4.6 Article

The Roots of Deguelia nitidula as a Natural Antibacterial Source against Staphylococcus aureus Strains

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo12111083

Keywords

antibacterial activity; Staphylococcus aureus; amino acid derivative; liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

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Deguelia nitidula roots have significant bactericidal activity against Staphylococcus aureus, especially the SREFr3 fraction which shows safe and effective antibacterial activity and has a high selectivity index, making it a potential candidate for further bio-guided research and natural drug development.
Deguelia nitidula (Benth.) A.M.G.Azevedo & R.A.Camargo (Fabaceae) is an herbaceous plant distributed in the Brazilian Amazon, and it is called raiz do sol (sun roots). On Marajo Island, quilombola communities use its prepared roots to treat skin diseases commonly caused by fungi, viruses, and bacteria. Thus, in this study, the extract, and its fractions from D. nitidula roots were used to perform in vitro cytotoxic and antibacterial assays against Staphylococcus aureus strains. Thereafter, liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) was used for the metabolite annotation process. The ethanolic extract of D. nitidula roots show significant bactericidal activity against S. aureus with IC50 82 mu g.mL(-1) and a selectivity index (SI) of 21.35. Furthermore, the SREFr2 and SREFr3 fractions show a potent bactericidal activity, i.e., MIC of 46.8 mu g.mL(-1) for both, and MBC of 375 and 93.7 mu g.mL(-1), respectively. As showcased, SREFr3 shows safe and effective antibacterial activity mainly in respect to the excellent selectivity index (SI = 82.06). On the other hand, SREFr2 shows low selectivity (SI = 6.8), which characterizes it as not safe for therapeutic use. Otherwise, due to a limited amount of reference MS2 spectra in public libraries, up to now, it was not possible to perform a complete metabolite annotation. Despite that, our antibacterial results for SREFr3 and correlated substructures of amino acid derivatives show that the roots of D. nitidula are a natural source of specialized metabolites, which can be isolated in the future, and then used as a support for further bio-guided research, as well as natural drug development.

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