HK1129271B - Pest repellent comprising geranylacetone - Google Patents
Pest repellent comprising geranylacetone Download PDFInfo
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Description
The present invention relates generally to methods and materials for use in repelling, or avoiding attracting, biting insects.
There are numerous publications concerned with the provision of compositions which are said to generally repel or attract (for example to traps) biting insects. These include US 3,668,226 ; GB 899,289 ; US 6,444,216 ; US 6,660,775 ; WO 03/009688 ; abstract for JP2002308706 ; abstract for JP10117657 ; abstract for JP10139602 ; US 4,560,551 ; WO 02/13607 ; US 6,203,786 ; abstract for JP11060421 ; abstract for JP7126110 ; GB 925,243 ; abstract for JP20002363006 ; abstract for JP1019004 ; WO 02/71840 ; abstract for JP9030906 ; US 6,660,288 .
Interestingly, mosquitoes (Culicidae), midges (Ceratopogonidae) and other flies (Diptera) that bite a range of vertebrate hosts to obtain blood, demonstrate preferences between species and within a host species. However there have been relatively few studies which have investigated inter- and intra-species host-preferences in these organisms 1-9,14.
Many factors are believed to determine preferences, but for human hosts, studies have demonstrated that differential attraction is determined by volatile olfactory (i.e. volatile chemical) cues that emanate from the skin and associated microorganisms, or breath 15, 16. Specifically, recent evidence suggests that relative attractiveness is caused by differences in olfactory cues provided by individual hosts10-13. However the actual chemical basis for relative attractiveness has remained undefined.
Japanese patent application publication JP20030284924 relates to an insect-pest repllent containing compounds such as geranylacetone.
Nevertheless, the provision of novel compositions or uses for controlling the behaviour of insects and inhibiting the activity of biting insects against hosts to which they are attracted would provides a contribution to the art.
The present inventors have for the first time demonstrated, counterintuitively, that a repellent, or attractant masking, mechanism is involved in the unattractiveness of individuals to the yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti and notorious Scottish biting midge, Culicoides impunctatus. This is contrary to the assumption in much of the literature that preferences may be dictated by a depleted range of attractants i.e. the view that such 'unattractive' individuals simply did not secrete such attractants.
Briefly, the inventors first established differential attractiveness for the yellow fever mosquito, Ae. aegypti, within a group of human volunteers and then collected volatile extracts from their bodies using a novel collection technique. Electrophysiological recordings from the antennae of Ae. aegypti and C. impunctatus, revealed 23 active compounds, which were identified and quantified. Several chemicals were found to be produced in greater amounts by unattractive individuals and these were further investigated as set out in the Examples below.
The results showed that some of these compounds caused a significant reduction in flight activity of Ae. aegypti when presented together with a human hand in the Y-tube olfactometer. A field trial was conducted against C. impunctatus and revealed that some of the active compounds were more effectively repellent, at naturally occurring concentrations, than the commercial biting fly repellent DEET. Compounds described herein may thus be used for protection against such insects.
An oral presentation was made at the SOVE (Society of Vector Ecology), 4th International Congress of Vector Ecology, Nugget Hotel/Casino Reno, Nevada, October 2-7, 2005 (Thursday, October 6, 2005; Student Paper Session II - Oral Presentations; SP-16 "Laboratory and field experiments on the effects of synthetic odor blends on the behaviour of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae" Qui, T.Yu, yu.tongqiu@wur.nl, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands, and R.Smallegange, J.Spitzen, J.Cajo, T.Braak, J.Joop, Var Loon, M.Jawara, P.Milligan, B.Knols, W.Takken). The presentation discussed olfactometer and field tests of a number of compounds believed to occur in human fresh and incubated sweat. Certain compounds, including compounds identified by the present inventors below, were shown to be both attractive and repellent in trials.
A thesis (Qiu, Y.T. (2005) "Sensory and behavioural responses of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae to human odours". PhD thesis, Wageningen University, The Netherlands) has also in published in December 2005.
No comparison of 'attractive' and 'unattractive' individuals was made in these disclosures. No trials based on actual application to host skin were conducted.
Generally the present specification describes methods of controlling the behaviour of insects, the method comprising use of a composition of the invention, as described below, which could for example be applied to a subject or environment.
Thus in one aspect the invention provides a composition which comprises geranylacetone as an active ingredient plus a further active ingredient which is 6-methyl-hepten-2-one wherein the 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranylacetone are present in a weight ratio of about 1:1.
This may be used in a method of inhibiting the activity of an insect pest against a subject, the method comprising applying to a subject the composition of the invention, as described below.
The subject to whom the composition is applied will generally be a species which is a normal host target for the insect pest, and would (in the absence of the composition) otherwise be targeted or attract the insect pest. Subjects to be treated with compounds of the present invention could in principle be human or animal subjects (e. g., dogs, cats, horses, cattle). Preferably the subject is a human subject.
The insect pest is preferably a haematophagous insect e.g. of the family Ceratopogonidae (preferably the genus Culicoides), or family Culicidae. Preferably the pest is an insect selected from Table 1.
Most preferably it is a mosquito or midge.
Biting midges belong to the genus Culicoides of the family Ceratopogonidae; they are the smallest of the bloodsucking insects and are common pests in the UK, NE United States (where they are called punkies, sand flies, and no-see-ums) and many other places around the world.
The composition will be applied in an amount effective to inhibit the activity of an insect pest against the subject, for example by comparison with the same subject without the composition as determined by standard field methods (such as are used in the Example below; see Ref 18) after any of 1, 5, or 30 minutes.
