1994
DOI: 10.3109/13880209409083017
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Flavonoids of Limonium axillare

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Cited by 19 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The individual bacteria revealed various degrees of sensitivity to different flavonoids. Growth rate of B. subtilis was decreased about two times in the presence of 100 µM genistein, apigenin or kaempferol, but daidzein and naringenin had no significant influence (Table 1), which generally agrees with previously published results (Oksuz et al 1984;Bashir et al 1994;Aljancic et al 1999;Ulanowska et al, 2006). Growth of cultures of M. luteus was completely inhibited by 100 µM kaempferol or naringenin, which was similar to the phenotype of Sarcina sp., revealing high sensitivity to kaempferol but only partial sensitivity to naringenin (Table 1).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The individual bacteria revealed various degrees of sensitivity to different flavonoids. Growth rate of B. subtilis was decreased about two times in the presence of 100 µM genistein, apigenin or kaempferol, but daidzein and naringenin had no significant influence (Table 1), which generally agrees with previously published results (Oksuz et al 1984;Bashir et al 1994;Aljancic et al 1999;Ulanowska et al, 2006). Growth of cultures of M. luteus was completely inhibited by 100 µM kaempferol or naringenin, which was similar to the phenotype of Sarcina sp., revealing high sensitivity to kaempferol but only partial sensitivity to naringenin (Table 1).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 82%
“…In contrast to V. harveyi, growth of C. freundii, E. coli, K. pneumoniae, P. vulgaris, S. enterica and S. marcescens was unaffected or only slightly affected by all tested compounds (Table 1). Our results obtained for E. coli, K. pneumoniae and P. vulgaris corroborate conclusions reported by some authors (Miski et al 1983;Ohemeng et al 1993) but are in contrast to results described by others (Oksuz et al 1984;Bashir et al 1994;Aljancic et al 1999). The individual bacteria revealed various degrees of sensitivity to different flavonoids.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 50%
“…Outros aspectos importantes que devem ser levados em consideração são as informações botânico-taxonômicas e químico-taxonômicas 3,22 . Como a constituição química, na maioria dos casos, difere significativamente em relação às distintas partes da planta [23][24][25][26] , parece mais viável estudar inicialmente aquela empregada na medicina popular e posteriormente as outras partes da planta, que também podem conter princípios ativos.…”
Section: Plantaunclassified
“…Various studies showed the antimicrobial activity of apigenin (Khanna et al, 1980;Palacios et al, 1983), kaempferol and its derivatives (Rauha et al, 2000;Khanna et al, 1980), luteolin and luteolin-7-glucoside (Bashir et al, 1994), quercetin, 3-O-methylquercetin and various quercetin glycosides (Rauha et al, 2000;Khanna et al, 1980). Some phenolic acid also showed the antibacterial effect e.g, caffeic acid, coumeric acid, pcoumeric acid, ferrulic acid (Nowak et al, 1998;Chiang et al, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%