Title of Invention

PLANT-DERIVED AND SYNTHETIC PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS AND PLANT EXTRACTS, EFFECTIVE IN THE TREATMENT AND PREVENTION OF CHLAMYDIAL INFECTIONS

Abstract The invention relates to natural and symhetic compounds, plant extracts and compositions containing them and mixtures of these in the treatment and/or prevention of a chlamydial infection. Medicinal preparations, food additive compositions and functional foodstuffs can be prepared from the plant-derived phenolic compounds and synthetic compounds and plant extracts.
Full Text 1
A COMPOSITION FOR THE TREATMENT AND OR PREVENTION OF CHLAMYDIAL INFECTIONS CAUSED BY C. PNEUMONIAE
The invention relates to effective plant-derived phenolic compounds and to the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts as well as compositions containing them, useful in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections and the use of the plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and compositions containing them in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections. The plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts can be used in the preparation of pharmaceutical preparations, food additive compositions and functional food stuffs beneficial for health.
Chlamydiae are small Gram-negative bacteria. Due to their unique intracellular reproduction cycle they have been classified as a separate order Chlamydiales, including genus Chlamydia. The genus Chlamydia was already initially divided into two species, C. trachomatis and C. psittaci. The division was based on biochemical properties:
C. trachomatis C. psittaci
Accumulation of glycogen
in chlamydial inclusions
(iodine staining +) + -
Sensitivity to sulpha drugs +
From the beginning, "C. trachomatis" was considered a homogeneous group and "C. psittaci" a very heterogeneous group. When the chlamydial strain (later

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C. pneumoniae) causing respiratory infections without bird contacts wa . discovered, it was indisputably considered to belong to the group of "C psittaci" because it satisfied the above-mentioned conditions based on biochemistry. C. trachomatis and C. pneumoniae are different in respect of their surface structure. The main component of the surface structure of C. trachomatis is the major outer membrane protein (MOMP) that varies at four different sites and gives the basis on the division of C. trachomatis to, at the present, almost 20 different immuno-types. In C. pneumoniae, MOMP is very conservative and only one imrnunotype . is found. In addition, the target cells in tissue are different: the epithelium of genitals and conjunctiva in the case of C. trachomatis and the epithelium of respiratory tract in the case of C. pneumoniae. The former, with the exception of rare lymphogranuloma venereum strain (LGV), is not capable of multiplying in phagocytes and macrophages, which specifically constitute the target cells of the latter. When penetrating into cells, C. pneumoniae uses a heparin receptor which is not used by genital chlamydiae with the exception of LGV. Furthermore, transmission routes and resulting clinical pictures are different: C. pneumoniae is transmitted via respiratory tract and may spread inside monocytes into the circulatory system, whereas C. trackomatis is transmitted principally in sexual contacts. In addition, the treatment is different; C. trachomatis is usually treated with a single dose, whereas for C. pneumoniae, even three-week antibiotic courses are recommended.
A list of diseases caused by or associated with these chlamydial species is shown below:
C. trachomatis:
- conjunctivitis
- cervicitis
- urethritis
- pelvic inflammatory disease (PID)
- infections of newborns e.g. infant pneumonitis

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- peritonitis
- perihepatitis
- reactive arthritis
C. pneumoniae:
- upper respiratory tract infections
- bronchitis
- pneumonia
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- asthma
- vasculitis
- atherosclerosis with its complications
- encephalitis
- certain types of multiple sclerosis
- part of the late onset of Alzheimer's disease
It was shown as early as 1989 that the chlamydial strain causing respiratory infections without bird contacts differed genetically both from C. trachomatis and from the described C. psittaci species so clearly that it was separated into its own species, C. pneumoniae. Its nucleic acid homology with C. trachomatis is below 10 %. C. trachomatis has extragenomic plasmids not found in human C. pneumoniae strains. The genomes of both species have been sequenced and the number of genes is considerably higher (about 200) in C. pneumoniae than in C. trachomatis. In a recent reclassification of chlamydiae, it has already been transferred to a totally different genus, Chlamydophila. Thus, there is good reason to believe that all that is known from C. trachomatis cannot be applied to C. pneumoniae.
Most common chlamydial species in humans are C. pneumoniae and C. trachomatis which cause common important diseases. C. psittaci is very widespread in the animal kingdom but can only occasionally also cause infections in man. Addi-