The examples described below show that compositions of the invention can be used to inhibit attraction towards subjects (for example as demonstrated by significant reduction in upwind flight activity towards the subject). Compositions in the field demonstrated repellency based on a World Health Organisation protocol for testing repellents. Thus it is clear that compositions of the invention can be used to negatively affect host-seeking behaviour by insect pests e.g. reduce the attraction to a subject, or increase the repulsion from the subject, and the terms "inhibition of activity" or "repellent" or the like as used herein will be understood by those skilled in the art accordingly.
Geranylacetone is alternatively known as 6,10-dimethyl-5,9-undecadien-2-one (cis and trans); 5,9-Undecadien-2-one; 6,10-dimethyl-, trans-Geranylacetone; Nerylacetone; Dihydropseudoionone; 6,10-Dimethyl-undeca-5,9-dien-2-one.
Lwande et al. (1999) Phytochemistry 50: 401-405 analysed the repellency of the essential oil of the anti-tick pasture shrub Gynandropsis gynandra in a tick-climbing repellency bioassay. Constituents of the oil were evaluated and included trans-geranylacetone, nononal and many others. It was concluded that the blend of all constituents might act as a general purpose arthropod repellent, although no evidence was offered that this would be effective when actually applied to a host.
The inhibition of activity in the field demonstrated herein for geranylacetone containing compositions is surprising since this has previously been discussed in the context of an attractant for clothes moths (see WO 03/009688 ) and mites (see abstract for JP2002308706 ; abstract for JP10117657 ).
The compositions of the invention include geranylacetone and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one. Such compositions of the invention may also include one or more further compounds selected from the list consisting of: octanal; decanal; nonanal.
6-Methyl -5-hepten-2-one is alternatively known as 6-Methylhept-5-en-2-one; Sulcatone; 5-Hepten-2-one, 6-methyl-; 6-Methyl-5-heptene-2-one; 2-Methyl-2-hepten-6-one; - Methyl hept-5-en-2-one; Methylheptenone; 2-Methyl-6-oxo-2-heptene; 2-Oxo-6-methylhept-5-ene.
All of the above compounds have shown inhibitory activity in the Examples hereinafter.
Optionally the compositions of the invention also include one or more further compounds selected from the list consisting of: benzaldehyde; naphthalene; acetophenone; (E)-2-octenal).
These compounds have been shown to be present in higher amounts in the skin of 'unattractive' individuals. They may optionally be added to the compositions of the present invention.
The compositions may optionally exclude ingredients such as one or more of: limonene, m-Cymene, 1-alpha-terpineol, beta-cyclocitral, nerol, carvacrol, beta-ionone, nerolidol, and in particular Methyl isothiocyanate. The compositions may exclude ingredients such as one or more of: heptanoic acid, tetradecanoic acid, 3-methyl-1-butanol, 4-ethylpentone.
Thus, in addition to further active ingredients, additives, and a carrier as discussed hereinafter, preferred compositions of the present invention comprise geranylacetone in the composition in a concentration of at least about 0.0001% by weight.
The carrier may be from 0.1 % to 99.9999% by weight of the total composition.
Preferably the compositions of the invention comprise:
| Geranylacetone: | 0.0001 - 10% |
| more preferably: | 0.001 - 10% |
Optionally the compositions comprise one or more further additive compounds selected from the list consisting of:
plus optional further active ingredients, additives, and a carrier as discussed hereinafter in order to make 100%. '%' in this context means g/100g (solid compositions, total weight) or g/100 ml (liquids or ointments, total volume).
| Octanal | 0.00001 - 1% |
| Nonanal | 0.1 - 10% |
| Decanal | 0.0001 - 10% |
Based on the examples set out below, such concentrations of ingredients may be employed for inhibition of flight towards a target.
Based on experiments showing orientation away from the source, compositions of the present invention may in certain embodiments comprise:
and optionally :
| Geranylacetone: | 0.0001-10% |
| Decanal | 0.0001 - 0.1 % |
Compositions of the present invention may comprise:
and optionally one or more further compounds selected from the list consisting of:
| Geranylacetone: | 0.001% to 1% |
| and 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one: | 0.001% and 1% |
| Decanal: | 1% |
| Octanal: | 0.01% |
Examples of such compositions have been shown to be effective against biting midges in field trials.
A preferred mixture for use in the compositions of the present invention will comprise Geranylacetone plus at least two, three, four, or five of the preferred additive compounds described above.
A preferred mixture for use in the compositions of the present invention is as follows:
- Geranylacetone: 0.00001 - 10%, more preferably 0.001 - 10%, more preferably 0.01 - 10%, more preferably 0.1 - 5%, most preferably about 1 %, and.
- 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one: 0.1 - 10%, more preferably 0.1 - 5%, most preferably about 1 %,
Another preferred mixture for use in the compositions of the present invention is as follows:
- Geranylacetone: 0.00001 - 10%, more preferably 0.001 - 10%, more preferably 0.01 - 10%, more preferably 0.1 - 5%, most preferably about 1 %.
- 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one: 0.1 - 10%, more preferably 0.5 - 5%, most preferably about 1 %.
- Octanal: 0.001 - 0.1%, more preferably 0.005 - 0.05%, most preferably about 0.01%,
Based on analysis of 'attractive' and 'unattractive' individuals, in the compositions of the invention comprising 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one and Geranylacetone these are in a weight ratio of about 1:1.
Compositions of the present invention may be formulated as ointments or solutions which contain the active ingredients disclosed herein.
Described herein is the use of geranylacetone, preferably in the form of any composition of the invention (as described herein), in the preparation of an inhibitory formulation for treatment of a subject for inhibiting the activity of an insect pest against the subject.
Preferably the composition is for topical application to the subject. For topical application, the formulation may take the form of a spray formulation or a cream or lotion formulation.
