| Literature DB >> 23449869 |
Sandeep B Rajput1, S Mohan Karuppayil.
Abstract
The aim of this work was to evaluate the anti-Candida efficacy of twenty five molecules of plant origin. Based on their MICs, effective molecules were categorized into four categories. Susceptibility testing of test compounds was carried out by standard methodology (M27-A2) as per CLSI guidelines. Minimum Fungicidal Concentration (MFC) was determined as the lowest concentration of drug killing 99.9% cells. Effect on sterol profile was evaluated by sterol quantitation method. Among the screened molecules, cinnamaldehyde, piperidine, citral, furfuraldehyde and indole were potent inhibitors of growth and viability. Exposure of Candida cells to cinnamaldehyde, piperidine, citral, furfuraldehyde, indole, α- and β- pinene at MIC's, altered ergosterol profile. Our results indicate that the molecules altering sterol profile may exert their antifungal effect through inhibition of ergosterol biosynthesis and could be good candidates for fungal specific drug development.Entities:
Keywords: Antifungals; Candida albicans; Ergosterol biosynthesis; Small molecules
Year: 2013 PMID: 23449869 PMCID: PMC3579468 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Effect of various molecules on growth, viability and ergosterol biosynthesis in C. albicans
| Group | Molecules | MIC (mg/ml) | MFC (mg/ml) | % decrease in ergosterol content of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Most effective (0.0625-0.5 mg/ml) | cinnamaldehyde | 0.0625 | 0.25 | 58 (± 0.502) |
| piperidine | 0.25 | 1 | 60 (± 0.123) | |
| indole | 0.5 | 1 | 55 (± 0.652) | |
| furfuraldehyde | 0.5 | 1 | 96 (± 0.926) | |
| citral | 0.5 | 1 | 99 (± 0.865) | |
| Moderately effective (1–2 mg/ml) | beta-Pinene | 1 | 1 | 90 (± 0.325) |
| salicylic acid | 1 | NA | NE | |
| guaiacol | 2 | 2 | NE | |
| cymene | 2 | 8 | NE | |
| Less effective (4–8 mg/ml) | caffeine | 4 | NA | NE |
| camphene | 4 | 4 | NE | |
| citronellol | 4 | 8 | NE | |
| geraniol | 4 | NA | NE | |
| geranyl acetate | 4 | NA | NE | |
| alpha-Pinene | 8 | NA | 40 | |
| carvone | 8 | NA | NE | |
| linalool | 8 | NA | NE | |
| thujone | 8 | NA | NE | |
| Non effective | bisabolol | NA | NA | NE |
| jasmonate | NA | NA | NE | |
| isopulegol | NA | NA | NE | |
| limonene | NA | NA | NE | |
| 1,4-cineole | NA | NA | NE | |
| 1,8-cineole | NA | NA | NE | |
| menthol | NA | NA | NE |
(NA: MIC not achieved at highest conc. tested i.e. 8 mg/ml; NE: Not effective; values in parenthesis in last column represent the mean ±SD of three experiments).
Figure 1Effect of ‘most effective’ molecules on growth ofATCC 90028.
Figure 2Effect of ‘moderately effective’ molecules on growth ofATCC 90028.
Figure 3Effect of ‘less effective’ molecules on growth ofATCC 90028.
Figure 4UV spectrophotometric sterol profiles ofwere grown for 16 h in Sabouraud dextrose broth containing 0.5 (curve b), 0.25 (curve c), 0.125 (curve d), 0.0625 (curve e), 0.0313 (curve f) mg/ml of Furfuraldehyde (a); 0.5 (curve b), 0.25 (curve c), 0.125 (curve d), 0.0625 (curve e), mg/ml of Citral (b) and 0 mg/ml of drug (curve a), sterols were extracted from cells, and spectral profiles between 240 and 300 nm were determined.