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tionally C. pecorun is known causing infections in ruminants. The classification of new genera and species in order Chlamydiales is in progress.
C. pneumoniae is the most common chiamydiae of the mankind and almost everybody gets infected with it 2 to 3 times during the life time. C. pneumoniae can easily invade lung tissue and multiply in macrophages and endothelium of blood vessels. The clinical picture of respiratory infections caused by C. pneumoniae varies largely from the usually mild upper respiratory tract infections in children to serious pneumonias of adults. 5-10% of all pneumonias are caused by C. pneu-moniae. C. pneumoniae is spread as an airway infection from people to people. Obviously some individuals are effective transmitters, because the infections become more common only at school age. In Nordic countries infections caused by C. pneumoniae occur as two to three years long epidemics with about six years' intervals.
Chlamydial infections are of incidious and latent nature and their chronic late complications are obviously most significant of all. Epidemiological studies indicate an important association between chronic C. pneumoniae infections and atherosclerosis: many studies have also revealed a connection between chlamydial infections and the incidence of acute nryocardial infarction (AMI). Further, the chronic C. pneumoniae infection apparently plays a role in the outbreak of asthma as well as of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Arteriosclerosis is a chronic inflammation state and C. pneumonia particles can be demonstrated in foam cells and smooth muscle cells in over half of the atherosclerotic plaques. In the AMI patients there often occurs an immune response to the chlamydial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), indicating the exacerbation of an infection. It has also been possible to detect chiamydiae in damaged heart valves and they are especially abundant in abdominal-aortic aneurysms. Additionally, C. pneumoniae have been discovered to play a role in cerebral infarcts and transient cerebral ischemic attacks. As yet it is not finally clear what role the chiamydiae found in

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the damaged site play in the development of the damage itself, but one factor in the slow progress of these diseases seems anyhow to be the chronic chlamydial infection. In animal models, however, C. pneumoniae has been shown to initiate and accelerate the development of the atherosclerosis. Epidemiological and clinical studies have shown that there is a clear connection between a chronic C. pneumoniae infection and atherosclerosis and AMI. In the latest studies, it has also been concluded that C. pneumoniae infection is a risk factor of the cardiac events. C. pneumoniae infection is often connected to cigarette smoking which obviously predisposes to a chronic chlamydial infection.
Antibiotic treatment has been observed to reduce the risk of heart attacks and it has also been possible to influence the common inflammation marker CRP and serum flbrinogen levels with antibiotic treatment. In most of the industrialised countries, the morbidity of heart diseases began to sink when the use of antibiotics, very effective against chlamydiae, became common in the treatment of other infections.
C. trachomatis is the most important cause of the genital infections of women. Additionally a part of the bacterial culture negative urinary tract infections of women in fertile age are caused by C. trachomatis. C. trachomatis is a common cause of the chronic endometriosis, and PED is the most common complication of C. trachomatis infections in women. A C. trachomatis infection can be almost symptomless, and even extrauterine pregnancy as well as infertility are known as complications of the obstructive scar formation caused by the incidious silent infection. About a half of the children born to chlamydiae carriers will get infected by the birth and about half of infected new-born children will develop inclusion conjunctivitis with C. trachomatis pneumonia as a complication. C. trachomatis also causes genital infections in men.
Chlamydiae are sensitive to tetracyclines and erythromycin; rifampicin and some new fluorokinolones are effective too. C. trachomatis is also, in contrast to e.g.

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C. pneumoniae, sensitive to sulpha drugs. In spite of the response to treatment, chlamydial infections are often recurring and there is also a risk that they become chronic. Chlamydiae multiply only inside the cell, and hence the new macrolide antibiotics,and azalides concentrating efficiently into the cells are nowadays alternatives to tetracycline and erythromycin as a primary drug. In a complicated chlamydial infection the treatment possibly has to be continued for a long time and for example in Reiter's disease caused by chlamydiae, a three month's treatment is recommended.
Until now there are no vaccines for the prevention of chlamydial infections. The nature of the immune response is insufficiently known and a tendency towards hypersensitivity is connected to it.
In patent EP O 377 722 a method for the evaluation of the risk of a cardiac infarct, a method of diagnosing a heart and blood vessel disease as well as the use of drugs effective against chlamydiae are described. In this publication tetracyclines, erythromycin, rifampicillin and fluorokinolones are described as suitable drugs for the treatment or prevention of a chronic heart disease caused by chlamydiae.
WO 98/50074 describes, especially for the treatment of an infection caused by C. pneumoniae, a combination of anti-chlamydiae agents wherein the active ingredients are each effective at a certain stage of the life cycle of chlamydia.
In patent US 5 830 874 a method for diagnosing of arterial chlamydial granuloma caused by C. pneumoniae, as well as therapeutical compositions for the treatment of arterial chlamydial granulomatosis are described. As suitable therapeutically acting compounds tetracyclines, erythromycins, clarithromycins, azitromycin and kinolones etc. effective against chlamydiae are mentioned.