Thus the compositions of the present invention may be employed with such solid and/or liquid dispersible carrier vehicles as described herein or as otherwise known in the art, and/or with other known compatible active agents, if desired, in the form of particular dosage preparations for specific application made therefrom, such as solutions, emulsions, suspensions, powders, pastes, and granules as described herein or as otherwise known in the art which are thus ready for use. The formulation may include antioxidants and UV absorbers.
Liquid formulations may be aqueous-based or non-aqueous(i. e., organic solvents such as ethanol as used in the Examples below), or combinations thereof, and may be employed as foams, gels, suspensions, emulsions, microemulsions or emulsifiable concentrates or the like. The ingredients may include rheological agents, surfactants, emulsifiers, dispersants or polymers.
The present invention also provides a topical formulation, which can be used for inhibiting the activity of an insect pest against a subject, which formulation comprises:
- (i) a dermatologically acceptable carrier; and
- (ii) a composition of the present invention as described above,
- (iii) optionally one or more active ingredients,
The present invention also provides an article of manufacture comprising:
- (i) a topical formulation, which can be used for inhibiting the activity of an insect pest against a subject, as described above,
- (ii) aerosol or other spay means for administering the formulation topically.
Insect repellent compositions are available commercially in aerosol form and aerosol technologies are well known in the art. Consumers find aerosol compositions easy to administer to both the skin and to clothing. Further, aerosol compositions help consumers avoid the inconvenience of having to apply and spread the insect repellent with the hands. US 6,969,521 relates to cosmetically-acceptable aerosol vehicles to disperse and deliver the insect repellent active, the vehicle having a volatile organic compound component.
Also described herein is an article of manufacture comprising:
- (i) a topical formulation for inhibiting the activity of an insect pest against a subject as described above,
- (ii) instructions for use of the formulation against the insect pest.
When using the formulations of the present invention, subjects may be directly or indirectly treated, such as by applying the formulation to the skin of the subject, or by applying the formulation to an article worn by or otherwise protecting the subject. For example garments, belts, collars, or other articles worn by the subject from whom insects are to be repelled. Preferred examples may include a slow-release badge worn on clothing; arm, wrist or ankle bands; accessories including pendants, necklaces, bracelets.
The formulation may be applied to netting or screening that protects a subject, particularly a sleeping subject.
In another alternative, the compositions of the invention may be formulated in paints with a conventional microencapsulation technology.
The repellent compounds are suitably applied by any method known in the art including, for example, spraying, pouring, dipping, in the form of concentrated liquids, solutions, suspensions, sprays, powders, pellets, briquettes, bricks and the like, formulated to deliver a repellent effective concentration of the repellent compound. It will be recognized that the concentration, applied amount and frequency of application will vary with the subject and locus of application, e. g., to the skin or hair of a human.
The invention may be used by applying the insect repellent formulation to achieve a topical dose of any given active ingredient of between about 0.0025ug/cm2 to 100 ug/cm2, more preferably 0.25ug/cm2 to 25 ug/cm2. One preferred final concentration is around 10 ug/cm2 based on the application of around 1 ml to a forearm of approximately 400 cm2, this can be achieved by a concentration of around:
- 0.0001% = 0.0025ug/cm2
- 0.01% =0.25ug/cm2
- 1% = 25ug/cm2
- 4% = 100ug/cm2
As noted above, when using the formulations of the present invention, subjects may not be directly treated. Thus the compositions may be used or applied to an environment (e.g. a pre-defined region, which may or may not be contained) from which it is desired to repel pests (or mask the attractiveness of the environment to pests). Thus as noted above the formulation may be applied to netting or screening that protects a subject. Alternatively it may be provided direct to an environment e.g. by spraying or by use of compositions of apparatus adapted to deliver a repellent effective concentration of the repellent compound.
Thus it will be understood the invention provides a non-therapeutic method of repelling an insect pest from an environment or preventing attraction to an environment (e.g. by masking the attractiveness if a subject therein), the method comprising applying to the environment a composition of the present invention. The compositions may be any of those discussed above or below.
Application (or dispensing) to an environment may be achieved by conventional means which include (by way of example only): candles, coils, slow release dispensers, (e.g. electric and non-electric vaporisers), electric and non-electric oil burners, electric 'plug-in' diffusers. Numerous such dispensers for volatile substances are very well known to those skilled in the art e.g. for dispensing incense, perfume, medicaments, insecticides, insect repellents, disinfectants, or fumigants. In such dispensers the volatile substance may be formulated as a gel for slow release e.g. with a gelling agent selected from the group consisting of dibenzyllidene sorbital acetal, gellan gum and polyacrylic acid polymers. Any such known dispenser or formulation may be applied analogously in the present invention.
Any such dispenser, comprising (and adapted to dispense) a composition of the present invention (optionally in the form of a gel) provides a further aspect of the present invention, as does a method of dispensing a composition of the present invention comprising use of any such dispenser.
One preferred dispenser is an electrostatic chemical dispenser such as is available from Aerstream Technology Limited (Wallingford, UK). In such a system droplets are electrostatically charged such that they may pervade an environment longer than aerosols. One such system is described in International Patent Application WO03/000431 .
Thus an electrostatic chemical dispenser for use with the the present invention may comprise
- a) a conduit that contains, in use, liquid to be atomised, which liquid comprises, consists or consists essentially of a composition of the present invention;
- b) a spray electrode; and,
- c) a discharge electrode.
