| Literature DB >> 28621716 |
Qing Liu1, Xiao Meng2, Ya Li3, Cai-Ning Zhao4, Guo-Yi Tang5, Hua-Bin Li6,7.
Abstract
Infectious diseases caused by pathogens and food poisoning caused by spoilage microorganisms are threatening human health all over the world. The efficacies of some antimicrobial agents, which are currently used to extend shelf-life and increase the safety of food products in food industry and to inhibit disease-causing microorganisms in medicine, have been weakened by microbial resistance. Therefore, new antimicrobial agents that could overcome this resistance need to be discovered. Many spices-such as clove, oregano, thyme, cinnamon, and cumin-possessed significant antibacterial and antifungal activities against food spoilage bacteria like Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas fluorescens, pathogens like Staphylococcus aureus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus, harmful fungi like Aspergillus flavus, even antibiotic resistant microorganisms such as methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Therefore, spices have a great potential to be developed as new and safe antimicrobial agents. This review summarizes scientific studies on the antibacterial and antifungal activities of several spices and their derivatives.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial activity; antifungal effect; antimicrobial property; clove; essential oil; oregano; spice; thyme
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28621716 PMCID: PMC5486105 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18061283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of clove.
| Type of Samples | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clove and cinnamon water extracts | Both in vivo and in vitro results confirmed the efficacy of clove extract as natural antimicrobials. | [ | |
| Ultra-fine powders of ball-milled clove | Clove powder showed a strong inhibitory effect with the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) ranging from 1.0% to 2.0% | [ | |
| Cardamom, cinnamon, clove essential oils (EOs) and phenol | 13 bacterial strains, 7 molds and 2 yeasts | Clove EO possessed the highest antimicrobial activities. | [ |
| 4 spice EOs | Clove EO possessed the strongest activities against all | [ | |
| 4 spice EOs | Clove EO showed the most effective inhibition with the MICs ranging from 1.25% to 2.50% | [ | |
| 9 spice EOs | Clove EO was the most effective with MIC of 0.13% | [ | |
| Ethanol extracts from 5 spices and herbs | Clove extract was the most effective against bacteria tested. | [ | |
| 13 plant ethanol extracts | Clove extract was the most effective with the MIC of 0.24 mg/mL. | [ | |
| 90 plant extracts | Clove water extract was the most effective among all the water extracts with the MIC ranging from 0.1% to 0.2%. | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate, acetone and methanol extracts of 12 plant species | Clove possessed the most effective inhibitory effects. | [ | |
| 7 spices, their extracts and EOs | Microorganisms in apple cider | Clove products had the strongest antimicrobial activities compared with other spices tested. | [ |
| Many spice and herb powders | 2% level of clove powder was more effective against | [ | |
| EOs and functional extracts of cumin and clove. | The films of low molecular weight chitosan with a concentration of 2% of EO of clove and clove ethyl heptanoate extract had antimicrobial activities against most strains tested. | [ | |
| EOs and functional extracts of cumin, clove, and elecampane | Chitosan films added with clove EO showed the best inhibitory effects with the MICs of 500 mg/L. | [ | |
| 3 spice EOs | Clove EO was the most effective against microorganisms tested. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of oregano.
