| Literature DB >> 35784103 |
Razan Salman Marouf1, Joseph Arsene M Mbarga1, Andrey V Ermolaev1, Irina V Podoprigora1, Irina P Smirnova2, Natalia V Yashina1, Anna V Zhigunova1, Aliya V Martynenkova1.
Abstract
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are one of the most common bacterial infections with uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) being the most prevalent causative agent in both complicated and uncomplicated UTIs. Antibiotic resistance among UPEC has been already demonstrated against a wide variety of antibiotics and the situation is continuing to deteriorate increasing the rate of recurrence and the difficulty of treatment and prophylaxis. Recently, a big attention has been paid to non-antibiotic approaches as an alternative to conventional antibiotics. Among many strategies, phytotherapy has gained a special attention worldwide. Herbal remedies have been used in traditional medicine since ancient times and they are well known for their effectiveness in treating many health conditions including UTIs. Researches are conducted continuously to validate the use of many medicinal plants against UPEC, investigate their mechanisms of action, and determine their active constituents. Our extensive review of the recent literature revealed that many phytochemicals are shown to target and inhibit a wide variety of bioprocesses in UPEC, such as adhesion, motility, biofilm formation, and quorum sensing. Such natural approaches are very promising in confronting the antibiotic resistance of UPEC and can be further used to develop plant-based strategies and pharmaceutical products to treat and prevent UTIs caused by UPEC. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Antibacterial agent; antibiotic resistance; bacterial adhesion; phytochemicals; traditional medicine; urinary tract infections; uropathogenic Escherichia coli
Year: 2022 PMID: 35784103 PMCID: PMC9245916 DOI: 10.4103/jpbs.jpbs_124_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Bioallied Sci ISSN: 0975-7406
Figure 1Number of studies published from 2000 to 2021 concerning the use of medicinal plants against UTIs (Scopus database)
Antibacterial effects of some medicinal plants against uropathogenic Escherichia coli
| Plant material | Active phytochemicals | Type of assay | Antibacterial activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cinnamon oil | TC |
| TC (560 and 750 µM) decreased the expression of major genes involved in UPEC attachment and invasion to urinary tract epithelial cellss[ |
| TC (0.25% and 0.50% v/v) inhibited biofilm formation on plates and catheters[ | |||
| Lock solution containing TC (1%, 1.25% and 1.5% v/v) inactivated UPEC biofilm on polystyrene plates and urinary catheters[ | |||
| Oregano oil and thyme red oil | Carvacrol and thymol, respectively |
| Carvacrol and thymol (0.01% v/v) inhibited biofilm formation, decreased the hemagglutination ability of UPEC and reduced fimbriae formation and swarming motility of UPEC[ |
| In the presence of carvacrol and thymol (0.01% v/v), human whole blood was able to more easily kill UPEC[ | |||
| Essential oils of |
| Showed antibacterial and high antibiofilm activity against UPEC[ | |
| Coumaric acid ester |
| Acetonic extract (>250 µg/mL) showed a significant antiadhesive activity against UPEC attachment to human T24 bladder cells[ | |
| Coumaric acid ester (1000 and 500 µg/mL) reduced the invasion of UPEC into the bladder cells[ | |||
| Commercial plant secondary metabolites; asiatic acid and ursolic acid | Pentacyclic triterpenes (asiatic acid and ursolic acid) |
| Asiatic and ursolic acid (40 and 50 μg/mL) showed antibacterial effects and significantly reduced the attachment of UPEC to urinary epithelial cells[ |
|
| N/A |
| Induced apoptosis in bladder epithelial cells and significantly reduced the number of intracellular UPEC[ |
| Garlic ( | N/A |
| Showed antibacterial activity against UPEC (MICs=62.5-100 mg/ml) and inhibited biofilm formation and dispersal[ |
| N/A | Reduced kidney and bladder colonization by UPEC[ | ||
| Reduced the bacterial adhesion to T24 bladder cells[ | |||
| Significantly inhibited bacterial quorum sensing[ | |||
| Green tea | N/A | Intravesical instillation of green tea attenuated the inflammatory response to UPEC-SR71-induced bacterial cystitis[ | |
| Nasturtium (Tropaeoli majoris herba) and horseradish (Armoraciae rusticanae radix) | ITC |
| ITC showed a strong antimicrobial activity against clinical UPEC strains (MIC 90=0.17 mg/ml)[ |
| ITC reduced bacterial internalization into human T-24 bladder cells[ | |||
|
| N/A |
| The extract (400 µg/ml) decreased the adhesion, invasion and biofilm formation of UPEC[ |
| Rosemary ( | N/A |
| Rosemary extract (1 and 10 μg/ml) showed a strong bacteriostatic effect against UPEC[ |
|
| Picolinyl hydrazide |
| The extract showed antibacterial activity against MDR-UPEC (MICs=12.5-50 mg/mL)[ |
| Neem ( | N/A |
| Showed inhibitory effect against UPEC[ |
|
| N/A |
| The extract showed antibacterial activity against UPEC (MIC=11.7 mg/mL) and significantly reduced bacterial biofilm formation[ |
TC: Trans-cinnamaldehyde, ITC: Isothiocyanates, N/A: Not applicable, UPEC: Uropathogenic Escherichia coli, R. officinalis: Rosmarinus officinalis, L. pumila: Labisia pumila, A. sativum: Allium sativum, A. repens: Agropyron repens, O. majorana: Origanum majorana, T. zygis: Thymus zygis, O. aristatus: Orthosiphon aristatus, C. bolivianum: Clinopodium bolivianum, S. rosmarinus: Salvia rosmarinus, B. abyssinica: Bersama abyssinica, A. indica: Azadirachta indica, A. nilotica: Acacia nilotica, MICs: Minimum inhibitory concentrations