1.Antimicrobial, cytotoxicity and preliminary phytochemical determination of commonly used medicinal plants to treat oral cavity, urinary tract and gut infections by inhabitants of Borabu sub-county, Nyamira County, Kenya
Eric Omori Omwenga ; Francisco Maria Goycoolea ; Andreas Hensel ; Anakalo Shitandi
Malaysian Journal of Microbiology 2020;16(4):312-322
Aims:
The study aimed at determining the antimicrobial activities and cytotoxicity properties of medicinal plants
collected from southwestern Kenya.
Methods and results:
A total of 23 ethanol extracts of selected medicinal plants were bio-assayed against Gramnegative bacterial strains (Escherichia coli NU14, Helicobacter pylori ATCC 700824, and Porphyromonas gingivalis
ATCC 33277). Cytotoxicity tests were also carried out on mammalian cell lines (AGS, KB, and TR146). Preliminary type
of phytochemical compounds present in the extracts was determined by thin-layer chromatography. Cassia
didymobotrya plant extract (1 mg/mL) had strong antimicrobial activity against P. gingivalis (average zone of inhibition of
21.70 ± 0.88 mm, MIC 0.13 ± 0.00 mg/mL and MBC 0.50 ± 0.00 mg/mL). Escherichia coli was resistant to all the extracts
bioassayed. Leonotis nepetifolia (15.80 ± 0.20 mm) and Clerodendrum myriacoides (14.20 ± 0.44 mm) showed only
moderate activity against H. pylori. Cell cytotoxicity results indicated a dose-dependent response against KB, TR146 and
AGS cell lines with C. didymobotrya having IC50 values of 47.64 and 704.00 µg/mL on KB and TR146 cell lines,
respectively. L. nepetifolia and C. myriacoides did produce IC50 of 0.1883 mg/mL and 0.1061 mg/mL against the AGS
cell line respectively.
Conclusion, significance and impact of the study
Most of the extracts had no or weak activity against test isolates,
but C. didymobotrya leaves extracts showed strong activity against P. gingivalis. C. didymobotrya can offer alternative
medicare to P. gingivalis conditions.
Plants, Medicinal--adverse effects
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Kenya (Southwestern)