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Cayenne and Candida

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Peppers Put the " Heat " on Pests

> > ___________________________________________

> >

> > ARS News Service

> > Agricultural Research Service, USDA

> > March 15, 2001

> > Jan Suszkiw, (301) 504-1630, jsuszkiw@...

> > ___________________________________________

> >

> > Cayenne pepper, a popular spice for flavoring food, is known for its

> > heat-producing properties from the substance capsaicin. Agricultural

> > Research Service scientists also have found that cayenne peppers contain

> > another potent substance in the saponin chemical family that kills

several

> > noxious fungi and yeasts.

> >

> > And because this pepper saponin, called CAY-1, is not toxic to human

cells

> > at microbial-killing doses, MycoLogics, Inc., a Denver, Colorado, firm,

has

> > begun testing its potential as a candidate drug for treating patients

with

> > fungal infections. MycoLogics is doing so under an agreement with ARS's

> > Southern Regional Research Center in New Orleans, La., according to

> > DeLucca, a microbiologist there.

> >

> > He and chemists Bland and Craig Vigo discovered CAY-1 during

research

> > to identify plant compounds that could be used as crop protectants

against

> > spoilage microorganisms such as Aspergillus fungi, which make

aflatoxins.

> > Cayenne peppers topped an unusual list of organisms--including Cecropia

> > moths, tree frogs, and bacteria--that produce other novel antifungal

> > compounds.

> >

> > Though CAY-1 proved active against Aspergillus and other important

microbial

> > crop pests, DeLucca speculated its properties might also interest

medical

> > researchers seeking candidate drug compounds to fight emerging fungal

> > threats to human health. That curiosity led to collaborative studies

with

> > National Institutes of Health scientist Tom Walsh, University of

Cincinnati

> > researcher Melanine Cushion, and MycoLogic president Claude

Seltrennikoff.

> >

> > In a paper undergoing peer review, they report results from bioassay

studies

> > in which germinating and non-germinating cultures of four bacterial, six

> > fungal and one yeast species were exposed to different CAY-1

concentrations.

> > For example, in one test against Candida albicans, which causes thrush

and

> > other human infections, a 2.6 microgram-per-milliliter dose curbed the

> > microbe's growth by 93 percent. Additionally, none of the antimicrobial

> > concentrations used caused harm to human cervix cell cultures. CAY-1

also

> > wasn't toxic to cells from lung tissue, where Aspergillus and

Pneumocystis

> > carinii fungi can cause serious infections in immuno-compromised

patients.

> >

> > ARS, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research

agency,

> > has filed a patent on CAY-1.

> >

> > ___________________________________________

> >

> > Scientific contact: Tony J. De Lucca, ARS Southern Regional Research

Center,

> > New Orleans, La., phone (504) 286-4253, fax (504) 286-4419,

> > adelucca@....

> > ___________________________________________

>

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