| Literature DB >> 34065939 |
Nelly Rivera-Yañez1,2, C Rebeca Rivera-Yañez3, Glustein Pozo-Molina1,4, Claudia F Méndez-Catalá2,4, Julia Reyes-Reali1,5, María I Mendoza-Ramos1,5, Adolfo R Méndez-Cruz1,5, Oscar Nieto-Yañez1.
Abstract
Infectious diseases are a significant problem affecting the public health and economic stability of societies all over the world. Treatment is available for most of these diseases; however, many pathogens have developed resistance to drugs, necessitating the development of new therapies with chemical agents, which can have serious side effects and high toxicity. In addition, the severity and aggressiveness of emerging and re-emerging diseases, such as pandemics caused by viral agents, have led to the priority of investigating new therapies to complement the treatment of different infectious diseases. Alternative and complementary medicine is widely used throughout the world due to its low cost and easy access and has been shown to provide a wide repertoire of options for the treatment of various conditions. In this work, we address the relevance of the effects of propolis on the causal pathogens of the main infectious diseases with medical relevance; the existing compiled information shows that propolis has effects on Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, fungi, protozoan parasites and helminths, and viruses; however, challenges remain, such as the assessment of their effects in clinical studies for adequate and safe use.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial; antifungal; antiparasitic; antiviral; bioactive compounds; propolis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065939 PMCID: PMC8151468 DOI: 10.3390/biology10050428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Effect of propolis from several parts of the world on various Staphylococcus species.
| Propolis Origin | Bacterial Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (red, green, and brown propolis from different regions) |
| Red extracts showed highest activity compared with green and brown extracts (MIC: 25–200 μg/mL both propolis) | [ |
| Poland | Twelve MSSA and MRSA clinical isolates | Displayed variable effectiveness against twelve clinical isolates (MBC: 0.78–3.13 mg/mL) | [ |
| Germany, Ireland, and Czech Republic | The three propolis showed moderate antibacterial activity (MIC: 0.08–2.5 mg/mL) | [ | |
| Italy | Propolis (MIC: 0.31–2.5 mg/mL) showed inhibitory action on the lipase activity of 18 | [ | |
| Serbia (53 samples from different regions; blue and orange propolis) |
| All propolis samples showed antibacterial activity, with orange-type (0.1–14.7 mg/mL) showing higher activity than blue-type propolis samples (1.8–12.9 mg/mL) | [ |
MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration; MBC: minimum bactericidal concentration.
Antibacterial effect of diverse propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis/ | Bacterial Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (red, green, and brown propolis from diverse regions) |
| Ferulic acid, gallic acid, caffeic acid, coumaric acid, | All propolis showed distinct antibacterial activities (200–1600 µg/mL) | [ |
| Poland (25 different samples) | Flavonols, flavones, flavanones, pinocembrin, chrysin, pinobanksin, apigenin, kaempferol, | All propolis (1–8 mg/mL) showed distinct antibacterial effect on | [ | |
| Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin (South African propolis) |
| Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin | The combinations of these three flavonoids presented higher inhibition than alone flavonoids (0.04–0.26 mg/mL) | [ |
Effects of propolis in combination with various drugs on different bacterial species.
