Abstract

The carnivorous plant Dionaea muscipula J. Ellis (Venus flytrap) is a widely known medical herb, capable of producing various phenolic compounds known for their strong antioxidant and antibacterial properties. In the pharmaceutical industry, Venus flytrap is grown in tissue cultures, as the natural population of D. muscipula is very limited. Here, we describe an improved method to increase the quantity and quality of phenolic compounds produced in D. muscipula. This is achieved by combining biotic elicitation (using Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria lysate) of D. muscipula cultured with rotary shaking (hydromechanical stress), which we describe here for the first time. The antibacterial activity and the antioxidant properties of the obtained compounds were studied on two antibiotic-resistant human pathogenic bacteria. The proposed plant culture conditions resulted in an increase in fresh weight, as well as a higher total phenolic content, in comparison to traditional tissue cultures on agar-solidified medium. With the use of high-performance liquid chromatography, we demonstrated that the described elicitation strategy leads to an increased synthesis of myricetin, caffeic acid, ellagic acid and plumbagin in D. muscipula tissue. We also found that a higher level of antioxidant activity, exhibited by the plant extract, corresponded with its higher phenylpropanoid content. The bactericidal activity of the extract against Staphylococcus aureus was dependent on the duration of plant culture under described elicitation conditions, whereas neither elicitation condition (duration or elicitor concentration) seemed relevant for the bactericidal activity of the extract towards Escherichia coli. This suggest that Gram-negative bacteria are less sensitive to compounds derived from Venus flytrap tissue.

Highlights

  • Carnivorous plants from the family, Droseraceae, have been used in natural medicine around the world for centuries

  • We examined the response of Venus flytrap in vitro plants grown in liquid media (LM) with rotary shaking to elicitation with lysate of Cronobacter sakazakii bacteria

  • Results of D. muscipula Elicitation with C. sakazakii Lysate (Experiment 2). In this experiment we compared biometric parameters and accumulation of various phenolic derivatives in plants affected by biotic elicitation in comparison to untreated plants

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Summary

Introduction

Carnivorous plants from the family, Droseraceae, have been used in natural medicine around the world for centuries. Molecules 2020, 25, 1794 various secondary metabolites from a group of phenolic compounds, especially 1,4-naphtoquinones derivatives, among which plumbagin (PLU) is the most common derivative [2,3]. According to Gaascht et al [2], secondary metabolites are highly diversified and complex group of plant derived chemicals, accumulated in very small amount [4], with various biological activities. The extracts from carnivorous plants from the family, Droseraceae, have strong antioxidant [5], antibacterial [1,6] and antifungal [7] properties. Due to the growing resistance for antibiotics of some human-pathogenic microbes, and the increasing demand for new drugs in cancer therapy, plant material with strong biological activity are in great demand

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