Abstract

Fungal infections of plants cause major difficulties in agricultural food production and in storage of food especially due to the development of fungal resistance and the negative environmental impact of some chemical fungicides. The aim of this study was to develop a plant-based product that could be used to control plant fungal pathogens in agriculture. Melianthus comosus is a weedy shrub endemic to southern Africa. Its acetone leaf extract had good activity against plant fungal pathogens. We investigated the efficiency of ten extractants with varying polarities. Acetone was the best with a 52 times higher selectivity for antifungal activity against eight important fungal pathogens than methanol. The average minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was 100μg/ml varying from 20 to 310μg/ml against eight fungal pathogens. By using open column silica gel chromatography and bioautography the major antifungal compound was isolated and characterized as oleanolic acid. Two methods based on selective extraction and solvent–solvent extraction were used to potentize the activity of the extract by removing inactive polar and non-polar compounds. The product had an average MIC of 66μg/ml varying between 20 and 160μg/ml against 10 fungal pathogens. The product had low water solubility and was stable for a month at 55ᵒC. When used in a field trial on comfrey (Symphytum officinale) with a natural rust infection it was much more effective at a concentration of 0.2mg/ml than the commercial product containing dicarboximide at a concentration of 1.5mg/ml. The Melianthus extract treatment led to 50 infected leaves in the bed compared to 250 infected leaves of the dicarboximide treatment and extensive infection in the negative control. It appears that this product has the potential to be used in agricultural practice. This plant may become a new crop that may be useful for organic cultivation.

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