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Patent JP 10 139 686 describes for the treatment of atherosclerosis caused by C. pneumoniae the use of 2-(3,4-dimetoxycinnainoyl)-amuiobenzoic acid as a thera-peutically active compound at a daily dosage of 100-1000 mg.
According to the above information there is an obvious need for new compounds and compositions which can be used in the treatment and prevention of chlamy-dial infections.
Shikiniates or compounds formed from shikimic acid via a biosynthetic pathway, compounds formed via the acetate-malonate biosynthetic pathway and compounds formed via combinations of both pathways belong to the group of plant-derived phenolic compounds. Simple aromates, phenols, coumarins, lignans, lignins as well as flavonoids and their derivatives belong to said compounds. Simple aromates mainly include phenylpropane derivatives and phenylmethane derivatives. In nature flavonoids, which are structurally phenolic compounds, form a widespread plant pigment group. Flavonoids occur everywhere in the plant kingdom, in bryophytes, in the stonecrop family and in other lower plants. Most of all they have been found from higher plants and vascular plants and they occur in all fruits, vegetables and among others in tea as well as wines, especially red wines. Flavonoids occur in nature mainly in the glycosidic form, but they can also be free phenols and sulphates in the so-called aglycon form or as bound to polysaccha-rides and proteins. In most cases the flavonoids are of their chemical structure polyphenolic, compounds. Over 8000 flavonoids have been identified from plants and they have a myriad of functions. They, due to their bitter taste, protect plants against noxious insects and, due to their antibiotic properties, protect plants against viruses and bacteria. According to the current opinion flavonoids are not nutritionally important compounds, but they seem to have beneficial effects on the health. This effect is apparently independent from the vitamins and minerals contained in the plant. Hardly anyone can avoid ingesting flavonoids, but their possibilities to effect depend, anyhow, on the absorption properties and bioavailability and additionally on the interaction of the simultaneously obtained flavonoids.

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The antioxidant effect of natural phenolic compounds has been already known for quite a long time and the antioxidant effect as well as the capture of free radicals have been dealt with in several studies. According to the present research information the ability of flavonoids to prevent the oxidation of LDL cholesterol is considered as one of their most important properties. The oxidation of LDL cholesterol in the subendothelium of a blood vessel is the initial factor in atherogene-sis. Many studies suggest that insufficient intake of flavonoids from the nutrition would be an important factor in the morbidity caused by the heart and blood vessel diseases. In human studies concerning flavonoids only a few most important flavonoids have been observed, of which quercetin has been shown to prevent the oxidation of LDL cholesterol and thus to reduce the risk of coronary disease, because the oxidised LDL cholesterol has clearly been related to the atherosclerotic stages.
The daily intake of flavonoids from the nutrition varies, for example according to a Dutch research, between 0-30 mg. In studies conducted in Finns, flavonoids have been noticed to show a modest protecting effect against the morbidity of heart and blood vessel diseases, but the differences in the intake of flavonoids on the other hand were rather small, the total amounts being about 2-6 mg/day. In a study carried out in Holland an inverse relation between from nutrition acquirable flavonols and flavanols and death cases caused by the heart and blood vessel diseases has been noticed. An inverse relation between the intake of flavonols and flavones and the risk of cardiac infarct has also been noticed. The flavonoids are further known to have an effect on inflammation and immune responses as well as on many other functions of the cell. Some flavonoids and many other phenolic natural compounds can prevent or enhance the calcium intake to the cell which is also demonstrated in Table 1 presented later.
The calcium channel blocking drags have an important role in the treatment of heart and blood vessel diseases, such as chest pain caused by cardiac anoxia, of myocardial infarct, atherosclerosis and hypertension. These drugs act on the cal-

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cium channels by preventing the influx of calcium to the cell and thus enlarge the coronary artery as well as lower the peripheral resistance of blood vessels wherein the cardiac load is diminished. Large scale use of calcium blockers has lead e.g. to the development of screening programs in order to find the calcium channel blocking effect of compounds isolated from nature. As the screening medium in the studies e.g. a continuous cell line originating from a tumour of the posterior lobe of the pituitary gland of rat (GH4C1) has been used, as well as patch clamp technique, in which the separate calcium channels of one cell can be examined at a time. As the result of the studies naturally occurring compounds and extracts have been found which have calcium channel blocking or activating effects. These compounds have been found among plant-derived simple phenols, coumarins, flavonoids and extracts rich in said compounds. Some of these are in their blocking effect comparable with verapamil and some of the compounds have a tendency to enhance the calcium influx to the cell.
The present invention relates to effective plant-derived phenolic compounds and to the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and compositions containing them, useful in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections, as well as to the use of the plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and of compositions containing them, in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections.
The characteristic features of the plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts according to the invention, compositions according to the invention containing them, as well as their use in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections are presented in the patent claims, as well as their use in the manufacture of medicaments or food stuffs beneficial to health, useful in the treatment and prevention of chlamydial infections.

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Surprisingly it has been found that certain plant-derived phenolic compounds, the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and fractions and partial fractions containing said plant-derived compounds have an antibiotic-like, strong effect against chlamydiae. According to the invention the plant-derived phenolic compounds are phenolic compounds formed from shikimic acid via a biosynthetic pathway, phenolic compounds formed via the acetate-malonate pathway and phenolic compounds formed as a result of combinations of both pathways. These compounds, such as simple aromates, phenols, coumarins, lignans, lignins and flavonoids are obtained from products of the vegetable kingdom such as fruits and vegetables, especially citrus fruits, vegetables, berries, onions, tea, red wines etc.
The plant-derived phenolic compounds, the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and extracts and fractions and partial fractions containing them may be used as such or as mixtures of them, optionally in combination with sulphur compounds contained in garlic, such as alliicine or derivatives of alliicine.
Preferred plant-derived natural phenolic compounds are flavonoids as well as phenylmethane and phenylpropane derivatives, phenolic acids, triterpenes, coumarins and cathecins, and extracts and partial fractions containing them, as well as fractions containing simple phenols, flavonoids, their derivatives, polyphenols, diterpene phenols and diterpene kinones, as well as fractions from which the tannin and diterpene fractions have been removed. Preferred are also the corresponding synthetic compounds and derivatives thereof and pharmaceutically acceptable salts, esters and derivatives of the above cited compounds.
Preferred compounds and extracts thereof are the ones with the anti-chlamydial effect (inhition of formation of inclusions) of equal or more than 30% and particularly preferable are the ones with the anti-chlamydial effect of equal or more than 90%, as defined in the examples. In the following are presented groups of preferred compounds and extracts:

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- Flavones, such as apigenin, luteolin, flavone
- Flavonols, such as quercetin, rhamnetin, morin
- Flavonones, such as naringin
- Isoflavones, such as genistein
- Phenylmethane-derived compounds, such as methyl gallate., propyl gallate,
octyl gallate, dodecyl gallate, isopropyl gallate
- Phenylpropane-derived compounds, such as:

- Coumarins like umbelliferone, scopoletin, methoxy psoralen,
xanthotoxin and coumarin
- Flavan-3-ols like (-)-epigallocatechin, (-)-epicatechin,
(+)-catechin and (-)-epicatechin gallate
Synthetic compounds, such as flavonoids and coumarins like coumarin 106, 2'-methoxy- -naphto-flavone, 6,2'-dimethoxyflavone, 6-methylcoumarin, alpha-naphtoflavone, rotanone, 7-diethyl-amino-3-thenoylcoumarin
Natural plant extracts, such as extracts of Mentha longifolia, Mentha arvensis, Galeopsis speciosa, Salvia officinalis, Thymus vulgaris, Rumex acetocella, Rosa rugosa, Veronica longifolia, Symphytum asperum, Artemisia vulgaris, Convallaria majalis, Quercus robur, Daucus carota, Fragaria iinumae, Brassica oleracea, Brassica napus, Medicago sativa, Citrus sinensis, Phloem flour, Vaccinum myrtillus
The plant-derived phenolic compounds, extracts and partial fractions containing them

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can conveniently be obtained from natural plants or parts of them by using any conventional technique for extracting and isolating substances. Braces, roots or leaves are suitably hydrodistilled and macerated or only hydro distilled in order to obtain the desired extract, which may further be purified using any conventional purification technique known to a man skilled in the art. The corresponding synthetic compounds or their derivatives are usually commercially available substances or they may be manufacured using any known synthetic methods.
In the following Table 1 some of the preferred plant-derived phenolic compounds according to the present invention, the effect of the compounds on the calcium influx to the cell, the antioxidant effect as well as the chemical structure of the compounds are presented.
The chemicall structures of the compounds presented in Table 1 are given in the following Schemes A, B, C, D and E. In Scheme A flavones, flavonols, in Scheme B flavanones, in Scheme C isoflavones, in Scheme D phenylmethane derivatives and in Scheme E phenylpropane derivatives are given. The substituents R1-7 refer to the respective functional groups given in Table 1.




Table 1 (continued)


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The anti-chiamydial effect of the plant-derived phenolic compounds quercetin, morin, rhamnetin and octyl gallate on C. pneumoniae and C. trachomatis was studied in examples 1-4. All of these compounds inhibited the growth of the C pneumoniae in a concentration of 0.5-50 g and quercetin, morin and rhamnetin were shown particularly effective on C. trachomatis when pretreated host cells were used. Preferable compounds for the treatment and prevention of a C. pneumoniae infection thus are for example phenolic compounds quercetin, morin, rhamnetin and octyl gallate isolated from natural materials, and for the treatment and prevention of a C. trachomatis infection in turn quercetin, morin and rhamnetin and extracts and partial fractions containing them.
The anti-chlamydial effect also of other plant-derived phenolic compounds, certain synthetic flavonoids and coumarins and mixtures of plant-derived phenolic compounds with garlic, using the concentration of 50 g was studied in example 5 showing remarkable inhibiting effect. Correspondingly, the anti-chlamydial effect of alliicine, contained in garlic, on C. pneumoniae has been studied with similar results.
The anti-chlamydial effect of natural plant extracts and dietary plant extracts was studied in example 6 showing excellent inhibiting effect.
Preferred compounds and extracts and fractions are the ones with the anti-chlamydial effect (inhition of formation of inclusions) of equal or more than 30% and particularly preferable are the ones with the anti-chlamydial effect of equal or more than 90%, as defined in the examples.
A compound according to the present invention, typically effective against chla-mydia, is additionally an antioxidant and has an effect on the Ca intake in the cell.
Octyl gallate is also a compound commonly used as a food additive.

