4.7 Article

Eco-Friendly Solution Based on Rosmarinus officinalis Hydro-Alcoholic Extract to Prevent Biodeterioration of Cultural Heritage Objects and Buildings

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911463

Keywords

microbial biodeterioration; Rosmarinus officinalis; vegetal hydro-alcoholic extracts; microbial enzymatic activity; acids; extracellular nitric oxide; antimicrobial; anti-adherence

Funding

  1. Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitalization [C1.2.PFE-CDI.2021-587, 41PFE/30.12.2021]
  2. [PN-III-P2-2.1-PED-2021-2526 (736 PED/2022)]

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The present study evaluated the inhibitory effect of Rosmarinus officinalis hydro-alcoholic extract on the growth of microbial strains. The extract exhibited antimicrobial and antioxidant activity, as well as the ability to inhibit microbial adherence to inert substrates. This study highlights the potential of R. officinalis extract as an eco-friendly solution for the conservation of cultural heritage.
Biodeterioration of cultural heritage is caused by different organisms capable of inducing complex alteration processes. The present study aimed to evaluate the efficiency of Rosmarinus officinalis hydro-alcoholic extract to inhibit the growth of deteriogenic microbial strains. For this, the physico-chemical characterization of the vegetal extract by UHPLC-MS/MS, its antimicrobial and antibiofilm activity on a representative number of biodeteriogenic microbial strains, as well as the antioxidant activity determined by DPPH, CUPRAC, FRAP, TEAC methods, were performed. The extract had a total phenol content of 15.62 +/- 0.97 mg GAE/mL of which approximately 8.53% were flavonoids. The polyphenolic profile included carnosic acid, carnosol, rosmarinic acid and hesperidin as major components. The extract exhibited good and wide spectrum antimicrobial activity, with low MIC (minimal inhibitory concentration) values against fungal strains such as Aspergillus clavatus (MIC = 1.2 mg/mL) and bacterial strains such as Arthrobacter globiformis (MIC = 0.78 mg/mL) or Bacillus cereus (MIC = 1.56 mg/mL). The rosemary extract inhibited the adherence capacity to the inert substrate of Penicillium chrysogenum strains isolated from wooden objects or textiles and B. thuringiensis strains. A potential mechanism of R. officinalis antimicrobial activity could be represented by the release of nitric oxide (NO), a universal signalling molecule for stress management. Moreover, the treatment of microbial cultures with subinhibitory concentrations has modulated the production of microbial enzymes and organic acids involved in biodeterioration, with the effect depending on the studied microbial strain, isolation source and the tested soluble factor. This paper reports for the first time the potential of R. officinalis hydro-alcoholic extract for the development of eco-friendly solutions dedicated to the conservation/safeguarding of tangible cultural heritage.

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