Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance seriously threatened human health, and new antimicrobial agents are desperately needed. As one of the largest classes of plant secondary metabolite, flavonoids can be widely found in various parts of the plant, and their antibacterial activities have been increasingly paid attention to. Based on the physicochemical parameters and antibacterial activities of sixty-six flavonoids reported, two regression equations between their ACD/LogP or LogD7.40 and their minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) to gram-positive bacteria were established with the correlation coefficients above 0.93, and then were verified by another sixty-eight flavonoids reported. From these two equations, the MICs of most flavonoids against gram-positive bacteria could be roughly calculated from their ACD/LogP or LogD7.40, and the minimum MIC was predicted as approximately 10.2 or 4.8 μM, more likely falls into the range from 2.6 to 10.2 μM, or from 1.2 to 4.8 μM. Simultaneously, both tendentiously concave regression curves indicated that the lipophilicity is a key factor for flavonoids against gram-positive bacteria. Combined with the literature analyses, the results also suggested that the cell membrane is the main site of flavonoids acting on gram-positive bacteria, and which likely involves the damage of phospholipid bilayers, the inhibition of the respiratory chain or the ATP synthesis, or some others.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial resistance seriously threatened human health, and new antimicrobial agents are desperately needed

  • Flavonoids can be widely found in various parts of the plant, and their antibacterial activities have been paid more and more attention to, especially after some of them were discovered to have the potency to enhance the susceptibility of some antibiotics to b­ acteria[4,5]

  • Considering that the experimental minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) would fluctuate within a reasonable ­range[5], the minimum MIC of plant flavonoids will likely fall into the range from 2.6 to 10.2 μM, or from 1.2 to 4.8 μM, predicted from their ACD/ LogP or ­LogD7.40

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial resistance seriously threatened human health, and new antimicrobial agents are desperately needed. As one of the largest classes of plant secondary metabolite, flavonoids can be widely found in various parts of the plant, and their antibacterial activities have been increasingly paid attention to. The inhibitory activities of plant flavonoids against gram-positive bacteria especially Staphylococcus aureus can be widely searched, while those against gram-negative ones and fungi were reported too few to carry out statistical a­ nalyses[4,6]. Thereby, the former was our focus in this research. OH OCH3O varied, this paper will pay more attention to the inhibitory activities of these flavonoids against Staphylococcus aureus, a species most reported in the literature

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