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As active ingredients the plant-derived phenolic compounds, the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts, fractions and mixtures of them may be dosed so that the daily supply counted as an aglycon is from 25 g to 3000 mg. The plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and fractions and mixtures of them may, according to the present invention, be prepared as pharmaceutical preparations in the form of capsules, tablets, ointments, liquid preparations or in other corresponding forms known to one skilled in the art. The preparations contain the active ingredient so that the daily supply is from 25 g to 3000 mg counted as an aglycon, as unit doses preferably of from 25 g to 500 mg.
The plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and fractions and mixtures of them may also be added as such to food stuffs or they can be prepared as compositions suitable for food stuffs, such as herbal preparations, spices, granules or the like, which can be used as such, as added to the daily nourishment or functional food stuffs beneficial to health also called pro-health products, such as ready-prepared foods, porridges, salad dressings, drinks, milk-based products, edible fats, frozen products, freeze-dried food stuffs, speciality food stuffs, potato ships, dipping sauces etc. in connection with the production. The plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives can exist in the compositions according to the present invention either in an aglycon form or in a glycosidic form.
The plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and fractions and mixtures of them according to the present invention are safe as compounds. The compositions and preparations according to the invention can be used both as a course of treatment of an acute chlamydial infection or by dosing the composition or preparation continuously and regularly with the daily nourishment in order to prevent a chlamydial infection. Because the chronic coronary heart disease causes considerably

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eases on the other hand causes high costs for national economy, it is possible with the plant-derived phenolic compounds and the corresponding synthetic compounds and their derivatives and plant extracts and fractions and mixtures thereof according to the present invention and with the new compositions containing them to considerably prevent and slow down the upraise and outbreak of the heart and blood vessel diseases especially within the risk groups. The compositions and preparations according to the invention can also be used for the treatment and prevention of an acute C. trachomatis infection as well as for the prevention of the late complications, such as infertility, extrauterine pregnancy and cervical cancer, and also for the treatment and prevention of other chlamydiae related infections and complications.
The invention is demonstrated in the following examples in more detail, but the invention is anyhow not restricted to the examples. In the examples, the direct anti-chlamydial effect of the compounds and plant extracts according to the invention on C. pneumoniae and C. frachomatis as well as the toxicity of the compounds and extracts towards the used host cells (HL cells, human lung tissue, standard diploid cell line) are described.
Example 1
The direct anti-chlamydial effect of plant-derived phenolic compounds (as inhibition of formation of inclusions) / C. pneumoniae K7 strain (clinical isolate)

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Results/ Concentration 50 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of Inhibition % of the
Concentration the DMSO control DMSO control
50 M (pre-treated)

Quercetin 90 90
Morin 99 96
Rhamnetin 100 59
Octylgallate 100 100
DMSO 0 0
The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in lml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.

Results/ Concentration 0.5 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of Inhibition % of the
Concentration the DMSO control DMSO control
0.5 M (pre-treated)

Quercetin 68 77
Morin 80 62
Rhamnetin 73 50
Octyl gallate 82 62
DMSO "o 0

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The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in lml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.
Example 2
Inhibition of the infectivity / C. pneumoniae

Results/Concentration 50 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of Inhibition % of the
Concentration the DMSO control DMSO control
50 M (pre-treated)

Quercetin 16 0
Morin 94 16
Rhamnetin 100 61
Octyl gallate 100 100
DMSO 0 0
The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in 1 ml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.

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Results/Concentration 0.5 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of
0.5 M the DMSO control

Inhibition % of the DMSO control (pre-treated)


Quercetin 58 0
Morin 81 53
Rhamnetin 100 75
Octyl gallate 59 42
DMSO 0 0
The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in 1 ml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.
Example 3.
Direct anti-chlamycial effect on C. trachomatis
C. trachomatis, cultivation in McCoy cells. The test procedure otherwise the same as with C. pneumoniae.

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Results/ Concentration 50 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of Inhibition % of the
Concentration the DMSO control DMSO control
50 M (pre-treated)*
Quercetin 0 100
Morin. 0 100
Rhamnetin 0 100
Octyl gallate 14 88

The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in 1 ml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.
Results/ Concentration 0.5 M:
Compounds Inhibition % of Inhibition % of the
Concentration the DMSO control DMSO control
0.5 M (pre-treated)*
Quercetin 0 20
Morin 0 100
Rhamnetin 0 17
OG 0 0

30 * The host cells were incubated for 1 day with the compound to be studied before infection. To 24-well plates containing host cells the compound to be studied in

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1 ml of maintenance medium was added in the same concentration as in the test procedure itself. The intention of this was to study the possible effect of the compound on the host cells themselves, which effect could be a factor inhibiting the infection. The test procedure was continued by the way described in the determination method.
Example 4.
Determination of the toxicity of some of the studied samples towards the host cells.
The determination was performed as in the previous tests but without any infection. The viability was determined with Trypan blue staining.
Samples:
Q = quercetin
M = morrn
R = rhamnetin
OG = octyl gallate
HL-C = HL cells in the sole nutrition medium
HL-CD = HL cells with a DMSO addition