| Type of Study | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oregano extract | Oregano extract had antibacterial effects on | [ | |
| EO-rich fractions of oregano | All of the supercritical fluid extraction fractions showed antimicrobial activities against all tested microorganisms. | [ | |
| Oregano EO | Heating treatment showed no significant effects on the antimicrobial activities of EO. | [ | |
| 4 spice decoctions | The 10% level of oregano decoction was 100% inhibitive to mycelial growth in the culture medium. | [ | |
| 4 plant aqueous extracts | Oregano extract had the highest antibacterial activities against all tested bacteria. | [ | |
| Oregano and marjoram EOs | All the isolates tested were sensitive to EO of oregano. | [ | |
| 3 spice EOs | 13 bacterial strains and 6 fungi | Oregano EO showed the most effective antibacterial activities. | [ |
| 6 spice EOs | Oregano EO was the most effective. | [ | |
| 8 spice EOs | Oregano EO was the most effective against | [ | |
| Oregano and | The MICs of oregano EO ranged from 0.5 to 1100 μg/mL for all tested | [ | |
| 7 spice EOs and the majority constituents | 33 | Oregano and thyme EOs possessed the equal and strongest antimicrobial activities among EOs. | [ |
| 4 spice EOs | Oregano presented antimicrobial activities against all tested bacteria. | [ | |
| Various spice EOs | Microorganisms in fresh leaf lettuce and radish sprouts. | Oregano-2 (in the USA) oil was the most effective at maintaining the reduced levels of total mesophilic microorganisms. | [ |
| Pure EOs of 4 spices and chitosan-EOs films | Both oregano EO alone and incorporated in the films possessed the best antimicrobial activities. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of thyme.
| Type of Samples | Tested Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thyme EO | MICs ranged from 75 to 1100 μg/mL for bacteria, and from 80 to 97 μg/mL for fungi. | [ | |
| Thyme EOs of 4 ontogenetic stages | All the thyme EOs had significant antibacterial activities against the microorganisms tested. | [ | |
| 4 | Thyme EO was the most efficient on all the tested bacteria and yeast both in original and half-diluted concentrations. | [ | |
| 5 spice hydrosols | Thyme hydrosol was more effective than sage, peppermint, and black pepper. | [ | |
| 6 plant hydrosols | 15% hydrosol concentration of thyme completely inhibited | [ | |
| 5 plant EOs | Thyme EO showed the highest antimicrobial activities with MICs ranging from 0.05% to 0.8% | [ | |
| 5 aromatic plant EOs | 13 | The MICs of thyme EO ranged from 0.078 to 0.31 mg/mL, and MBCs ranged from 0.31 to 1.25 mg/mL. | [ |
| 5 spice EOs | Only the thyme EO showed inhibition effects on all tested bacteria at all added doses. | [ | |
| 4 spice EOs | MICs of thyme EO ranged from 0.312 to 1.25 μL/mL. | [ | |
| Various EOs | 18 pathogens and 15 spoilage bacteria | Thyme EO showed the strongest antibacterial activities against spoilage bacteria. | [ |
| 17 spices and herbs | MICs of thyme ranged from 0.5% to 1% ( | [ | |
| Thyme infusion, decoction and hydroalcoholic extracts | Decoction presented the most pronounced effects. | [ | |
| Thyme EO, hydrosol and propolis extracts | Natural mycobiota on the surface of sucuk | Thyme EO and propolis extract provided reductions of 2.45 and 2.05 log CFU/g in yeast-mold counts respectively. | [ |
| Polyphenolic fractions and oil fractions from 4 spice oilseeds | 35 bacterial strains | Thyme oil fraction had the highest antibacterial activities comparing with other spices oilseeds. | [ |
| Thymol, nisin, carvacrol, cymene | Thymol completely inhibited the yeast growth at concentrations over 1 mmol/L for at least 21 days at 25 °C. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of cinnamon.