Briefly, in such a system, each electrode is adjacent to a dielectric, wherein the electrodes are connected in an electrical circuit to enable a potential difference to be applied between the spray electrode and the discharge electrode to atomise the liquid and to generate charge carriers of a first polarity in the proximity of the spray electrode and ions of a second polarity in the proximity of the discharge electrode, and wherein some of the first polarity charge carriers deposit on the dielectric adjacent to the spray electrode and some of the second polarity ions deposit on the dielectric adjacent to the discharge electrode so that the atomised liquid is repelled from the dielectric adjacent to the spray electrode and electrically discharged by second polarity ions that are repelled by the dielectric adjacent to the discharge electrode.
The invention will now be further described with reference-to-the following non-limiting Figures and Examples. Other embodiments of the invention will occur to those skilled in the art in the light of these.
- Figure 1. Behavioural responses Aedes aegypti host-seeking female mosquitoes to the hands of volunteers. a) Flight activity - the proportion of mosquitoes that were recorded upwind in the Y-tube; b) Relative attraction - the proportion of mosquitoes that were recorded in the 'test' arm of the Y-tube. Data are presented as differences between the response to the volunteer and the response to the standard stimulus (hand of volunteer Y01). Back transformed means ± s.e.d. are shown. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences from the standard (Y01) (GLM, * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001; ns not significant; n=10-12).
- Figure 2. Behavioural responses Aedes aegypti host-seeking female mosquitoes to extracts (+CO2) collected from seven volunteers and the standard volunteer (Y01). a) Flight activity - the proportion of mosquitoes that were recorded upwind in the Y-tube; b) Relative attraction - the proportion of mosquitoes that were recorded in the 'test' arm of the Y-tube. Back transformed means ± confidence intervals (95 %) are shown. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences from the control (GLM, * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001; ns not significant; n=10-12).
- Figure 3. Typical coupled GC-EAG traces a). Aedes aegypti female mosquito response to human (Y01, attractive) air entrainment extract and C. impunctatus midge responses to human (Y05, unattractive) air entrainment extract. Top trace corresponds to the FID detector on the GC. Bottom trace corresponds to the antennal response of the insect preparation. A. benzaldehyde B. 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, C. octanal, D. unknown 7, E. nonanal & linalool, F. menthol & naphthalene, G. decanal, H. geranylacetone.
- Figure 4. (a) Absolute total (ng), and(b) mean amounts (%) of EAG active compounds collected from whole body air entrainments of volunteers within the attractive group (n=6) and unattractive group (n=4). Significant differences between the two means are denoted by: * p<0.05; ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001. Compound numbers: 1. hexanal, 2. benzaldehyde, 3. 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, 4. octanal, 5. 1,4-dichlorobenzene, 6. 2-ethylhexanol, 7. limonene, 8. unknown 7, 9. dihydromyrcenol, 10. nonanal, 11. linalool, 12. undecane, 13. (E)-2-nonenal, 14. octanoic acid, 15. menthol, 16. naphthalene, 17. decanal, 18. indole, 19. dodecanal, 20. geranylacetone, 21. pentadecane, 22. hexadecane, 23. α-isomethylionone, 24. heptadecene. Significant differences between the two groups are denoted by * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001.(c) Plot of canonical-variate scores based on the amounts of all GC-EAG active chemicals within air entrainment extracts for all volunteers. Black crosses = Group 1 (attractive individuals); Red crosses = Group 2 (unattractive individuals). Circles represent 95 % confidence intervals.
- Figure 5. Mean proportion of Aedes aegypti female mosquitoes showing flight activity in the Y-tube in response to the standard (hand of Y01 in one side of the Y-tube and filter paper control in the other) and seven doses of a) 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, b) octanal, c) nonanal, d) decanal and e) geranylacetone chemical treatments (hand of Y01 + chemical in one side of the Y-tube and filter paper solvent control in the other). (-1 = 1 x 10-1 g µL-1; -2 = 1 x 10-2 g µL-1 , etc). Back transformed means ± 95 % confidence intervals (calculated for a binomial distribution) from the logistic scale are shown.
- Figure 6. Repellency of EAG-active human-derived compounds applied to the forearms of volunteers and tested on Culicoides impuctatus midges in the field. a) over 1 minute and b) over 5 minutes.
A convenient bioassay was established following work by Geier et al. (1999)17 using a Y-tube olfactometer in which mosquitoes, Ae. aegypti, could "choose" between volatile skin emanations and air alone, the "choice" being expressed as flight activity or relative attraction. Initially, the source of skin emanations was from individual hands of a series of human volunteers. Volunteers were analysed in this way until a range of attractive and unattractive examples were obtained (Fig. 1 ). Five volunteers (X04, X07, X09, X08 and X05) induced greater upwind flight activity and relative attraction than the standard volunteer (Y01). Four volunteers (X06, Y04, Y05 and Y07) induced significantly less upwind flight activity and relative attraction than the standard (Y01).
A novel system was devised for obtaining volatile chemicals from whole bodies. This involved placing each volunteer (and the standard (Y01)) from the attractive and unattractive groups in an aluminiumised plastic bag (Lifesystems ™), with the head outside, under positive pressure from clean air and withdrawing air that had passed over the body, to be entrained through a small column of absorbent polymer. This provided samples, the same batch of which could be used for multiple behavioural, electrophysiological and chemical analysis.
The volatiles were extracted from the polymer and assayed again using the Y-tube olfactometer against an air control and standard volunteer (Y01), all with added CO2 (Fig. 2 ). For the first time, volatile extracts of human volunteers were shown to exhibit similar attractiveness or unattractiveness to the direct human skin emanations, with extracts from the standard (Y01), X04, X07 and X09 being significantly attractive, and those from X06, Y04, Y05 and Y07 as unattractive as the air control.
