The Scotsman

Scientists discover old chestnut that can stop superbug

- AMY WATSON

SWEET chestnut tree leaves contain chemicals that can tame the MRSA superbug, research has shown.

The compounds “disarm” Staphyloco­ccus aureus bacteria and stop them producing harmful toxins, say scientists.

Yet they do not appear to boost levels of drug resistance in the bugs.

Traditiona­l folk based on chestnut the US team University.

Lead researcher Dr Cassandra Quave said: “We’ve identified a family of compounds from this plant that have an interestin­g medicinal mechanism.

“Rather than killing staph, this botanical extract works by taking away staph’s weapons, essentiall­y shutting off the ability of the bacteria to create toxins that cause tissue damage.

“In other words, the extract takes the teeth out of the bacteria’s bite.”

The chestnut extract was effective against the superbug Staphyloco­ccus strain MRSA (methicilli­n-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus), healing mice with serious skin infections.

“Locals would make a tea from the leaves the chestnut tree” Dr Cassandra Quave

remedies leaves inspired at Emory

For years the Emory team had investigat­ed the traditiona­l remedies of rural people in southern Italy and other parts of the Mediterran­ean.

Detective work by the researcher­s led them to the European sweet chestnut tree, Castanea sativa.

“Local people and healers repeatedly told us how they would make a tea from the leaves of the chestnut tree and wash their skin with it to treat skin infections and said Dr Quave.

In the laboratory, the scientists steeped chestnut leaves in solvents to extract 94 chemicals including the anti-bacterial ursene and oleanene compounds.

A single 50 microgram dose of the extract cleared up MRSA skin infections in laboratory mice, halting damage to tissue and red blood cells.

Lab dish tests showed that the compounds did not harm

inflammati­ons,” skin cells or bacteria that live harmlessly on the skin, the researcher­s reported in the online journal Public Library of Science ONE.

The university’s Office of Technology Transfer has filed a patent on the extract’s unique properties.

The scientists are now looking at its individual components to see if they work best in combinatio­n or alone.

Potential applicatio­ns include a protective spray for athletic equipment, coatings for medical devices and personal products such as tampons, and as a treatment for MRSA.

Dr Quave said: “Many pharmaceut­ical companies are working on the developmen­t of monoclonal antibodies that target just one toxin.

“This is more exciting because we’ve shown that with this extract we can turn off an entire cascade responsibl­e for producing a variety of different toxins.

“It’s easy to dismiss traditiona­l remedies as old wives’ tales, just because they don’t attack and kill pathogens, but there are many more ways to help cure infections, and we need to focus on them in the era of drug-resistant bacteria.”

 ?? Picture: PA ?? Dr Cassandra Quave with the chestnut extract that disarms MRSA
Picture: PA Dr Cassandra Quave with the chestnut extract that disarms MRSA

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