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TOXIC ITY TEST HL-C
Q50 Q5 Q0,5 Q0,05 Q0,005 HL-C HL-CD
10.5 9.2 7.0 11.7 7.4 19.7 9.6 %
M50 M5 M0,5 M0,05 M0.005 HL-C HL-CD M
11.2 8.3 8.4 9.0 8.3 19.0 9.0 %
R50 R5 R0,5 R0,05 R0,005 ' '
15.7 9.6 10.0 9.5 10.9 %
OG50 OG5 000,5 OG0,05 OG0,005 HL-CD HL-CD
16.4 8.8 7.9 7.4 8.0 5.7 7.8 %
5 TOXICITY TEST HL-C (pre-treated)
Q50 Q5 Q0,5 Q0.05 Q0,005 HL-CD M
10.5 8.1 3.3 7.2 7.9 30.1 %
M50 M5 M0,5 M0,05 M0,005 ' '' M
9.7 12.7 6.4 8.1 14.4 %
R50 R5 R0,5 R0,05 R0,005 HL-C HL-CD M
16.9 8.0 10.6 10.7 6.6 10.8 10.7 %
OG50 OG5 OG0,5 OG0,05 OG0,005 HL-C M
14.8 8.5 5.0 7.1 7.0 7.9 %

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Example 5.
Direct anti-chlamydial effect of plant-derived phenolic compounds, certain synthetic compounds and mixtures on C. pneumoniae.
The concentration used was 50 M.

Compound Inhibition %
1. NATURAL FLAVONOIDS
Apigenin 100
Luteolin 100
Flavone 90
Vitexin 3
Vitexin-2"-O-rhamnoside 11
Luteolin-7-glucoside 23
Luteolin-3 ',7-glucoside 45
Quercetin 90
Rhamnetin 100
Isorhamnetin 70
Morin 100
Quercitrin 50
Rutin 46
^Naringenin 16
^/Naringin 66
Daidzein 51
Genistein 60
Daidzin 0
Genistin 37
ProcyanidinBl 30
Procyanidin B2 0
2. NATURAL PHENOLIC ACIDS
Benzoic acid 44
Gallic acid 27
Syringic acid 32
Caffeic acid 78

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Ferulic acid 14
Methyl gallate 100
Propyl Gallate 100
Octyl Gallate 100
Dodecyl gallate 100
3. NATURAL TRITERPENE
Resveratrole 54
4. NATURAL COUMARINS
AND CATHECINS
Scopoletin 96
Methoxy psoralen 100
Umbelliferone 75
Xanthotoxin 94
Coumarin 28
(-)-Epicatechin gallate 85
(-)-Epigallocatechin 58
(-)-Epicatechin 75
(+)-Catechin 76
5. SYNTHETIC FLAVONOIDS
AND COUMARINS
3-( -acetonylbenzyl)-4- 0
hydroxycoumarin
Coumarin 102 63
Coumarin 106 100
2 '-methoxy- -napbtoflavone 100
6,2 '-dimethoxyflavone 73
6-methylcoumarin 71
Alpha-naphtoflavone 92
Rotenone 100
7-diethylamino-3- thenoylcoumarin 100
3 -(2 -benzoxazoyl)umbelliferone 28
Coumarin 30 50
3-benzoylbenzo(F)coumarin 62
6,8-dibromocoumarin-3- 0
carboxylic acid
4-metbyl-3-phenylcoumarin 0

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6. MIXTURES
Octylgallate 100
Octylgallate 1/10 53
Octylgallate 1/100 17
Garlic 26
Garlic 1/10 25
Garlic 1/100 19
Octylgallate 50% + Garlic 50% 100
Octylgallate 50% + Garlic 50% 47
1/10
Octylgallate 50% + Garlic 50% 34
1/100
Octylgallate 50% + Garlic 50% 6
1/1000
Example 6.
Effect of plant extracts against C. pneumoniae
Initial screening of 101 extracts prepared from 61 natural and dietary plant materials against C. pneumoniae was conducted. The concentration used was 40 ng/well.
In the following are presented results of the selected most active natural plant extracts against C. pneumoniae, calculated from 4 different evaluations.

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Plant Family Inhibition % Viability
N48. Mentha longifolia Labiateae 100 OK




N53. Mentha arvensis Labiateae 100 OK




N44. Galeopsis speciosa Labiateae 100 OK




N57. Salvia officinalis Labiateae 100 OK




N57. Salvia officinalis Labiateae 100 OK




N58. Thymus vulgaris Labiateae 100 OK




N34. Rumex acetocella Polygonaceae 100 less




N30. Rosa rugosa Rosaceae 100 OK




N28. Veronica longifolia Scrophulariaceae 100 less




N8. Symphytum asperum Boraginaceae 100 less




N22. Artemisia vulgaris Asteraceae 100 OK




N37. Convallaria majalis Convallariaceae 100 -




Quercus robur Fagaceae 100 -




In the following are presented results of the selected most active dietary plant extracts that showed 100% inhibition of C. pneumoniae, calculated from 4 different evaluations.

