| Literature DB >> 26091077 |
Anthony M Kyriakopoulos1, Biswanath Dinda2.
Abstract
The medicinal properties of Cornus mas L. (=Cornus mascula L.), Cornaceae, are well described in Hippocratian documents, and recent research provides experimental evidence for some of these properties. However, the chemical components of Cornus mas L. that may be of pharmaceutical importance are relatively unstable. In this respect a novel methodology for plant nutrient element extraction that provides favorable conditions for simultaneous stabilization of such fragile and unstable structures has been devised. Using this methodology, medicinal preparations derived from Cornus mas L. fresh fruits, proved to possess significant antimicrobial activity selective against S. aureus and P. aeruginosa. This effect became apparent with the addition of sodium bromide in the extraction procedure and varied with the ion availability during extraction. The identification of novel agents with potent antimicrobial activity against these species is of medical importance to overcome the problem of universal antibiotic resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Cornus mas (L.) fresh fruits; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Staphylococcus aureus; novel medicinal preparations; selective bactericidal effect
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26091077 PMCID: PMC6272430 DOI: 10.3390/molecules200611202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Antibacterial effects of Cornus mas L. extracts against (a) S. aureus; (b) P. aeruginosa. (c) C. albicans. Both A.A.L.E.P. and A.O.E.P. preparations exert bactericidal activity against S. aureus and P. aeruginosa whereas growth of C. albicans was not affected. * The effects were still evident after second inoculation on day 28 when the A.A.L.E.P. and A.O.E.P. test vials were inoculated again with same count of S. aureus (a) and P. aeruginosa (b) as day 1, to test the duration and strenth of the activity. Experiments were repeated three different times and figures were drawn from mean value results from all three experiments (for Standard Deviations see Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3).
Bactericidal activity of different Cornus mas L. extracts against S. aureus (ATCC6538).
| Tested Solution | Initial Inoculum cfu/mL | Day 7 Average a Value (SD b) | Day 14 Average Value (SD) | Day 21 | Day 28 | SecondInoculum cfu/mL c | Day 42 Average Value (SD) | Day 49 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A.A.L.E.P | 5 × 105 | 1.3 × 103 (2 × 102) | 1.8 × 102 (3 × 10) | <10 | <10 | 5 × 105 | 2.2 × 102 (40) | <10 |
| A.O.E.P | 5 × 105 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | 5 × 105 | <10 | <10 |
| Extract in PBS | 5 × 105 | >107 | NMC d | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Extract in ddH2O | 5 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Methanol Extracts | 5 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | -- |
| PBS/ddH2O | 5 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| 100 mM NaBr | 5 × 105 | 2 × 106 | >108 | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| 200 mM NaBr | 5 × 105 | 1.8 × 106 | >108 | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Extract in PBS & Extract in ddH2O + 3 g/L octanediol | 5 × 105 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | - | - | - |
a These are the mean average values of results obtained by three different experiments; b SD: Standard Deviation calculated by formula: ; c At day 28, to check the endurance of antimicrobial activity of A.A.L.E.P. & A.O.E.P. the experiment was continued by repeating the inoculation of S. aureus only for these preparations; d NMC: not measurable colonies, >108 cfu/mL.
Bactericidal activity of different Cornus mas L. extracts against P. aeruginosa.
| Tested Solution | Initial Inoculum cfu/mL | Day 7 Average a Value (SD b ) | Day 14 | Day 21 | Day 28 | SecondInoculumcfu/mL c | Day 42 | Day 49 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A.A.L.E.P | 2 × 105 | 1.3 × 102 (3× 10) | <10 | <10 | <10 | 2 × 105 | <10 | <10 |
| A.O.E.P | 2 × 105 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | 2 × 105 | <10 | <10 |
| Extract in PBS | 2 × 105 | >106 | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Extract in ddH2O | 2 × 105 | NMC d | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Methanol Extracts | 2 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| PBS/ddH2O | 2 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| 100 mMNaBr | 2 × 105 | 4 ×106 (2 × 106) | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| 200 mM NaBr | 2 × 105 | 2 × 105 (2 × 105) | NMC | NMC | NMC | - | - | - |
| Extract in PBS & Extract in ddH2O + 3 g/L octanediol | 2 × 105 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 | - | - | - |
a Mean average values of results obtained by three different experiments; b SD: Standard Deviation; c At day 28, to check the endurance of antimicrobial activity of A.A.L.E.P. and A.O.E.P. the experiment was continued by repeating the inoculation of P. aeruginosa only for these preparations.; d NMC: not measurable colonies: >108 cfu/mL.
Effect of Cornus mas L. extracts against Candida albicans (ATCC 10231).
| Tested Solution | Initial Inoculum cfu/mL | Day 7 Average Value a (SD b) | Day 14 Average Value (SD) | Day 21 Average Value (SD) | Day 28 Average Value (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A.A.L.E.P | 1.6 × 105 | 1.5 × 105 (4 × 104) | 1.5 × 106 (5 × 105) | 8.9 × 106 (9 × 105) | 8 × 108 (9 × 107) |
| A.O.E.P | 1.6 × 105 | 1.8 × 105 (6 × 104) | 2× 106 (8 × 105) | 2.2× 106 (8 × 105) | 2 × 108 (1.1 × 107) |
| Extract in PBS | 1.6 × 105 | 2 × 106 (1 × 105) | NMC c | NMC | NMC |
| Extract in ddH2O | 1.6 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC |
| Methanol Extracts | 1.6 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC |
| PBS/ddH2O | 1.6 × 105 | NMC | NMC | NMC | NMC |
| 100 mM and 200 mM NaBr | 1.6 × 105 | 2 × 106 (1 × 105) | NMC | NMC | NMC |
| Extract in PBS and Extract in ddH2O + 3 g/L octanediol | 1.6× 105 | <10 | <10 | <10 | <10 |
a These are the mean average values of results obtained by three different experiments; b SD: Standard Deviation; c NMC: not measurable colonies: >108 cfu/mL.
Figure 2Bactericidal effect on S. aureus and P. aeruginosa.
Scheme 1(a) Degradation of l-(+)-ascorbic acid to l-(−)-threonic acid, (b) Degradation of d-glycosides to d-glucose and (c) Salt formation of glycoside structures.
Scheme 2(a) Possible formation of stable anthrocyanide-bromide salts at an acidic pH and (b) of stable flavylium salts at a basic pH. Basic flavonoid structure via its cationic condition can form stable flavylium salts with bromide.