Int J Pharm Pharm Sci, Vol 8, Issue 2, 324-325Short Communication


ANTIBACTERIAL ACTIVITY FROM HAEMOLYMPH OF FRESHWATER CRAB OF GENUS MAYDELLIATHELPHUSA AGAINST RESPIRATORY TRACT PATHOGENS

SHURVEER SINGH1, PRASHANT ARYA2, SATYANAND BAHUGUNA1*, JAGAT PRAKASH MEHTA2, GAURAV BHATT1, ASHISH KUMAR CHOWDHARY1, VIVEK BAHUGUNA1

1Department of Zoology and Biotechnology, 2Department of Botany and Microbiology, HNB Garhwal University, Srinagar Garhwal, Uttarakhand, India 246174
Email: profsnbahuguna@rediffmail.com

 Received: 03 Sep 2015 Revised and Accepted: 12 Dec 2015


ABSTRACT

Objective: To study the antibacterial activity using haemolymph from a freshwater crab species of genus Maydelliathelphusa against respiratory tract pathogens.

Methods: 3 ml of haemolymph was collected from the live animal with a fine sterile syringe and tested for antibacterial assay by the well diffusion method. Different quantities viz. 10μl, 20μl and 30μl of haemolymph were loaded in agar plates having bacterial strains and kept for incubation at 37 °C for 24 h to test the development of bacteria. Further, the efficacy of haemolymph against bacteria was compared with antibiotic erythromycin, used as positive control.

Results: The results reported the strong inhibitory action of the haemolymph against the pathogens in the present study. The lowest zone of inhibition was observed against Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) and the highest zone of inhibition was observed against Streptococcus pneumoniae (S. pneumoniae). Erythromycin, as a positive control and Di-Methyl Sulfoxide (DMSO), as a negative control were used to check the sensitivity of pathogens. The minimum inhibition concentration (MIC) of the haemolymph for the studied bacteria was ranged between 6.25 mg/ml and 12.5 mg/ml. Maximum inhibition % (151.12) and minimum inhibition % (12.87) of haemolymph was calculated for S. pneumoniae and K. pneumoniae respectively during the study.

Conclusion: Study concluded that the haemolymph has a good antibacterial activity as it suppresses the growth of the bacteria completely at very low concentrations.

Keywords: Freshwater Crab, Haemolymph, Antibacterial activity, Respiratory tract pathogens.


Crustaceans are the most numerous, diverse and prevalent animals on earth along with insects. They lack complex and highly specific adaptive immune system of vertebrates, which is based on lymphocytes, immunoglobulins and immunological memory. The innate immune system of crustaceans is primarily related to their blood or haemolymph and is comprised of cellular and humoral responses [1]. Crabs are used for the medicinal purpose all over the world since long time ago. Their use as human food was reported by [2], and their economic and medical importance is well documented by [3]. Living in an aquatic environment rich in microorganisms, crustaceans have developed an effective system for detecting and eliminating noxious microorganisms. The crabs are in intimate contact with an aquatic environment rich in pathogenic microbes and are prone to infection by those microbes at various stages of growth, and losses due to disease can be enormous [4].

They are the rich sources of bioactive compounds; researchers carried out the pharmacological properties of marine crabs [5], but not in freshwater crabs. Few studies were conducted on the bioactivity of crustaceans by [6-8]. There are so many researches on marine as well as freshwater organisms still they need to be screened further for the discovery of new and useful antibiotics. Hence, an effort has been made to study the antibacterial activity of the crab’s haemolymph against some selected respiratory tract pathogens such as S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus, K. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa and compared its activity with standard antibiotic erythromycin.

Crab samples were collected from a local stream of district Udham Singh Nagar in Uttarakhand. Approx. 3 ml of haemolymph was collected from joints of walking legs of the animal with a fine sterile syringe. To avoid haemocyte degranulation and coagulation, the haemolymph was collected in the presence of sodium citrate buffer, pH 4.6 (2:1, V/V). An equal volume of physiological saline (0.85% NaCl, w/v) was added to it. To remove haemocytes from plasma, the haemolymph was centrifuged at 2000g for 15 min at 4 °C. The supernatant was collected and stored at 4 °C until use. The antibacterial activity of haemolymph was determined by agar well diffusion method [9]. 0.1 ml of 12-16 h incubated cultures of bacterial species were mixed in molten Mueller Hinton Agar medium and poured in pre-sterilized Petri plates. A cork borer (6 mm diameter) used to punch walls in solidified medium and loaded with different quantities of haemolymph such as 10μl, 20μl and 30μl respectively. DMSO was used as negative control and erythromycin as a positive control. The plates were incubated at 37 °C for the 24 h in Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD) incubator and the diameters of the zones of inhibition were measured in millimetre. Each sample was assayed in triplicate and the mean values were observed.