| Type of Samples | Tested Bacteria and Fungi | Mian Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cinnamon extract and oil | 7 Gram-positive bacteria, 3 Gram-negative bacteria, and 7 fungi | Cinnamon oil was more effective than cinnamon extract with MICs ranging from 1.25% to 5% | [ |
| Cinnamon, sodium benzoate, potassium sorbate | [ | ||
| Cinnamon oil and liposome-encapsulated cinnamon oil | Methicillin resistant | Cinnamon oil possessed effective antibacterial activity and prominent anti-biofilm activity against MRSA. | [ |
| 4 spice aqueous extracts | 0.05 g/mL of cinnamon extract completely inhibited | [ | |
| 5 plant aqueous extracts | Cinnamon aqueous extract inhibited all the tested microorganisms at the concentration of 1%. | [ | |
| 6 spice hydrosols | The percent inhibition ranged from 10% to 33.8% at 5% hydrosol of cinnamon. | [ | |
| 6 spice diethyl ether extracts | Cinnamon possessed inhibitory activities against all the tested microorganisms. | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate, acetone, and methanol extracts from 12 plants | The methanol extract of cinnamon showed antibacterial activities against all the microorganisms tested. | [ | |
| 7 Indian spice ethanol extracts | 215 enterococcal strains | Crude ethanol extract of cinnamon was the most effective against all the clinical isolates. | [ |
| 8 spice EOs | Cinnamon EO possessed the strongest inhibition effects with the MICs ranging from 0.015 to 2.0 mg/mL. | [ | |
| 10 spice EOs | Cinnamon EO was efficient in inhibiting all tested bacterial strains. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of cumin.
| Type of Study | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cumin EO | [ | ||
| Cumin seeds EO | 1230 fungal isolates obtained from food samples | The EO was fungicidal against most of the fungal species at MIC of 0.6 μL/mL. | [ |
| Cumin seeds EOs | Both microwave and conventionally (oven) roasted cumin oils showed higher effects than raw oils. | [ | |
| Cumin EO | ã-Irradiation to cumin seeds at 10 and 25 kGy had no significant effects on the antibacterial effects. | [ | |
| Aqueous infusions and aqueous decoctions from kalonji, cumin and poppy seed | 188 bacterial isolates isolated from oral cavity of apparently healthy individuals | Aqueous decoction of cumin inhibited 73% of the tested bacteria. | [ |
| Cumin and | Cumin EO showed antibacterial activities against all tested bacteria except | [ | |
| 9 spice EOs | Cumin EO was effective against all bacterial species and two fungi ( | [ | |
| 4 spice EOs | Cumin EO was effective against | [ | |
| 6 spice EOs | Cumin EO was the second effective among tested spices. | [ | |
| 5 spice EOs | Cumin inhibited all tested bacteria and fungi and showed synergistic and antagonistic effect with antibiotics. | [ | |
| EOs of 9 spices in combination | Coriander/cumin seed oil combination showed synergistic interactions on antibacterial activities. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of rosemary.
| Type of Study | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rosemary EO | Rosemary EO showed higher effects against bacteria tested than yeasts. | [ | |
| Rosemary and sage EOs | The EO of rosemary showed significant antifungal activities and antibacterial activities. | [ | |
| 7 spice and herb extracts | The hexane extract of rosemary exhibited significantly higher antibacterial activities than ethanol and water extracts. | [ | |
| 5 plant ethanol extracts | Rosemary extract was the most effective against all the tested microorganisms. | [ | |
| 14 spice ethanol extracts and their mixture | The mixture of rosemary and liquorice extracts was the most effective against all tested bacteria. | [ | |
| 5 spice aqueous extracts | 8 Gram-positive bacteria and 12 Gram-negative bacteria | MICs ranged from 0.125 to 0.5 mg/mL for Gram-positive bacteria and 0.25–0.5 mg/mL for Gram-negative bacteria. | [ |
| 2 spice and herb extract combinations | Both combination of galangal, rosemary, and lemon and combination of galangal and rosemary significantly reduced levels of aerobic bacteria and lactic acid bacteria. | [ | |
| Rosemary, mint and a mixture of tocopherols | Microorganisms from the sausages | The addition of rosemary resulted in significant inhibition of microbial growth and showed possible synergistic effects with mint. | [ |
| 5 spice EOs | Rosemary EO showed synergic effects with cephalothin. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of garlic.