The volatile extracts of the volunteers used in Figure 2 were then by high resolution GC directly coupled whole antennal electrophysiological preparations, from female Ae. aegypti, (6-12 days old) to produce GC-electronantennograms (GC-EAG), typically as shown in Figure 3 . Thus, components which were physiologically active, and therefore likely to be responsible for the differences in attractiveness of the human volunteers, were determined.
Compounds giving the peaks associated with electrophysiological activity by GC-EAG were tentatively identified by GC-MS under similar conditions and the identity confirmed by peak enhancement on GC using two columns of different polarity by coinjection with authentic compounds.
Identifications are listed in Table 2 and absolute amounts, determined by a multiple point external standard method, given. Statistically significant differences between the attractive (Group 1) and unattractive (Group 2) were observed for:
- benzaldehyde,
- 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one,
- octanal,
- nonanal,
- decanal,
- naphthalene
- geranylacetone
Additionally the relative amounts (in respect of total chemical composition; see Fig. 4 ) of 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, octanal and decanal were higher.
A number of electrophysiologically active compounds from the 32 active peaks have not been conclusively identified, but only one was believed to be associated with unattractiveness.
Although a number of electrophysiologically active compounds were chiral the isomeric composition was not determined as these compounds were not implicated as factors contributing to human unattractiveness. Care was made to remove contamination of volunteers, for example with industrial or cosmetic chemicals (see Methods). Nevertheless compounds with electrophysiological activity were shown even if, as with dichlorobenzene and naphthalene, these could have arisen from synthetic sources.
Confirming the grouping of the volunteers, multivariate analysis revealed that the attractive (Group 1) and unattractive (Group 2) groups differed significantly in terms of the variability in the amounts of the seven specified EAG-active chemicals between the two groups (Fig. 4 ; Table 1).
Tables 3a and 3b show ratio of these compounds from "attractive" volunteers and "unattractive" volunteers.
Based on the results above, five chemicals were chosen as those most likely to be naturally involved in human unattractiveness and were subjected to further analysis:
- (i) 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one,
- (ii) octanal,
- (iii) nonanal,
- (iv) decanal,
- (v) geranylacetone
These compounds (from Sigma Aldrich) were tested individually at different concentrations in the olfactometer against Ae. aegypti. The upwind flight activity, relative attraction and probing activity (feeding) of the mosquitoes to the hand of an attractive volunteer with and without the chemicals was recorded. All chemicals caused a significant reduction in flight activity and geranylacetone caused a reduction in relative attraction (Fig. 5 ; data for relative attraction not shown). Probing activity (feeding) was also significantly reduced by 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranylacetone (data not shown).
Thus, it is clear that each of these five demonstrated the ability to interfere significantly with the attractiveness of skin emanations from the hand of an attractive standard volunteer, i.e. Y01, at naturally occurring levels. Only nonanal allowed significantly greater flight activity than the untreated hand but at only one dose.
Only octanal has been described previously as a repellent for Ae. aegypti (H. D. Douglas et al. "Chemical Odorant of Colonial Seabird Repels Mosquitoes" J. Med. Entomol. 42(4): 647-651 (2005)), and the compounds newly identified here as repellents could be used in defence against these other biting flies and possibly other haematophagous arthropods. The chemical factors conferring low human attractiveness to mosquitoes and midges determined here could be still more effective given a more persistent formulation.
Interestingly, the variation between DEET and a more recent repellent, picaridine (Bayrepel ®), shows variability of repellency with human subjects19. This may arise in part from the type of individual variation described herein.
The extracts of volunteer human volatiles were also analysed by GC-EAG on C. impunctatus, which it is understood is the first time such an investigation had been done with a Ceratopogonid. A typical trace is given in Figure 3 and the same range of compounds was responded to, but particularly those implicated as giving negative responses in samples from the unattractive volunteers.
A field trial was made in the Ormsary estate, Argyllshire, during the summer 2005 in a region with an extremely high natural population of C. impunctatus. Active compounds at reducing normal human attractiveness to Ae. aegypti in the Y-tube olfactometer (6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one; geranylacetone) plus six mixtures, were tested for repellency (Table 4) using a WHO protocol18. Compounds were applied to (nylon) stockings and worn on the forearms of volunteers and were tested at three concentrations in ethanol (1%, 0.01% and 0.0001%). All compounds and mixtures were compared against the WHO approved repellent diethyltoluamide (DEET) (1% and 40%).
Results (Fig. 6 ) show that DEET at 40% was not more repellent than DEET at 1%. Therefore, statistical comparisons were subsequently made between the compounds or mixtures and DEET at 1 %.
Geranylacetone was effective at all concentrations tested and with a typical dose response of increasing efficacy with increasing concentration.
For 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one at the 1 min time, at 0.001% is significantly repellent; 0.01% is not repellent but 1% is strongly repellent, indeed more effective than DEET, but was repellent only at 1% over 5 min.
Over 1 min, 1% geranylacetone, 1 % 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, Mix 5 and Mix 6 were significantly greater than DEET at 1 %, and for the full 5 min testing period.
1 % geranylacetone, Mix 6 and Mix 5 showed higher % repellency than DEET; these differences were not significant.
Human-derived compounds (6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranylacetone) were tested for repellency against Anopheles gambiae and Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes in laboratory-based repellency tests using an established protocol (Omolo et al., 2004). The mosquitoes were laboratory-reared using standard conditions at ICIPE, Duduville. 5-7 day old female mosquitoes that had been starved for 18h but previously fed on 6% glucose solution were used. Eighteen cages (50x50x50cm) were used with 25 female mosquitoes in each. Six human volunteers with no or little allergic reaction to bites were selected. Test solutions (0.5ml in acetone) were applied to a volunteer's forearms and the hand was covered with a glove. Acetone alone (0.5ml) served as a control on the other arm. The control arm was inserted into a cage and the number of landings were recorded over 3 min. The treated arm was then inserted as above. Repellency data was expressed as protective efficacy (PE) and was calculated by using the formula PE = (% control mean - % test mean / % control mean). The data were transformed and subjected to an ANOVA.
