Screening Amazon rainforest plant extracts for antimicrobial activity: a 15-year commitment to the Brazilian biodiversity

Ivana Barbosa Suffredini,Jefferson de Souza Silva,Sérgio Alexandre Frana, Karla Cristiane Pinto, Keli Cristina Dias Bento, Erika Costa Rudiger, Paloma Kelly de Souza Belo, Jose A. Arruda, J Schulze,Adriana Lígia de Castilho,Livia Roberta Piedade Camargo, Ricardo Olivieri Paulino,Yodiney dos Santos, Rui Morais, Karen Cristina Comin Maldonado, Gabriele Kolndorfer, Karolayne Sousa Silva, Pietra Dantas de Jesus, G. S. Moura, Victoria Rocha Brandão, Helena Ribeiro, Christian Henrique Komka Vara, Fabiane Massola,Ingrit Elida Collantes Díaz,Mateus Luís Barradas Paciência, Selene Dall’Acqua Coutinho,Riad Naim Younes,Antônio Drauzio Varella

Frontiers in Antibiotics(2023)

引用 0|浏览8
暂无评分
摘要
Introduction The need for new tools to treat infections is constantly growing due to the possibilities of emerging diseases related to environmental changes, climatic catastrophes, microorganism resistance, and human and animal aging, leading to an evident unbalance in the planet’s health. Brazil contains the most significant portion of world biodiversity, a potential source of new antimicrobial natural products. Nonetheless, its environment, particularly its forests, and rainforests, is under threat, meaning that rapidly conducted, comprehensive research into the potential of antimicrobial activity to address this threat is urgently needed. Methods In this study, plants from the Amazon rainforest and the Atlantic forests were collected and tested against several pathogenic microbes relevant to humans, animals, and the environment, and subjected to large-scale susceptibility assays, bioautography, and Artemia salina toxicity assays. From the plants, 2,280 organic and aqueous extracts were obtained from different organs, namely leaves, barks, flowers, fruits, and seeds, and subjected to a large-scale susceptibility screening assay against Staphylococcus aureus , Staphylococcus epidermidis , Enterococcus faecalis , Streptococcus mutans , Streptococcus sanguinis , Escherichia coli , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Candida albicans , Malassezia pachydermatis , Malassezia furfur , and Listeria monocytogenes . Results and discussion The selected extracts were subjected to antimicrobial susceptibility tests to determine their inhibition zone diameters and minimum bactericidal concentrations, to bioautography, and to an Artemia salina toxicity assay, which resulted in 154 active extracts. Moreover, 111 out of 154 extracts were ranked based on scores established by the p -values and the mean rank differences in each set of test results. The final ranking identified which extracts should be studied in further phytochemical research using thin-layer chromatography techniques as a priority. The extracts obtained from plants belonging to Combretaceae, Connaraceae, Convolvulaceae, Fabaceae, Malpighiaceae, Moraceae, Piperaceae, Polygonaceae, and Salicaceae were selected as the most promising ones and used to support the identification of plant-based antimicrobial active compounds from the immense biodiversity of Brazilian forests.
更多
查看译文
关键词
amazon rainforest plant extracts,antimicrobial activity,biodiversity,brazilian
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要