| Propolis Origin | Antibiotics | Bacterial Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | Two-drug combinations: vancomycin, oxacillin, and levofloxacin | MRSA | Propolis (MIC: 0.4–5 mg/mL) synergistically enhanced the efficacy of antibiotics, especially those acting on cell wall synthesis (vancomycin (0.2 mg/mL) and oxacillin (12.5 mg/mL)) on drug-resistant bacteria | [ |
| Poland | Amikacin, kanamycin, gentamycin, tetracycline, and fusidic acid |
| Propolis (16–32 µg/mL) showed a synergistic effect in combination with various antibiotics (1–0.0312 µg/mL) that inhibit protein synthesis | [ |
| Cefoxitin, clindamycin, tetracycline, tobramycin, linezolid, trimethoprim + sulfamethoxazole, penicillin, and erythromycin | The combination of propolis (MIC: 0.39–0.78 mg/mL) with different drugs potentiated the antibacterial effect of eight antistaphylococcals (1–30 µg/mL) against all strains | [ | ||
| Italy | Ampicillin, gentamycin, streptomycin, chloramphenicol, ceftriaxone, and vancomycin | Propolis increased the antibacterial effect of ampicillin (0.05–3.12 µg/mL), gentamycin (0.05–1.56 µg/mL), and streptomycin (0.05–50 µg/mL); moderately for chloramphenicol (0.05–25 µg/mL), ceftriaxone, and vancomycin (0.39–3.15 µg/mL) | [ | |
| Nanoparticles prepared with Malaysian propolis | Rifampicin, ciprofloxacin, vancomycin, and doxycycline |
| Propolis nanoparticles (15.63–125 µg/mL disrupted bacterial biofilms by causing membrane damage and significantly reducing biofilm formation, and showed synergism with antibiotics (0.2–25 µg/mL) | [ |
MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
Antistreptococcal activity of diverse propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis/ | Bacterial Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany, Ireland, and Czech Republic | N. I. | Moderate antibacterial activity (MIC: 0.6–5 mg/mL) | [ | |
| Mexico |
| Pinocembrin, chrysin, galangin, alpinetin, dillenetin, isorhamnetin, ferulic acid, syringic acid, and caffeic acid | Propolis (MIC: 125–1024 µg/mL) presented antibacterial activity; galangin, ferulic acid, syringic acid, and caffeic acid showed activity against this oral pathogen | [ |
| South of Brazil (different samples) |
| Gallic acid, caffeic acid, coumaric acid, artepillin C, and pinocembrin | All samples of propolis (25–800 µg/mL) have an inhibitory action biofilm growth | [ |
| Iran/ | Quercetin | Both propolis (MIC: 3.12–100 µg/mL) were efficient against the bacteria studied and showed an inhibitory activity | [ |
N.I., none identified; MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
Antibacterial activity of different propolis on various microorganism species.
| Propolis/ | Bacterial Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany, Ireland, and Czech Republic | N.I. | All showed moderate antibacterial activity (MIC: 0.6–5 mg/mL) | [ | |
| Brazil (red, green, and brown propolis) and Southern Poland | Ferulic acid, | All samples showed distinct antibacterial activities (25–800 µg/mL) | [ | |
| Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin (South African propolis) | Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin | The combinations of these three flavonoids (0.04–0.26 mg/mL) presented higher inhibition activity than alone components | [ |
N.I., none identified; MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
Antibacterial activity of diverse propolis on different microorganisms that cause nosocomial infections.
| Propolis Origin | Bacterial Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (red, green, and brown propolis from different regions) | Red extracts showed higher activity than green and brown extracts (MIC: 31.1–1000 µg/mL both propolis) | [ | |
| Germany, Ireland, and Czech Republic | All propolis showed moderate antibacterial activity (0.06–2.5 µg/mL) | [ | |
| Cameroon, Congo, and Kenya | All propolis showed differences in antibacterial activity (50 mg/mL) | [ |
MIC: minimum inhibitory concentration.
Effect of diverse propolis and its main identified components on P. aeruginosa and K. pneumoniae.
| Propolis/ | Bacterial Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albania |
| Caffeic acid, | Propolis (15.6–62.5 mg/mL) inhibited the microbial development and biofilm growth, also decreased extracellular DNA release and phenazine production | [ |
| Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin (South African propolis) | Pinocembrin, galangin, and chrysin | Combinations of the three flavonoids (0.6–25 µg/mL) present better antibacterial effect than single components | [ |
Anti-Candida activity of different propolis around the world.