Each compound was tested at concentrations ranging from 0.0001% to 10%.
Three mixtures were also tested at the same concentrations and comprised the following components:
- Mixture 1: 1:1:1:1:1 of 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, octanal, nonanal, decanal and geranylacetone
- Mixture 2: (not according to the invention) 1:3:1:0.5:0.5 of 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, octanal, nonanal, decanal and geranylacetone
- Mixture 3: 1:1 of 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranylacetone.
Mixture 1 and mixture 3 were then incorporated into a formulation which consisted of emulsifying wax NF, Petroleum jelly and liquid paraffin in a 1.2:2.8:1 ratio. These formulated mixtures were then tested using the above methodology and were repeated after 2, 4, 6 and 8 hours to give PE over time.
The human-derived compounds tested against Anopheles gambiae s.s. gave dose-dependent repellency, with the maximum repellency observed for compounds at 10%. 100% repellency was recorded only for geranylacetone at 10%.
DEET gave better repellency than the single compounds giving 100% repellency at 1% and 10% (Tables 5-7). However, the greatest repellency against this species was given by mixture 3, which achieved 100% repellency at concentrations of 1% and 10%.
At lower concentrations than these, good repellency was also observed and at 0.1 % concentration 87% repellency was recorded in comparison with DEET which gave only 83% repellency. At a lower concentration (0.01%) mixture 3 gave 80% repellency compared with DEET which gave only 20% repellency at this concentration (Tables 8-10). All formulated mixtures gave 100% repellency at the start of the experiments (i.e. time zero). Around 90% repellency was achieved after 2 hours with mixture 1 and this decreased over time to 12% after 8 hours (Tables 11-13). Greater repellency was observed for mixture 3 with 98% repellency recorded after 2 hours. Repellency then decreased to 64% after 4 hours and to 35% after 8 hours. DEET maintained 100% effectiveness up to 6 hours and 94% after 8 hours.
The human-derived compounds tested against Culex quinquefasciatus gave dose-dependent repellency, with the highest repellency for each compound observed at 10%. Geranylacetone and DEET gave 100% repellency but only at a concentration of 10% (Tables 14-16).
Mixture 1 and 3 gave 100% repellency at a concentration of 10%. At lower concentrations, mixture 1 gave greater repellency than mixture 3 with 84% and 77% repellency achieved respectively at a concentration of 1 %. Both formulated mixtures gave 100% repellency at the start of the experiment, and this decreased slightly to 89% for mixture 1 and to 99% for mixture 3 after 2 hours (Tables 17 and 18).
After 8 hours, the repellency given by mixture 1 had decreased to 20%. However, for mixture 3, repellency was maintained at a greater level, decreasing only to 80% after 4 hours, 60% after 6 hours and 45% after 8hours. DEET gave 100% repellency up until 6 hours and this decreased to 93% after 8 hours (Tables 19-21).
The most effective treatment against Anopheles gambiae over 3 minutes was mixture 3 and this was better than DEET at equivalent concentrations. For Culex quinquefasciatus, the most effective treatment was decanal alone at 1%, although this was not better than DEET. The best treatment comprising human-derived compounds was mixture 3 for both species.
| West Nile Virus | USA | Yes | |
| Japanese Encephalitis | Asia | ||
| Filariasis | South America, Africa | ||
| Dengue fever | South America and Africa | Yes | |
| Yellow fever | |||
| Malaria | Asia | Yes | |
| Malaria | Africa | Yes |
| None | Scotland, UK | Yes | |
| None | Australia | Yes |
| Borreliosis and Lyme disease | EU and USA | No |
| EU, Portugal | Yes | ||
| species | Leishmaniasis (visceral, mucosal, cuticular) | South America | Yes |
| Leishmaniasis | Africa | Yes |
| Other | Bluetongue | EU and Africa | Yes |
| African Horse Sickness |
| Tick-borne encephalitis | North America | No | |
| Tick-borne fever | Africa |
| 1 | 776 | Hexanal | 0.00044 |
| 2 | 932 | Benzaldehyde | 0.00133 |
| 3 | 965 | 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one | -0.00427 |
| 4 | 980 | Octanal | 0.00062 |
| 5 | 988 | 1,4-Dichlorobenzene | 0.00126 |
| 6 | 1010 | 2-Ethylhexanol | 0.00117 |
| 7 | 1022 | Limonene | -0.0005 |
| 8 | 1030 | Unknown 7 | 0.00016 |
| 9 | 1057 | Dihydromyrcenol | -0.00082 |
| 10 | 1080 | Nonanal | -0.00047 |
| 11 | 1083 | Linalool | 0.00047 |
| 12 | 1100 | Undecane | 0.0001 |
| 13 | 1135 | 0.00011 | |
| 14 | 1151 | Octanoic acid | 0.00056 |
| 15 | 1160 | Menthol | 0.00097 |
| 16 | 1160 | Naphthalene | -0.00102 |
| 17 | 1184 | Decanal | -0.00245 |
| 18 | 1256 | Indole | -0.00233 |
| 19 | 1384 | Dodecanal | -0.00122 |
| 20 | 1430 | Geranylacetone | 0.00042 |
| 21 | 1480 | α-isomethylionone | 0.00037 |
| 22 | 1500 | Pentadecane | -0.00067 |
| 23 | 1600 | Hexadecane | -0.00024 |
| 24 | 1681 | Heptadecene | 0.00115 |
| Benzaldehyde | 1 | 1 |