Plant Family Inhibition % Viability
D8. Daucus carota Umbelli ferae 100 -




D14. Fragaria iinumae Rosaceae 100 less




D16. Brassica oleracea Cruciferae 100 OK




D17. Brassica napus Cruciferae 100 OK




D21. Medicago sativa Leguminosae 100 OK




D23. Citrus sinehsis Rutaceae 100 Less




D25. Phloem flour Polvsonaceae 100 OK




D30. Vaccinum myrtilhis Ericaceae 100 OK




D31. Vaccinum myrtilhis Ericaceae 100 OK





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No significant activity differences were noticed between organically and normally grown plants.
In this study the extracts of plants that showed 100% inhibition of C. pneumomae inclusions (n=4) were considered active. Five plants that belong to the family La-biateae were found paricularly active. Despite of the method of extraction, both hydrodistilled and macerated or only hydrodistilled extracts of Salvia officinalis were active against C. pneumoniae.
In the following is provided a description of the microbiological methods used.
1. CULTURE AND PASSAGE OF HL CELLS
Passage cultures of HL cells are made with intervals of 3 days. The host cells are inoculated on the day preceding the infection. The cells are rinsed with PBS 1 x 10 mis and harvested by trypsinisation (1:10, 1.5-2.0 ml/bottle; ca. 5 min in a laminar flow cabinet or 2 min in CO2 at +37°C). The cell suspension is diluted to a level of ca. 350000 cells/ml of nutrition medium (RN). Cultivation at +37°C, CO2 (5.0 %) and the RN medium changed 1-2 times a week. The HL cells can be freezed in liquid nitrogen [1 ml 7.5% FCS (RN) + 1 ml DMSO].
2. PURIFICATION OF THE CHLAMYDIAE
EB (Elementary Body) = the infective extracellular form of the chlamydiae. On the preceding day the necessary amount of the HL cell suspension infected with the chlamydia is taken to thawing. The cells are suspended well and kept in an ultrasonic bed for 2 minutes altogether [20 seconds of sonication (Amplitude is 24-25) and 10 seconds of cooling x 6], The cells are broken and the chlamydiae remain undamaged.

29
The suspension is centrifuged for 10 minutes at 1600 rpm (550 x g), wherein the chlamydiaes are in the supernatant (the HL cells remnants are discarded). The supernatant is aspirated away and 5 ml of PBS is added, suspended and sonicated for 1 minute (10 seconds of sonication - 5 seconds of cooling x 6).
The chlamydiae can be stored frozen at -70°C. 3. CHLAMYDIAE TEST PROCEDURE
The cultivated HL cells are infected with C. pneumoniae EB's. The EB's which have invaded the cell are changed into the metabolically active reticulate body (RB) which are dividing by binary fission in the endosome vacuole or inclusion. After a certain time (about 72 hr) the C. pneumoniae RB's are condensing back into EB's, after which the inclusions are broken, the host cells are broken and the EB's are liberated. In this method the intention is to verify the inclusions before the breaking up of the host cells.
As the host cell of C. pneumoniae in in vitro conditions HL cells are used. As the host cells of C. trachomatis in in vitro conditions McCoy cells often are used.
Infection of HL cells and McCoy cells
On the day preceding the infection the host cells are inoculated on a 24-well plate: the cells are harvested by trypsinisation, they are suspended in ca. 5 ml of the nutrition liquid and counted in a Burker's chamber. Each well are seeded using a concentration of 250000 - 400000 cells/well for cultivation. Before the addition of the cells to the well is if necessary round cover glass (diameter 13 mm) put for staining. Nutrition liquid is added so that the volume is 1 ml/well. On the following day the cells are infected with the desired bacterium.

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Solution to be used in the infection and containing chlamydiae particles is mixed throughout. The old nutrition liquid is aspirated away. By the infection the inoculum which has been stored at -70°C is diluted to an IFU concentration of ca. 103 so that the volume of the solution is at least 200 1/well on a 24-well plate. The cells are infected by centrifuging at 1600 rpm (550 x g)/l hr. The nutrition medium is aspirated away and changed to a maintenance medium containing cyclo-hexamide and also containing the studied compound (DMSO concentration 0.2%), 1 ml/well. The cells are incubated in a 5% CO2 atmosphere at +35°C. The cells infected with C. pneumoniae are incubated for 3 days. After 2-3 days the maintenance medium is removed and the cells washed with 1 x lml of PBS. To the wells 200 1 of SPG are added for further infection, harvested with a pipette tip and transferred into tubes. This is used for infecting new cells in the same way as above to test the inhibition of infectivity (chlamydiasidic effect).
Chlamydial staining
The nutrition medium, which is above the cover glass left for staining, is aspirated away. The infected cells are fixed on the cover glass with methanol for 10 min. The cover glass is removed from the well and transferred onto a suitable fluorescein-conjugated monoclonal antibody on Parafilm in a moist chamber with the cell-containing side down. The cover glass is incubated for 30 min at +37°C and washed twice with PBS and once with water. Finally it is dried. The cover glass is put with the cell-containing side down on an object glass containing a fixative (e.g. Mounting medium). When viewed under the fluorescent microscope, cell culture specimens infacted with chlamydiae show a characteristic apple-green fluorescence of inclusions against a red counterstained background.