| Propolis Origin | Fungal Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (green propolis) | Vaginal isolates of | Suppress growth and biofilm formation | [ |
| Brazil | All strains were suppressed, with minimal variation independent of the yeast species (273.43 μg/mL) | [ | |
|
| Showed fungicidal activity against the three morphogenetic types; the induced cell death was mediated by metacaspase and Ras signaling | [ | |
| Brazil (topical pharmaceutical preparation based upon propolis) | Vulvovaginal candidiasis infection in a mouse model ( | Can partially control | |
| Poland (different samples) | Azole-resistant | Only one of the four propolis samples revealed high activity (MFC: 0.0006–1.25% | [ |
| Portugal and France | Presented distinct antifungal activities (15.63–250 μg/mL) | [ | |
| Germany, Ireland, and Czech Republic | Propolis from Ireland and Czech demonstrated excellent fungicidal (0.1–5 mg/mL) effects; propolis from Germany showed mostly fungistatic (0.1–2.5 mg/mL) activity. | [ | |
| Saudi Arabia | Showed fungicidal (2.5% | [ | |
| Iran | 22 samples of | Both extracts showed inhibitory effects on | [ |
| Propolis-loaded nanoparticles from Thailand |
| Inhibited the virulence factors of | [ |
MFC: medium fungicidal concentration.
Antifungal activity of diverse propolis and its chemical composition on different Candida strains.
| Propolis Origin | Fungal Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Caffeic acid, | Showed fungicide (0.5%) action on different strains; | [ | |
| Brazil (propolis-based gels) | Vaginal candidiasis mouse model | Presented antifungal effect (1%) similar to clotrimazole cream | ||
| Poland (50 different samples) | 69 | Caffeic acid, | All samples showed high activity in the inhibition of biofilm formation by | [ |
| Poland (from agricultural areas and Southern Poland) | Pinocembrin, chrysin, pinobanksin, apigenin, kaempferol, | Samples from Southern Poland showed greater antifungal activity (2–16 mg/mL) | [ |
Effect of propolis on different species of Trichophyton.
| Propolis Origin | Fungal Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (red and green propolis) | Both propolis were active on the strains, but the red propolis was more efficient than the green (256–1024 µg/mL) | [ | |
| Brazil (green propolis) | Clinical isolates of | Propolis had the ability to decrease the cells in the preformed | [ |
| Brazil (topical green propolis treatment) | Sixteen patients with onychomycosis | Treatment showed a complete mycological and clinical cure of onychomycosis (10%) |
Antimalarial effect of propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuba (20 different samples) | Liquiritigenin and lupeol | Three samples of propolis (0.2 μg/mL) shows activity against | [ | |
| Libya (12 different samples) | N.I. | All samples of propolis (1.65–53.6 μg/mL) showed antiprotozoal activity | [ | |
| Iran (four different samples) | Palmitic acid, stearic acid, pinocembrin, tectochrysin, and 4′,5-dihidroxy-7-methoxyflavanone | All samples of propolis presented antimalarial in vitro and in vivo activity at different concentrations (16.2–80 μg/mL) | [ | |
| Saudi Arabia | N.I. | Considerably suppressed the parasitemia and demosntraed important effect in decresing anemic in infected mice (25–100 mg/Kg), reduced oxidative damage by enhancing the catalase function and the glutathione concentrations, and enhanced the quantity of TNF-α, IFN-γ, G-CSF, and GM-CSF. | [ |
N.I. = none identified.
