| Literature DB >> 30679585 |
Fei Huang1,2,3, Jie Kong1,2,3, Jian Ju1,2,3, Ying Zhang1,2,3, Yahui Guo1,2,3, Yuliang Cheng1,2,3, He Qian1,2,3, Yunfei Xie4,5,6, Weirong Yao1,2,3.
Abstract
The antifungal mechanism of essential oils against fungi remains in the shallow study. In this paper, antifungal mechanism of trans-cinnamaldehyde against Penicillium italicum was explored. Trans-cinnamaldehyde exhibited strong mycelial growth inhibition against Penicillium italicum, with minimum inhibitory concentration of 0.313 μg/mL. Conventional analytical tests showed that trans-cinnamaldehyde changed the cell membrane permeability, which led to the leakage of some materials. Meanwhile, the membrane integrity and cell wall integrity also changed. Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, an ultrasensitive and fingerprint method, was served as a bran-new method to study the antifungal mechanism. Characteristic peaks of supernatant obviously changed at 734, 1244, 1330, 1338 and 1466 cm-1. The Raman intensity represented a strong correlation with results from conventional methods, which made SERS an alternative to study antifungal process. All evidences implied that trans-cinnamaldehyde exerts its antifungal capacity against Penicillium italicum via membrane damage mechanism.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30679585 PMCID: PMC6345780 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-36989-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Minimum inhibitory concentration of various essential oils against P. italicum.
| Name of essential oils | Minimum inhibitory concentration |
|---|---|
| Salicylic acid | 2.590 mg/mL |
| Cinnamic acid | 0.400 mg/mL |
| Thymol | 15.938 mg/mL |
| Carvacrol | 0.625 μg/mL |
| Eugenol | 2.500 μg/mL |
| Carvone | 0.750 μg/mL |
| Trans-Cinnamaldehyde | 0.313 μg/mL |
| Citral | 1.250 μg/mL |
| Geraniol | 3.750 μg/mL |
| Hexanal | 10.000 μg/mL |
Figure 1Mycelial growth inhibition of P. italicum under different concetration of trans-cinnamaldehyde.
Figure 2Optical microscope images of P. italicum spores after 6 h treatment with 2 MIC trans-cinnamaldehyde.
Figure 3Tendency chart of some index. (a) plasma membrane integrity of P. italicum spores. (b) OD260 value of constituents absorbing at 260 nm. (c) Soluble protein leakage. (d) Potassium ions efflux.
Figure 4Level of ROS accumulating in mycelium after treating with different concetration of trans-cinnamaldehyde.
Figure 5SEM images of mycelium treated under different concentrations. (a) control group. (b) 0.5 MIC treated group. (c) 1 MCI treated group. (d) 2 MIC treated group.
Figure 6SERS spectra and extracted dataset. (a) SERS spectra of extracellular material after treatment with 2 MIC trans-cannamaldehyde. (b) Trend of peak intensity at different Raman shift. (c) Magnified curve of Raman intensity at 1244 cm−1 and 1466 cm−1.
Figure 7Correlation between Raman intensity and index from previous study. (a) The correlation curve between Raman intensity at 734 cm−1 and OD260 value after 2 h treatment of 2 MIC trans-cinnamaldehyde. (b) The correlation curve between Raman intensity at 1244 cm−1 and soluble protein leakage after 2 h treatment of 2 MIC trans-cinnamaldehyde.