| Type of Study | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh garlic, garlic powder, garlic oil | Microorganisms in raw chicken sausage | The order of antimicrobial activities were fresh garlic > garlic powder > garlic oil > butylated hydroxyanisole. | [ |
| Garlic powder | Fresh garlic produced the greatest inhibition followed by freeze-dried powder. | [ | |
| Chopped garlic | Microorganisms in ground beef and raw meatball | Chopped garlic had slowing-down effects on microbiological growth. | [ |
| 5 spice extracts | 20 serogroups of | Garlic extract exhibited significant activities against microorganisms except | [ |
| 3 ethanol extracts | Garlic extract exerted superior antibacterial activities at all concentrations | [ | |
| 6 spice crude ethanol, hexane and acetone extracts | Garlic was the most effective against all the tested pathogens except | [ | |
| 7 spice crude extracts | Cold water extract of garlic exhibited good antifungal activities against all three tested fungi. | [ | |
| Garlic aqueous extract | The first and second week samples were significantly decreased by all the 1, 2, and 3-mL garlic extracts. | [ | |
| 5 spice hydrosols | Garlic hydrosols demonstrated stronger antibacterial activities than other spices hydrosols. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of ginger.
| Type of Sample | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 spice extracts and EOs | 5 strains of | Commercial EOs of ginger inhibited all | [ |
| Ginger EO and oleoresin | EO and oleoresin of ginger were 100% antifungal against | [ | |
| Ginger ethanol and | Only [10]-gingerol and [12]-gingerol effectively inhibited the growth of tested bacteria at a MIC range of 6–30 µg/mL. | [ | |
| Ginger oil extracted by hydrodistillation and solvent extraction method | Extracts obtained by both extraction methods inhibited listed microorganisms. | [ | |
| Ginger and mustard EOs | Ginger and mustard EOs inhibited the growth of | [ | |
| 5 spice extracts | 20 serogroups of | Ginger extract possessed inhibitory effects on two serogroups of | [ |
| 4 spice water extracts | Ginger extract significantly inhibited the mycelial growth of tested microorganisms. | [ | |
| 7 spice crude extracts | In the case of the hot water extracts, garlic and ginger showed the best antifungal activities. | [ | |
| 7 spice ethanol extracts | 215 enterococcal strains isolated from clinical samples | Ginger was found to have antibacterial activities against all the isolates. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of basil.
| Type of Samples | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| EO from aerial parts of basil | All the tested microorganisms were sensitive to EOs of basil. | [ | |
| Chloroform, acetone and methanol extracts of basil | The methanol extract inhibited | [ | |
| Basil extracts | At the concentration of 1.50% | [ | |
| EOs from 12 cumin cultivars | MICs of basil EOs ranged from 0.009 to 23.48 μg/mL for bacteria and 0.08–5.00 μg/mL for fungi. | [ | |
| 7 spice EOs | Basil EO completely inhibited | [ | |
| 8 spice EOs | Histamine-producing bacteria including | Basil EO inhibited | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of fennel.
| Type of Sample | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fennel seeds EO | MICs: 80 ppm | [ | |
| Fennel seeds EO | EO of fennel seeds inhibited several foodborne pathogens with lowest MIC of 0.125 mg/mL. | [ | |
| Fennel crude extract | Fennel crude extract had antimicrobial activities against all nine microorganisms, especially fungi. | [ | |
| Fennel EO and acetone extract | Fennel EO showed complete zone inhibition against several strains at 6 μL dose. | [ | |
| Cumin and fennel EOs | The MICs of fennel EO was 0.031% | [ | |
| 8 spice methanol and ethanol extracts | Fennel seeds extracts showed the largest zones of inhibitions in six out of the seven bacteria. | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of coriander.