Anti-trypanosome activity of different propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil |
| N.I. | Activity on | [ |
| N.I. | Effective on the three forms of the parasite strongly inhibits infection levels promoting lysis of bloodstream trypomastigotes, diminishing the number of parasites in peritoneal macrophages and infected heart muscle cells (0.1–0.75 mg/mL) | [ | ||
| Caffeic acid, cinnamic acid, pantenoic acid, ferulic acid, linoleic acid, amyrin, pinostobin | In vitro effect against | [ | ||
| 3-prenyl-4-hydroxycinnamic acid and 2,2-dimethyl-6-carboxyethenyl-8-prenyl-2H-1-benzopyran. | Propolis (2.64 mg/mL) and its compounds (0.73–1.2 mg/mL) identified showed anti-trypanosome effects | [ | ||
| Brazil and Bulgaria | N.I. | Both propolis (0.015–1.5 mg/mL) showed activity against | [ | |
| Bulgaria | Caffeic acid, stearic acid, oleic acid, ferulic acid, coumaric acid, pinocembrin, chrysin, pinostrobin | Both samples of propolis had great inhibition effect mainly on | [ | |
| Bulgaria | N.I. | Reduced parasitemia and showed no toxic hepatic or renal effect, decreased spleen mass, modulated the initial inflammatory reaction, favored a greater number of CD8+, and partially inhibited the increase in CD4 (50mg/Kg) | [ | |
| Brazil | N.I. | Reduced parasitemia enhanced the survival of the animals, and did not induce any hepatic, muscular lesion, or renal toxicity (25–300 mg/Kg) | [ |
N.I. = none identified.
Antileishmanial activity of various propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil (brown, green, and red propolis) and Portugal | N.I. | All inhibited the growth of promastigotes of distinct parasitic strains and effectively reduced number of internalized amastigotes in infected murine macrophages (36–250 mg/mL) | [ | |
| Turkey (Three regions: Adana, Hatay, and Bursa) | Adana: cembrene; | All propolis (50–1000 μg/mL) showed good antileishmanial activity, but that of Bursa was the most effective | [ | |
| Cuba (20 different samples) |
| Amyrin, lupeol, and cycloartenol | All samples of propolis (3.2–22.2 μg/mL) presented antiprotozoal properties | [ |
| Ecuador (three different samples) |
| Naringenin, sakuranetin, eupatolitin, and rhamnazin | All inhibited | [ |
| Brazil (two different samples) | Minas Gerais: diethyl 2-methylsuccinate, cinnamic acid, pentanedioc acid, and hydrocinnamic acid; | Both showed great antileishmanial activity. Ribeirao Petro propolis exhibited a dose-dependent effect against promastigotes of | [ | |
| Brazil | N.I. | Reduced growth by promoting morphologic alterations in promastigotes; in supernatants from liver cells and peritoneal exudate of mice pretreated with propolis and infected, increased TNF-α production was seen (5–100 μg/mL) | [ | |
| Brazil (green propolis) | N.I. | Decreases lesion development caused by | [ |
Activity of Brazilian propolis on different Leishmania infection models.
| Propolis Origin | Substances | Infection Model | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | Nitric oxide | The combination of propolis (5 mg/kg) with NO favored the healing, collagen synthesis, the function of macrophages and fibroblasts, reduced expression of proinflammatory and tissue damage markers | [ | |
| Brazil (green propolis) | Liposomal meglumine antimoniate | Reduced the parasitic burden in the liver, without damaging kidney, liver, spleen, and heart (500 mg/kg) | [ |
Effect of different propolis on G. lamblia in in vitro and in vivo models.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico (Sonoran Desert, region Ures) |
| Inhibitory activity against | [ |
| Brazil | Effectively eliminated trophozoites of | [ | |
| Egypt | Reduces infection, enhanced IFN-γ serum level and CD4+:CD8+ T cell ratio. Co-administration of propolis and metronidazole had remarkable activity in controlling the parasite number. Favors intestinal homeostasis and the histological integrity (NS) | [ |
NS: not specified.
