Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia

In a systematic screening effort, extracts of marine fungi from Malaysia were investigated for antimicrobial activity and potentially active secondary metabolites. In preliminary experiments, the plug assay method was employed to screen 152 strains for antimicrobial activity. Of these, 82 exhibited...

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Main Authors: Zainuddin, N., Alias, S.A., Lee, C.W., Ebel, R., Othman, N.A., Mukhtar, M.R., Awang, K.
Format: Article
Published: Walter De Gruyter & Co 2010
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/11722/
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
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spelling my.um.eprints.117222015-01-08T02:39:27Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/11722/ Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia Zainuddin, N. Alias, S.A. Lee, C.W. Ebel, R. Othman, N.A. Mukhtar, M.R. Awang, K. Q Science (General) In a systematic screening effort, extracts of marine fungi from Malaysia were investigated for antimicrobial activity and potentially active secondary metabolites. In preliminary experiments, the plug assay method was employed to screen 152 strains for antimicrobial activity. Of these, 82 exhibited biological activity, with most of the active strains (90.2%) having antibacterial activity, mainly towards Gram-positive bacteria, while only 9.6% had antifungal activity. On the basis of these results, five marine fungi, Fasciatispora nypae, Caryosporella rhizophorae, Melaspilea mangrovei, Leptosphaeria sp. and ascomycete strain 19 (NF) were selected for further investigation to confirm their biological activity by the disc diffusion assay method. The selected species had various degrees of activity against the test microorganisms, depending on culture conditions (stationary vs. shaking cultures) and incubation time (10-25 days). Only F. nypae showed a wider range of antifungal and antibacterial activity as compared to the remaining fungal strains under investigation. Therefore, bioactivity-guided fractionation was undertaken to isolate the active principles, resulting in the characterisation of 2,2,7-trimethyl-2H-chromen-5-ol (1) which had antimicrobial activity towards test microorganisms. The structure of 1, which previously had only been reported as a synthetic intermediate, but not as a natural product, was elucidated by mass spectrometry in conjunction with one-and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. Walter De Gruyter & Co 2010 Article PeerReviewed Zainuddin, N. and Alias, S.A. and Lee, C.W. and Ebel, R. and Othman, N.A. and Mukhtar, M.R. and Awang, K. (2010) Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia. Botanica Marina, 53 (6, SI). pp. 507-513.
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Zainuddin, N.
Alias, S.A.
Lee, C.W.
Ebel, R.
Othman, N.A.
Mukhtar, M.R.
Awang, K.
Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
description In a systematic screening effort, extracts of marine fungi from Malaysia were investigated for antimicrobial activity and potentially active secondary metabolites. In preliminary experiments, the plug assay method was employed to screen 152 strains for antimicrobial activity. Of these, 82 exhibited biological activity, with most of the active strains (90.2%) having antibacterial activity, mainly towards Gram-positive bacteria, while only 9.6% had antifungal activity. On the basis of these results, five marine fungi, Fasciatispora nypae, Caryosporella rhizophorae, Melaspilea mangrovei, Leptosphaeria sp. and ascomycete strain 19 (NF) were selected for further investigation to confirm their biological activity by the disc diffusion assay method. The selected species had various degrees of activity against the test microorganisms, depending on culture conditions (stationary vs. shaking cultures) and incubation time (10-25 days). Only F. nypae showed a wider range of antifungal and antibacterial activity as compared to the remaining fungal strains under investigation. Therefore, bioactivity-guided fractionation was undertaken to isolate the active principles, resulting in the characterisation of 2,2,7-trimethyl-2H-chromen-5-ol (1) which had antimicrobial activity towards test microorganisms. The structure of 1, which previously had only been reported as a synthetic intermediate, but not as a natural product, was elucidated by mass spectrometry in conjunction with one-and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy.
format Article
author Zainuddin, N.
Alias, S.A.
Lee, C.W.
Ebel, R.
Othman, N.A.
Mukhtar, M.R.
Awang, K.
author_facet Zainuddin, N.
Alias, S.A.
Lee, C.W.
Ebel, R.
Othman, N.A.
Mukhtar, M.R.
Awang, K.
author_sort Zainuddin, N.
title Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
title_short Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
title_full Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
title_fullStr Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from Malaysia
title_sort antimicrobial activities of marine fungi from malaysia
publisher Walter De Gruyter & Co
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/11722/
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