| 6-MHO | 2.020595 | 1.55218 |
| Octanal | 0.541551 | 0.529534 |
| Nonanal | 6.510643 | 2.906716 |
| Naphthalene | 0.875217 | 0.979441 |
| Decanal | 1.821094 | 1.468768 |
| Geranylacetone | 5.130115 | 1.108576 |
| The table shows the ratio in one unattractive volunteer and the ratios for the mean absolute amounts of the attractive and unattractive group of volunteers. | ||||||||
| 350.0 | 1.8 | 49.73 | 0.4 | 320.08 | 1.4 | |||
| 200 | 1 | 126.26 | 1 | 228.6 | 1 | |||
| Mixture 1 | 1% 6-methyl-hepten-2-one, 0.01% octanal (in ethanol) |
| Mixture 2 | 1% 6 -methyl-hepten-2-one, 0.01% octanal, 0.02% geranylacetone (in ethanol) |
| Mixture 3 | 1% 6-methyl-hepten-2-one, 1% geranylacetone, 0.01% octanal (in ethanol) |
| Mixture 4 | 1% 6-methyl-hepten-2-one, 0.0001% geranylacetone, 0.01% octanal (in ethanol) |
| Mixture 5 | 1% 6-methyl-hepten-2-one, 1% geranylacetone (in ethanol) |
| Mixture 6 | 1% geranylacetone, 0.01% octanal (in ethanol) |
| % Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 7.25±9.5 | 11.17±12.9 | 30.13±11 | 76.97±5.9 | 100±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.0001 | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 0.85±3.9 | 1.57±11.2 | 19.2±5.5 | 34.07±6.6 | 35.73±8.7 | 74.75±6.1 |
| % conic. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 6.23±1.7 | 20.65±6.4 | 83.78±3.9 | 100±0 | 100±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E ± SE | 9.2 ± 1.8 | 16.93±3.5 | 44.58+1.1 | 94.1±1.1 | 100±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E ± SE | -3.47±6.4 | 16.50+5.1 | 26.93±3.7 | 59.48±3.1 | 100.00±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.0001 | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E ± SE | 9.4±2.3 | 24.38+5.1 | 79.42±3.7 | 87.08±3.1 | 100±0 | 100±0 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 89.41±3.67 | 54.87±4.49 | 32.11±5.59 | 12.50±2.1 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 98.48±1.51 | 64.26±6.15 | 38.82±4.31 | 30.83±6.96 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 100±0 | 100±0 | 100±0 | 94.35±1.02 |
| % Conc. | 0.0001 | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 4.8±2.4 | 10±1.6 | 23.7±4.5 | 33.2±4.5 | 84.1±4.2 | 100±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.0001 | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 8.0±1.8 | 12.7±2.1 | 21.8±4.9 | 30.1±4.1 | 49.7±2.9 | 100.0±0 |
| % Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 7.6±1.8 | 12.0±1.7 | 76.9±5.4 | 98.2±1.1 | 100±0 |
| Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 9.61±3.53 | 20.82±4.86 | 33.46±3.76 | 84.06±6.94 | 100±0 |
| Conc. | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.1 | 1 | 10 |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 11.27±1.86 | 20.83±2.26 | 55.64±5.81 | 77.00±4.53 | 100±0 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 89.03±4.2 | 56.17±4.37 | 28.46±5.15 | 19.83±3.16 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 98.57±1.43 | 79.97±1.7 | 60.91±3.1 | 45.79±4.13 |
| Duration (hrs) | 0H | 2H | 4H | 6H | 8H |
| Mean % P.E±S.E | 100±0 | 100±0 | 100±0 | 100±0 | 93.33±4.08 |
- 1. Brouwer, R. (1960). "Variations in human body odour as a cause of individual differences of attraction for malaria mosquitoes." V. Trop. Geogr. Med 12,: 186-192.
- 2. Khan, A. A. and H. I. Maibach (1966). "Quantitation of Effect of Several Stimuli on Landing and Probing by Aedes Aegypti." Journal of Economic Entomology 59(4): 902-&.
- 3. Mayer, M. S. and J. D. James (1969). "Attraction of Aedes Aegypti (L) - Responses to Human Arms Carbon Dioxide and Air Currents in a New Type of Olfactometer." Bulletin of Entomological Research 58: 629-&.
- 4. Burkot, T. R. (1988). "Non-Random Host Selection by Anopheline Mosquitos." Parasitology Today 4(6): 156-162.
- 5. Schreck, C. E., D. L. Kline, et al. (1990). "Mosquito Attraction to Substances from the Skin of Different Humans." Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 6(3): 406-410.
- 6. Brady, J., C. Costantini, et al. (1997). "The role of body odours in the relative attractiveness of different men to malarial vectors in Burkina Faso." Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 91: S121-S122.
- 7. Costantini, C. S., N. Gibson, G. Coluzzi, M. (1997). "The role of body odours in the relative attractiveness of different men to malarial vectors in Burkino Faso." Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 91(1): s121-s122.
- 8. Lindsay, S. W., J. H. Adiamah, et al. (1993). "Variation in Attractiveness of Human-Subjects to Malaria Mosquitos (Diptera, Culicidae) in the Gambia." Journal of Medical Entomology 30(2): 368-373.
- 9. Qie Y T, Smallegange R. C., Hoppe S. van Loon J. J., Bakker E.J., Takken W. (2004) Behavioural and electrophysiological responses of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto (Diptera: Culicidae) to human skin emanations. Med and Vet Entomol. Dec. 18 (4): 429-38
- 10. Acree, F., R. B. Turner, et al. (1968). "L-Lactic Acid - a Mosquito Attractant Isolated from Humans." Science 161(3848): 1346-&.
