Antimicrobial discovery from South African marine algae
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Date
2018
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of the Western Cape.
Abstract
Antimicrobials are chemical compounds that destroy or inhibit the growth of microorganisms.
The majority of these antimicrobials are actually natural products or natural product derived
with key examples being the pioneer antibiotics penicillin and cephalosporin. Antimicrobials
are an extremely important class of therapeutic agents; however, the development of drug
resistance and slow pace of new antibiotic discovery is one of the major health issues facing
the world today. There is therefore a crucial need to discover and develop new antibacterial
agents. In this study, the potential of marine algae as a source of new antibiotics was explored.
Crude organic extracts and chromatographic fractions obtained from small-scale extraction of
17 different marine algae were used to prepare a pre-fractionated library that would be tested
against several disease causing microorganisms. The activity of the pre-fractionated library and
purified compounds was determined against a panel of drug resistant microorganisms namely
Acinetobacter baumannii ATCCBAA®-1605™, Enterococcus faecalis ATCC® 51299™,
Escherichia coli ATCC® 25922™, Staphylococcus aureus subsp. aureus ATCC® 33591™ and
Candida albicans ATCC® 24433™. Finally, cytotoxicity tests of 50 selected library extracts
and isolated compounds were done against two cell lines namely MCF-7 (breast cancer) and
HEK-293 (kidney embryonic).
Description
>Magister Scientiae - MSc
Keywords
Antimicrobials, Microorganisms, Chromatographic Fractions, Small-scale Extraction, Halogenated Monoterpenes