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  • Exposure of Candida to p-anisaldehyde inhibits its growth and ergosterol biosynthesis.

Exposure of Candida to p-anisaldehyde inhibits its growth and ergosterol biosynthesis.

The Journal of general and applied microbiology (2011-08-06)
Sheikh Shreaz, Rimple Bhatia, Neelofar Khan, Sumathi Muralidhar, Seemi F Basir, Nikhat Manzoor, Luqman Ahmad Khan
ABSTRACT

p-Anisaldehyde (4-methoxybenzaldehyde), an extract from Pimpinella anisum seeds, is a very common digestive herb of north India. Antifungal activity of p-anisaldehyde was investigated on 10 fluconazole-resistant and 5 fluconazole-sensitive Candida strains. Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC(90)) ranged from 250 µg/ml to 600 µg/ml for both sensitive and resistant strains. Ergosterol content was drastically reduced by p-anisaldehyde-62% in sensitive and 66% in resistant strains-but did not corelate well with MIC(90) values. It appears that p-anisaldehyde exerts its antifungal effect by decreasing NADPH routed through up-regulation of putative aryl-alcohol dehydrogenases. Cellular toxicity of p-anisaldehyde against H9c2 rat cardiac myoblasts was less than 20% at the highest MIC value. These findings encourage further development of p-anisaldehyde.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
p-Anisaldehyde, analytical standard
Sigma-Aldrich
p-Anisaldehyde, 98%
Sigma-Aldrich
p-Anisaldehyde, ≥97.5%, FCC, FG