Fig. 1: Antibacterial activity against different bacterial strains at 10μl, 20μl and 30μl of haemolymph

Haemolymph of crab showed a significant antibacterial activity against the selected bacterial strains. The activity of haemolymph against S. aureus and P. aeruginosa was found minimum with a zone of inhibition 0.00 mm at 10μl (fig. 1b & d) whereas it was found maximum against S. pneumoniae with a zone of inhibition 10.66±1.2 mm at 30μl (fig. 1e).

Fig. 2: Zone of Inhibition against different bacterial strains at 10μl, 20μl and 30μl of haemolymph and±ve control at 30μl, data presented as mean±SD of three replicates

The presence of antimicrobial compounds in the haemolymph of crustacean species (crabs) has been reported by so many researchers [10, 11]. Crab’s haemolymph is known to contain several immune effects, and they play a major role in the innate immune mechanisms. The least activity of haemolymph was found against S. aureus and P. aeruginosa and maximum activity was against S. pneumoniae. Similar results were observed with the haemolymph of some brachyuran crabs against clinical pathogens [12]. In the present study, the haemolymph activity was more or less same against all the bacteria except S. aureus, where erythromycin gave a zone of inhibition (15±1.2 mm) that was almost double the haemolymph zone of inhibition (9±1.2 mm) fig. 2. This means S. aureus is more susceptible to erythromycin in comparison to others. The MIC of the haemolymph was ranged between 6.25 mg/ml and 12.5 mg/ml. The least MIC 6.25 mg/ml was obtained for K. pneumoniae among all the five bacteria. S. pneumoniae has maximum inhibition % (151.12) and K. pneumoniae has minimum inhibition % (12.87) against haemolymph during the study. The present findings suggest that this freshwater crab species are having a good antibacterial activity against bacteria causing respiratory tract infection in human beings and may be used effectively to treat the disease caused by them and would provide a new natural compound for the development of alternate antibiotics on further research.

CONFLICT OF INTERESTS

The authors declared no conflict of interest. Author Shurveer Singh is thankful to UGC New Delhi for providing Rajiv Gandhi National Fellowship (F.1-17/2011-12/RGNF-SC-UTT-6394) for conducting the present research work.

REFERENCES

  1. Chisholm JRS, Smith VJ. Antibacterial activity in the haemocytes of the shore crab Carcinus maenas (L.). J Marine Biol Assoc UK1992;72:529-42.
  2. Magalhaes C, Barbosa UC, Daniel V. Decapod crustaceans used as food by the Yanomami Indians of the Balawa-ú village, State of Amazonas, Brazil. Acta Amazonica 2006;35:369-74.
  3. Yeo DJC, Ng PKL, Cumberlidge N, Magalhaes C, Daniels SR, Campos MR. Global diversity of crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura) in Freshwater. Hydrobiologia 2008;595:275-86.
  4. Hudson DA, Lester RJG. Parasites and symbionts of wild mud crab Scylla serrata (Forskal) of potential significance in aquaculture. Aquaculture 1994;120:183-99.
  5. Anbuchezien RM, Ravichandran S. Influence of crab haemolymph on clinical pathogens. Adv Biol2009;3:104-9.
  6. Prakash AA, Balasubramaniam S, Gunasekaran G, Prakash M, Senthilraja P. Control of clinical pathogens by the haemolymph of Paratelphusa hydrodromous, a freshwater crab. ISRN Pharmacol 2011:1-4. doi:10.5402/2011/642768. [Article in Press].
  7. Ravichandran S, Siva Subramanian K, Anbuchezhian RM. Antimicrobial activity from the haemolymph of the crab Ocypode macrocera (H. Milne-Edwards 1852). World Appl Sci J 2010;11:578-81.
  8. Packia Lekshmi NCJ, Brindha Shini A, Jeeva S, Rajabrindha J, Selva Bharath M. Synthesis of silver nanoparticles using haemolymph of marine crabs (Carcinus maenas and Ocypode quadrata) and its influence on clinical pathogens. J Chem Phrm Res 2015;7:598-606.
  9. Ahmed I, Mehmood Z, Mohammad F. Screening of some Indian medicinal plants for their antimicrobial properties. J Ethnopharmacol 1998;62:183.
  10. Khoo L, Robinette DW, Noga EJ. Callinectin, an antibacterial peptide from blue crab, Callinectes sapidus, hemocytes. Marine Biotechnol1999;1:44-51.
  11. Veeruraj A, Ravichandran S, Rameshkumar G. Antibacterial activity of crab haemolymph on clinical pathogens. Trends Appl Sci Res 2008;3:174-81.
  12. Rameshkumar G, Ravichandran S, Aravindhan T. Antimicrobial proteins from the crab Charybdis lucifera (Fabricius, 1798). Middle-East J Sci Res 2009;4:40-3.