| Type of Sample | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coriander EO and linalool | MICs ranged between 0.5 and 1 mL/mL. | [ | |
| Coriander EO | MICs and MBCs ranged between 1 and 4 μL/mL. | [ | |
| Coriander EO and 6 antibacterial drugs | Coriander EO showed synergistic action with chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, and tetracycline. | [ | |
| Coriander leaves EO | MICs ranged from 15.6 to 31.2 µg/mL, and MFCs ranged from 31.2 to 62.5 µg/mL. | [ | |
| Coriander EO | 12 bacterial strians | MICs of coriander against all tsted bacteria ranged from 0.1% to 1.6%, | [ |
| EOs of 6 coriander accessions | Coriander EOs could inhibit | [ | |
| Coriander EO and oleoresin | Both EO and oleoresin of coriander were effective against tested fungi. | [ | |
| Coriander ethanol and aqueous-ethanol extracts | The ethanol extract showed clear difference and more potent against tested microorganisms in comparison with the aqueous-ethanol extract. | [ | |
| Coriander EO | - | Microwave and conventionally roasted oils exhibit similar antimicrobial effects but were higher effect than raw oils. | [ |
| 4 spice EOs | Microorganisms isolated from clinical specimens of patients | Coriander oil was active only against | [ |
| Lemon EO, coriander extract and cinnamon extract | Coriander extract had the best antifungal activities in the vapor phase | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of galangal.
| Type of Sample | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 spice and herb extracts | Galangal hexane and ethanol extracts had strong antimicrobial activities against | [ | |
| Combination of extracts from galangal, rosemary and lemon iron bark | Galangal showed synergistic activities against tested microorganisms with rosemary and lemon iron bark. | [ | |
| Galangal methanol, acetone and diethyl ether extracts | The activities of methanol extract at pH 5.5 were excellent with MICs ranging from 0.04 to 1.28 mg/mL. | [ | |
| 4 | 6 strains of bacteria and 4 strains of fungi | Galangal flower possessed the highest activity against | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of black pepper
| Type of Samples | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black pepper EO and acetone extract | The EO was effective against | [ | |
| 4 spice EOs and acetone extracts | Black pepper extracts showed complete reduction of colonies against tested bacterial strains at 5 and 10 μL levels. | [ | |
| Various solvent extracts, piperine and piperic acid from pepper | The ethanol extract was the most effective with the MICs ranging from 156.25 to 1250 μg/mL. | [ |
Antimicrobial activities of spices against several common microorganisms.
| Bacteria and Fungi | Spices | Type of Samples | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clove | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Acetone extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate extract | [ | ||
| Ethyl heptanoate extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Oregano | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| EO-rich fractions | [ | ||
| Thyme | Decoction | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydroalcoholic extract | [ | ||
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Infusion | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | [ | ||
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate extract | [ | ||
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Garlic | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Ginger | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Basil | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Chloroform extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Fennel | Crude extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Clove | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Ethyl heptanoate extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Oregano | EO | [ | |
| EO-rich fractions | [ | ||
| Thyme | Decoction | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydroalcoholic extract | [ | ||
| Infusion | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | [ | ||
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate extract | [ | ||
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | EO | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Garlic | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Acetone extract | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Basil | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Chloroform extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Methanol | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Clove | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethyl heptanoate extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Oregano | EO | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Cinnamon | EO | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Garlic | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Ginger | EO | [ | |
| Basil | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Chloroform | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Clove | EO | [ | |
| Ethyl heptanoate extract | [ | ||
| Powder | [ | ||
| Oregano | Extract | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Garlic | Powder | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | EO | [ | |
