4.3 Article

Alpha-mannosidosis caused by toxic plants in ruminants of Argentina

Journal

ANAIS DA ACADEMIA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIAS
Volume 93, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACAD BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIAS
DOI: 10.1590/0001-3765202120191496

Keywords

Argentina; guinea pig model; livestock; neuronal vacuolation; poisonous plants; swainsonine

Funding

  1. INTA [1281102, 1115054]
  2. FONCyT [PICT 1379-2011, 0900-2017]
  3. UNNE [B001-2009, B009-13]
  4. Consejo de Investigacion de la Universidad Catolica de Salta [Resol. 1494/16]

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This review summarizes information about swainsonine-containing plants in Argentina, which have been shown to induce alpha-mannosidosis in livestock. These plants contain the indolizidine alkaloid swainsonine, which inhibits lysosomal enzyme alpha-mannosidase and affects glycoprotein metabolism, leading to abnormal clinical symptoms and histological lesions in affected animals. The main animal model used for studying alpha-mannosidosis is the guinea pig due to its similarities with naturally intoxicated livestock.
It is well known that several of the swainsonine-containing plant species found widespread around the world have a negative economic impact in each country. In Argentina, most of the information on the poisonous plant species that produce alpha-mannosidosis is published in Spanish and thus not available to most Englishspeaking researchers interested in toxic plants. Therefore, the aim of this review is to summarize the information about swainsonine-containing plants in Argentina, which are extensively distributed throughout different ecoregions of the country. To date, five species from three genera have been shown to induce alpha-mannosidosis in livestock in Argentina: Ipomoea carnea subsp. fistulosa, Ipomoea hieronymi subsp. calchaquina (Convolvulaceae), Astragalus garbancillo, Astragalus pehuenches (Fabaceae), and Sida rodrigoi (Malvaceae). These species contain the indolizidine alkaloid swainsonine, which inhibits the lysosomal enzyme alpha-mannosidase and consequently affects glycoprotein metabolism, resulting in partially metabolized sugars. The prolonged consumption of these poisonous plants produces progressive weight loss and clinical signs related to a nervous disorder, characterized by tremors of head and neck, abnormalities of gait, difficulty in standing, ataxia and wide-based stance. Histological lesions are mainly characterized by vacuolation of different cells, especially neurons of the central nervous system. The main animal model used to study alpha-mannosidosis is the guinea pig because, when experimentally poisoned, it exhibits many of the characteristics of naturally intoxicated livestock.

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