- 11. Smith, C. N., N. Smith, et al. (1970). "L-Lactic Acid as a Factor in Attraction of Aedes-Aegypti (Diptera-Culicidae) to Human Hosts." Annals of the Entomological Society of America 63(3): 760-&.
- 12. Steib, B. M., M. Geier, et al. (2001). "The effect of lactic acid on odour-related host preference of yellow fever mosquitoes." Chemical Senses 26(5): 523-528.
- 13. Bernier, U., Kline, DL, Schreck, CE, Yost, RA, Barnard, DR. (2002). "Chemical analysis of human skin emanations: comparison of volatiles from humans that differ in attraction of Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae)." J Am Mosq Control Assoc. 18(3): 186-95.
- 14. Takken, W. and B. G. J. Knols (1999). "Odor-mediated behavior of Afrotropical malaria mosquitoes." Annual Review of Entomology 44:131-157.
- 15. Costantini, C., Sagnon, N.F., della Torre, A., Diallo, M., Brady, J., et al. (1998) Odour-mediated host preferences of West African mosquitoes, with particular reference to malaria vectors. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 58, 56-63.
- 16. Bernier, U. R., D. L. Kline, et al. (2000). "Analysis of human skin emanations by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. 2. Identification of volatile compounds that are candidate attractants for the yellow fever mosquito (Aedes aegypti)." Analytical Chemistry 72(4): 747-756.
- 17. Geier, M. and J. Boeckh (1999). "A new Y-tube olfactometer for mosquitoes to measure the attractiveness of host odours." Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata 92(1): 9-19.
- 18. WHO (1996) Report of the WHO Informal Consultation on the evaluation and testing of insecticides, WHO, Geneva, Ref: CTD/WHOPES/IC/96.1 http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/1996/CTD_WHOPES_IC_96.1.pdf
- 19. S. Carpenter, K. Eyres, I. McEndrick, L. Smith, J. Turner, W. Mordue and A. J. Mordue (Luntz) (2005) Repellent efficiency of BayRepel against Culicoides impunctatus (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) Parasitology Research 95 (6): 427 - 429
Claims (22)
- A composition which comprises geranylacetone as an active ingredient plus a further active ingredient which is 6-methyl-hepten-2-one wherein the 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one and geranylacetone are present in a weight ratio of about 1:1.
- The composition as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a carrier.
- The composition as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the composition comprises octanal as a further active ingredient.
- The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the composition consists essentially of geranylacetone in combination with the other active ingredients
- A composition as claimed in any one of the preceding claims which comprises geranylacetone: 0.00001 - 10% and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one: 0.00001 - 10% by weight.
- A composition as claimed in claim 5 which comprises octanal: 0.001 - 0.1 %, 0.005 - 0.05%, or about 0.01% by weight.
- A composition as claimed in claim 6, wherein the composition comprises: geranylacetone: 0.001% to 1% by weight and 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one: 0.001% to 1% by weight.
- A composition as claimed in any one of the preceding claims further comprising an active ingredient selected from the list consisting of: Nonanal, at 0.1 - 10%; Decanal at 0.0001 - 10% by weight.
- A composition as claimed in any one of the preceding claims further comprising an active ingredient selected from the list consisting of: benzaldehyde; naphthalene; acetophenone; (E)-2-octenal.
- A composition as claimed in any one of the preceding claims, wherein the composition comprises geranylacetone plus at least two, three or four of the further active ingredients.
- A composition as claimed in claim 1 wherein the composition comprises a mixture selected from the list consisting of:1 weight % 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, 1 weight % geranylacetone, 0.01 weight % octanal in ethanol; or1 weight % 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, 1 weight % geranylacetone in ethanol.
- A formulation which is an ointment, solid or solution adapted for topical application, and which comprises:(i) a dermatologically acceptable carrier; and(ii) a composition as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11.
- An article of manufacture which is either:(i) an aerosol or other spray means comprising a topical formulation as claimed in claim 12 suitable for administering said formulation topically; or(ii) an article for wearing or otherwise protecting a subject, wherein the article comprises a composition as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11.
- A dispenser for repelling a pests from an environment, the dispenser comprising a composition as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11.
- A dispenser as claimed in claim 14, which is selected from the list consisting of: a candle, a coil, a slow release dispenser, an oil burner, an electric diffuser.
- A non-therapeutic method of repelling a haematophagous insect pest or tick from an environment or preventing attraction to an environment, the method comprising applying to the environment a composition as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11.
- A method as claimed in claim 16, which method comprises providing a dispenser as claimed in claim 14 or claim 15 into said environment such that the composition is dispensed therefrom.
- A non-therapeutic method of inhibiting the activity of an haematophagous insect pest or tick against a subject, the method comprising applying to a subject a composition as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 11.
- A method as claimed in claim 18 wherein the subject is a human subject.
- A method as claimed in claim 18 or claim 19 wherein the haematophagous insect pest is of the family Ceratopogonidae or family Culicidae.
- A method as claimed in any one of claims 18 to 20 wherein the haematophagous insect pest is selected from the list consisting of: members of the Culex pipiens complex; Aedes aegypti; Anopheles stephensi; Anopheles gambiae complex; Culicoides impunctatus; Culicoides molestus; Lutzomyia species; Phlebotomine species; Midges.
- A method as claimed in any one claims 18 to 21 wherein the treatment comprises applying the composition to achieve a topical dose of each of the active ingredient of between 0.0025ug/cm2 to 100 ug/cm2 or 0.25ug/cm2 to 25 ug/cm2.
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US60/779,109 | 2006-03-03 |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| HK1129271A HK1129271A (en) | 2009-11-27 |
| HK1129271B true HK1129271B (en) | 2018-05-04 |
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