| Literature DB >> 28394295 |
Harish Chandra1, Parul Bishnoi2, Archana Yadav3, Babita Patni4, Abhay Prakash Mishra5, Anant Ram Nautiyal6.
Abstract
Indiscriminate and irrational use of antibiotics has created an unprecedented challenge for human civilization due to microbe's development of antimicrobial resistance. It is difficult to treat bacterial infection due to bacteria's ability to develop resistance against antimicrobial agents. Antimicrobial agents are categorized according to their mechanism of action, i.e., interference with cell wall synthesis, DNA and RNA synthesis, lysis of the bacterial membrane, inhibition of protein synthesis, inhibition of metabolic pathways, etc. Bacteria may become resistant by antibiotic inactivation, target modification, efflux pump and plasmidic efflux. Currently, the clinically available treatment is not effective against the antibiotic resistance developed by some bacterial species. However, plant-based antimicrobials have immense potential to combat bacterial, fungal, protozoal and viral diseases without any known side effects. Such plant metabolites include quinines, alkaloids, lectins, polypeptides, flavones, flavonoids, flavonols, coumarin, terpenoids, essential oils and tannins. The present review focuses on antibiotic resistance, the resistance mechanism in bacteria against antibiotics and the role of plant-active secondary metabolites against microorganisms, which might be useful as an alternative and effective strategy to break the resistance among microbes.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; antimicrobial; mechanism of action; plant metabolite
Year: 2017 PMID: 28394295 PMCID: PMC5489788 DOI: 10.3390/plants6020016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Various ways of resisting the action of antibiotics [8] (Reproduced with permission from IOS Press and D.I. Andersson).
Examples of certain plants and their antimicrobial components.
| S. No. | Name of Plants | Antimicrobials | Microbes treated | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Terpenoids, flavanoid, Saponins, Tannins | [ | ||
| 2. | Flavanoid, Polyphenol | MDR | [ | |
| 3. | Organosulphur compounds (Phenolic compounds), Allicin | [ | ||
| 4. | Coumarins | [ | ||
| 5. | Glycoprotein | [ | ||
| 6. | Cinnamaldehyde (essential oil) | [ | ||
| 7. | Flavones | [ | ||
| 8. | Curcuminoid (A phenolic compound), turmerone, curlone, Essential oil, curcumins, turmeric oil | [ | ||
| 9. | Essential oil | [ | ||
| 10. | Flavones | [ | ||
| 11. | Hypericin (anthraquinone) | Methicillin Resistant | [ | |
| 12. | Quinones | [ | ||
| 13. | Saponins, Canavanine | [ | ||
| 14. | Essential oil | MDR | [ | |
| 15. | Essential oil | MDR | [ | |
| 16. | AMPs (antimicrobial peptides) | [ | ||
| 17. | Essential oil | [ | ||
| 18. | Piperine, Saponin, alkaloid | [ | ||
| 19. | RsAFP2 (Antifungal peptide) | [ | ||
| 20. | Alkaloids and Non alkaloids | [ | ||
| 21. | Essential oil | [ | ||
| 22. | Alkaloids, antimicrobial peptides | [ | ||
| 23. | Tannins | [ | ||
| 24. | Alkaloids | [ | ||
| 25. | Essential oil, Eugenol | [ | ||
| 26. | Vetivone (vetiver oil) | [ | ||
| 27. | Flavones | [ | ||
| 28. | Gingerol | [ |
MDR-Multidrug Resistance, ESBL-Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamase, VRE-Vancomycin Resistant Enterococci.