31
Chemicals and reagents
RN = FCS nutrition medium: 100 ml of RPMI 1640 (Sigma), to which 3.5% L-
glutamine and 10 mg streptomycin have been added (final concentration
20 Mg/ml), 7.5 ml FCS. The ready solutions are stored at +8°C.
Maintenance medium: 100 ml of FCS nutrition medium with addition of 50 g of
cyclohexamide final concentration 0.5 fig/ml. The ready solutions are stored at
+8°C.
PBS (Dulbecco's Phosphate buffered saline, Gibco), pH 7.4
SPG = Saccharose 0.2M (37.5 g), KH2PO4 3.8 mM (0.26 g), Na2HPO4 x 2H2O 6.7
mM (0.61 g), glutamic acid (C5H9NO4) 5 mM (0.36 g) as mixed to 500 ml of
milli-Q water. Is after sterilisation stored at -20°C.
FCS, Foetal Calf Serum (Gibco, Scotland), is inactivated at 56°C, 30 min, filtered
and stored at -70°C.

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WE CLAIM:
1. A composition for the treatment and/or prevention of chlamydial infections caused by. C. pneumoniae, )wherein the composition comprises from 25 g to 3000 mg, calculated as an aglycon, of a compound selected from apigenin, luteolin, flavone, quercetin, quercitrin, rhamnetin, isorhamnetin, morin, daizein, genistein, naringin,
caffeic acid, methyl gallate, propyl gallate, octyl gallate, dodecyl gallate, isopropyl gallate, reservatrole, umbelliferone, scopoletin, methoxy psoralen, xanthotoxin, coumarin, coumarin 106, coumarin 102, 2'-methoxy- -naphtoflavone, 6,2'-dimethoxy-flavone, 6-methylcoumarin, -naphto-flavone, rotenone, coumarin 30, 3-benzoy-benzo(F)coumarin and 7-diethyl-amino-3-thenoylcoumarin and mixtures of said compounds, and that the anti-chlamydial effect on C. pneumoniae of the compound is equal or more than 30 % as inhibition of formation of inclusions.
2. The composition as claimed in claim 1, wherein the anti-chlamydial effect on C. pneumoniae of compound is equal or more than 90 % as inhibition of formation of
inclusions.
3. The composition as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein the composition comprises a
compound selected from apigenin, luteolin, flavone, quercetin, morin, rhamnetin,
methyl gallate, propyl gallate, octyl gallate, dodecyl gallate, naringin, isopropyl
gallate, scopoletin, methoxy psoralen, xanthotoxm, coumarin 106, -naphtoflavone,
rotenone and 7-diethyl-amino-3-thenoylcoumarin.
4. The composition as claimed in any one of claims 1-3, wherein the compound is a
plant derived compound.
5. The composition as claimed in claim 4, wherein the plant is selected from Mentha
longifolia, Mentha arvensis, Galeopsis speciosa, Salvia officinalis, Thymus vulgaris,
Rumex acetocella, Rosa rugosa, Veronica longifolia, Symphytum asperum, Artemisia
vulgaris, ConvaUaria majalis, Quercus robur, Daucus carota, Fragaria iinumae,

33
Brassica oleracea, Brassica napus, Medicago sativa, Citrus sinensis, Vaccinum myrtillus, and Phloem flour.
6. The composition as claimed in any one of claims 1-5, wherein the compound in the aglycon or glycosidic form.
7. The composition as claimed in any one of claims 1-6, wherein the composition contains a sulphur compound originating from garlic.
8. The composition as claimed in any one of claims 1-7, wherein the composition is
useful in the preparation of foodstuff or as such to be added to the daily nourishment.
9. The composition as claimed in any one of claims 1-7, wherein the composition is
useful in the preparation of medicament.
The invention relates to natural and symhetic compounds, plant extracts and compositions containing them and mixtures of these in the treatment and/or prevention of a chlamydial infection. Medicinal preparations, food additive compositions and functional foodstuffs can be prepared from the plant-derived phenolic compounds and synthetic compounds and plant extracts.

Documents:


Patent Number 205543
Indian Patent Application Number 00153/KOLNP/2003
PG Journal Number 14/2007
Publication Date 06-Apr-2007
Grant Date 05-Apr-2007
Date of Filing 10-Feb-2003
Name of Patentee CONTROL OX OY
Applicant Address IILUODONTIE B, FIN-00980 HELSINKI
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 VUORELA HEIKKI KAIVOKATU 48, FIN-06100 PORVOO
2 VUORELA PIA OF KAIVOKATU 48, FIN-06100 PORVOO
3 LEINONEN MAIJA RANTAKATU 9 B 1, FIN-90100 OULU
4 SAIKKU PEKKA VIHDINTIE 13 A3, FIN-00320 HELSINKI
5 HILTUNEN RAIMO SELKAMERENKATU 10 B 31, FIN-00180 HELSINKI
PCT International Classification Number A 61 K 35/68
PCT International Application Number PCT/FI01/00726
PCT International Filing date 2001-08-16
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/225,735 2000-08-17 U.S.A.
2 20001832 2000-08-18 U.S.A.