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Effects of Medicinal Plant Extracts and Photosensitization on Aflatoxin Producing (Raper and Fennell). | LitMetric

Effects of Medicinal Plant Extracts and Photosensitization on Aflatoxin Producing (Raper and Fennell).

Int J Microbiol

School of Biological Sciences, University of Nairobi, P.O. Box 30197-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.

Published: May 2017

This study was undertaken with an aim of exploring the effectiveness of medicinal plant extracts in the control of aflatoxin production. Antifungal properties, photosensitization, and phytochemical composition of aqueous and organic extracts of fruits from , bark from and leaves from , , and were tested. Spores from four-day-old cultures of previously identified toxigenic fungi, UONV017 and UONV003, were used. Disc diffusion and broth dilution methods were used to test the antifungal activity. The spores were suspended in 2 ml of each extract separately and treated with visible light (420 nm) for varying periods. Organic extracts displayed species and concentration dependent antifungal activity. had the highest zones of inhibition diameters in both strains: UONV017 (mean = 18.50 ± 0.71 mm) and UONV003 (mean = 11.92 ± 0.94 mm) at 600 mg/ml. Aqueous extracts had no antifungal activity because all diameters were below 8 mm. had the lowest minimum inhibitory concentration at 25 mg/ml against UONV017. All the plant extracts in combination with light reduced the viability of fungal conidia compared with the controls without light, without extracts, and without both extracts and light. Six bioactive compounds were analyzed in the plant extracts. Medicinal plant extracts in this study can control conidia viability and hence with further development can control toxigenic fungal spread.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5433414PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/5273893DOI Listing

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