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Hexane extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Clove | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Oregano | EO-rich fractions | [ | |
| Thyme | Decoction | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydroalcoholic extract | [ | ||
| Infusion | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Diethyl ether extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | EO | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Ginger | EO | [ | |
| Basil | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Chloroform | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Fennel | EO | [ | |
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Oregano | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| EO-rich fractions | [ | ||
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Hydrosol | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | EO | [ | |
| Garlic | Hydrosol | [ | |
| Ginger | EO | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | EO | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Clove | EO | [ | |
| Ethyl heptanoate extract | [ | ||
| Oregano | EO | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Cinnamon | EO | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Garlic | Powder | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Diethyl ether extract | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | EO | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Cinnamon | Diethyl ether extract | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Clove | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Garlic | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Galangal | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Thyme | Decoction | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydroalcoholic extract | [ | ||
| Infusion | [ | ||
| Garlic | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Fennel | Crude extract | [ | |
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Clove | Powder | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Cinnamon | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Clove | EO | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Clove | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cumin | Decoctions | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Infusions | [ | ||
| Thyme | Hydrosol | [ | |
| Garlic | Hydrosol | [ | |
| Ginger | EO | [ | |
| Cinnamon | Diethyl ether extract | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Galangal | Methanol extract | [ | |
| Clove | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cinnamon | Acetone extract | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Garlic | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Thyme | Decoction | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Hydroalcoholic extract | [ | ||
| Infusion | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Clove | EO | [ | |
| Oregano | EO | [ | |
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Cinnamon | Hydrosol | [ | |
| Diethyl ether extract | [ | ||
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Rosemary | EO | [ | |
| Garlic | Ethanol extract | [ | |
| Coriander | Aqueous-ethanol extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Oregano | EO-rich fraction | [ | |
| Cinnamon | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ | |
| Ginger | Aqueous extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Oleoresin | [ | ||
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Coriander | EO | [ | |
| Galangal | Methanol extract | [ | |
| Basil | EO | [ | |
| Fennel | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| oregano | Decoction | [ | |
| ginger | EO | [ | |
| basil | Extract | [ | |
| coriander | EO | [ | |
| Oleoresin | [ | ||
| Fennel | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Coriander | EO | [ | |
| Oleoresin | [ | ||
| Black pepper | Acetone extract | [ | |
| EO | [ | ||
| Thyme | EO | [ | |
| Cumin | EO | [ |
Antibacterial and antifungal activities of other spices.
| Spices | Type of Samples | Bacteria and Fungi | Main Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol extract | [ | |||
| Ethanol extract | The antibacterial activities of | [ | ||
| Seeds, pods, leaves and rhizomes extract | [ | |||
| Hydromethanol extract | MRSA, | [ | ||
| Extracts of bulbs, leaves, flowers and seeds by 3 extraction methods | [ | |||
| Pressurized-liquid extract | [ | |||
| EO | Different foodborne pathogens | [ | ||
| EO and acetone extract | EO and extract showed different but both effective activities against tested microorganisms. | [ | ||
| diethyl-ether extract | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Water extract | [ | |||
| Volatile compounds | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Ethanol extract | [ | |||
| Microwave assisted solvent extracts showed significant activities and | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Methanol crude extract | MIC and MBC for | [ | ||
| Ultra-fine powder | [ | |||
| Leaves EO | The MFCs of EO against all the tested fungi were 230 μg/mL. | [ | ||
| Bark and leaf extracts and EO | Bacteria isolated from urine samples, and | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Ethanol extract | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Leaves EO | The extract of | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| Polyphenolic compounds | [ | |||