Anthelmintic activity of propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egypt |
| Diprenyl-dihydrocoumaric acids, coumarate esters, ferulate esters, hydroxy acetophenones, furanon derivative, furofuran lignans, benzofuran lignans, and valeric acids derivatives | Alteration in the architecture, inhibitory activity on the viability and hatchability of immature helminths (10–800 μg/mL) | [ |
| N.I. | Propolis administration (500 mg/kg) not eliminated the worms of infected mice, but significantly reduced the hepatic granuloma number, hepatic, splenic and plasma MPO activity, as well the liver and thymus NO levels; also, regulation of plasma antioxidant proteins evidenced by decrease in MDA and normalization of GSH | [ | ||
| Turkey |
| N.I. | Propolis (1 µg/mL) killed all the protoscoleces | [ |
| Brazil (essential oil of red propolis) |
| N.I. | Have 100% larvicidal effect after treatment (1 µg/mL) of 48 h and can suppress the ability of the treated | [ |
| Libya (five different samples) |
| Cycloartanol, mangiferolic acid, agathadiol, isocupressic acid, isoagatholal | All propolis samples (4.7–59.3 μg/mL) showed moderate activity | [ |
N.I., none identified; MPO, myeloperoxidase; MDA, malondialdehyde; GSH, glutathione.
Antiviral activity of different samples of propolis.
| Propolis Origin | Viral Species | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Czech Republic (aqueous and ethanolic extract) | HSV-2 | Both propolis (0.0005–0.005%) decreased the infection and exhibited a concentration- and time-dependent antiviral effect; high antiviral effect when viruses were pretreated prior to infection | [ |
| United States, Brazil, and China | HIV-1. | Three propolis inhibited viral expression in CD4+ lymphocytes and microglial cell in a concentration-dependent manner; propolis from United States suppressed cell fusion in cultures of CD4+ lymphocytes (0.8–66.6 μg/mL) | [ |
| Brazil (13 different samples) | Influenza virus. | Four samples had anti-influenza virus effect in vitro (10–149.2 μg/mL) | [ |
| Influenza virus-infected mice. | Only one propolis sample (10 mg/mL) effectively prolonged the lifetimes of infected mice; anti-influenza effectiveness of propolis in mice was dose-dependent | ||
| Brazil (13 different samples) | HSV-1-infected mice | The three propolis had direct anti-HSV-1 effects, stimulated immunological effect on intradermal HSV-1 infection in mice (0.4, 2, and 10 mg/mL) | [ |
Anti-HSV-1 and HSV-2 activity of several propolis and its chemical composition.
| Propolis Origin | Parasitic Species | Identified Compounds | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | HSV-1 and HSV-2 | Benzoic acid, cinnamic acid, vanillic acid, | Presents a pronounced viricidal effect and interfered with virus adsorption (0.1 mg/mL) | [ |
| Turkey (south) | Gallic acid, (±)-catechin, caffeic acid, syringic acid, epigallocatechin, | Suppressed the replication of HSV-1 and HSV-2; inhibited HSV-1 replication following 24 h of incubation and effect on HSV-2 at 48 h following incubation; decreased the number of viral copies; activity similar to that of acyclovir; a synergism of the propolis and acyclovir combined on HSV-1 and HSV-2 replication compared with acyclovir alone (25–3200 μg/mL) | [ | |
| Czech Republic (aqueous and ethanolic propolis) | HSV-1 | Caffeic acid, | Both samples presented high anti-HSV-1 effect in cells pretreated prior to viral infection; galangin and chrysin were the most bioactive compounds; however, the propolis had higher antiherpetic effects than single isolated constituents (1%) | [ |
Antiherpetic activity of Central European propolis in patient studies.
| Propolis Origin | Model | Activity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central Europe (lip cream with propolis) | Patients with herpes labialis | Lip cream with propolis (0.5%) produced a better effect than acyclovir in the treatment of patients with herpes labialis in the vesicular phase | [ |
| Central Europe (constituent of a lotion) | Herpes zoster in patients | Improvement in pain and healing of lesions were better and quicker with treatment of the propolis lotion (0.5%); approximately 50% of propolis-treated patients had no injuries on day 14 and the formation of new vesicles was suppressed | [ |