laboratory against these skin pathogens. That study was published in the
journal Medical
Mycology.
Read
more about this research in the July 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.