| Curcumin | Antibacterial activity of curcumin against | [ | ||
| EO from aerial parts | 15 bacterial species including | The oil of | [ | |
| Methanol extract | [ | |||
| Methanol extract | The extract of | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | 4 strains of Gram-positive bacteria and 12 strains of Gram-negative bacteria | [ | ||
| EO and various oleoresins | The EO showed strong effects against bacteria tested at 3000 ppm, and the methanol and ethanol oleoresins gave the best results against | [ | ||
| Hydrodistillated extract | [ | |||
| EO | The leaf oil of | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| Aqueous extract | The MICs and MBCs against all tested bacteria ranged from 1 to 4 g/L and 2 to 8 g/L, respectively. | [ | ||
| EO | 100% fungistatic effects were observed with 40 ppm doses of | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | |||
| Methanol extract and fractions in different solvent systems | The | [ | ||
| Methanol extracts | 13 bacteria and 2 yeasts | All the extracts showed significant antimicrobial activities against all tested microorganisms. | [ | |
| Methanol extracts | The methanol extracts had antibacterial activities against the first six microorganisms listed. | [ | ||
| horseradish | Aqueous extract | Horseradish water extract showed a higher biological activity. | [ | |
| EO | All tested EO and deodorized extracts showed activities with the MICs ranging from 4 to 16 mg/mL. | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | The fruit extract had significant antimicrobial effects on pathogen bacteria. | [ | ||
| Ethanol extract | 4 Gram-positive bacteria and 12 Gram-negative bacteria | [ | ||
| EO and leaves ethanol, water and hot water extract | [ | |||
| Aqueous, ethanol, ethyl acetate and hexane extracts | Only aqueous extract of | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| Acetone extract | [ | |||
| EO | The EO was effective against 75% of the microorganisms analyzed especially | [ | ||
| Acetone and aqueous extracts | The aqueous and acetone extracts were active against the bacterial strains, and the acetone extract exhibited the antifungal activities higher than even the reference drugs. | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | The MIC and MBC of | [ | ||
| Ethanol, ethyl acetate and aqueous extracts | [ | |||
| EO | For effective concentration of | [ | ||
| hexane, chloroform, ethyl acetate, and aqueous fractions of ethanol extract | [ | |||
| Water extract | [ | |||
| - | 20 different serogroups of | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate and ethanol extracts of flesh, mace and seed | Flesh ethyl acetate extract had the highest effects against tested bacteria with mean MICs ranging from 0.625 to 1.25 mg/mL among all tested extracts. | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| Methanol, ethyl acetate, acetone extracts | The most effective extract was the methanol extract from | [ | ||
| EO | A complete antifungal activity was observed at 1000 ppm of | [ | ||
| EO | The EO was active against | [ | ||
| Aqueous extracts | [ | |||
| n-hexan extract | 24 pathogenic, spoilage and lactic acid bacteria | [ | ||
| EO | MICs of | [ | ||
| EO | The EO exhibited antifungal activities against fungal isolates from some spices and showed better efficacy as fungi toxicant than prevalent fungicide Wettasul-80. | [ | ||
| EO | MIC: 0.3 μL/mL. | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| Methanol extract | [ | |||
| Water extract | [ | |||
| EO | Whey protein based edible films incorporated with | [ | ||
| Methanol and aqueous extracts | [ | |||
| Methanol extract | [ | |||
| Alcoholic and hexane extracts | Alcoholic and hexane extracts of | [ | ||
| EO of fruit | The most sensitive fungus for | [ | ||
| EO | 16 microorganisms | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| powder | [ | |||
| Methanol, ethanol, ethyl acetate extracts and EO | [ | |||
| Acetone, methanol and ethanol extracts | The MICs of all extracts ranged from 64 to 512 g/mL for all bacterial strains tested. | [ | ||
| 80% ( | The MICs of | [ | ||
| Water extract | [ | |||
| EO | 13 bacterial strains and 6 fungi | Sage EO was more effective against | [ | |
| 80% ethanol extract | Sage extract showed the best antibacterial activities compared with four other plants, especially against Gram-positive bacteria and | [ | ||
| EO | Microwave-EO of | [ | ||
| Methanol extract | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | MICs of | [ | ||
| EO | 30 pathogenic microorganisms | [ | ||
| EO | 37 | Both | [ | |
| EOs | The EOs exhibited fungicidal activities against | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate, chloroform, methanol, ethanol and acetone extract | [ | |||
| Summer savory | - | 0.5% summer savory extract showed 100% inhibition till the seventh day of incubation. | [ | |
| Water extract | [ | |||
| Decoction | [ | |||
| EO | MICs ranged from 0.32 to 20 mg/mL. | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | 13 bacteria and 2 yeasts | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | [ | |||
| EO | 8 mg/disc EO of | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| - | [ | |||
| Polymeric procyanidin | A polymeric proanthocyanidin purified from the fruit of | [ | ||
| EO | [ | |||
| 80% ( | The MICs of | [ |