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Rev. bras. plantas med ; 12(1): 8-12, jan.-mar. 2010. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-578928

ABSTRACT

Determinou-se in vitro a Intensidade de Atividade de Inibição Bacteriana (IINIB) e a Intensidade de Atividade de Inativação Bacteriana (IINAB), através de Testes de Diluição em Sistema de Tubos Múltiplos, de extratos de oito pimentas do gênero Capsicum, etnograficamente acessadas na região metropolitana de Porto Alegre/RS/BR, frente a inóculos bacterianos padronizados (American Type Culture Collection - ATCC), respectivamente Staphylococcus aureus (25923), Enterococcus faecalis (19433), Salmonella enteritidis (13076) e Escherichia coli (11229), em doses-desafio = 10(7) UFC mL-1. Quatro destas plantas, pimenta calabresa ("pool" Capsicum sp), pimenta-de-jardim (C.annuum), pimenta dedo-de-moça (C. baccatum) e pimenta malagueta (C. frutescens), apresentaram atividades de inibição e inativação seletivas, em ordem decrescente, para salmonela, coliforme fecal, enterococo e estafilococo. As demais, pimenta cambuci (C. baccatum) e os pimentões (C. annuum) amarelo, verde e vermelho, apresentaram nenhuma atividade. Discute-se a validade da ferramenta etnográfica na prospecção de fatores de proteção anti-bacteriana em plantas, bem como a influência da inibição/inativação na preditividade do diagnóstico bacteriológico.


The intensity of bacterial inhibition activity (IINIB) and the intensity of bacterial inactivation activity (IINAB) of extracts of eight peppers of the genus Capsicum, ethnographically located in the metropolitan region of Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, were assessed in vitro through Dilution Tests in Multiple Tube Series against standardized bacterial inocula (American Type Culture Collection - ATCC), Staphylococcus aureus (25923), Enterococcus faecalis (19433), Salmonella enteritidis (13076), and Escherichia coli (11229), respectively, at challenge doses = 10(7) CFU mL-1. Four of these species, cayenne pepper (Capsicum sp pool), garden pepper (C. annuum), ají pepper (C. baccatum), and malagueta pepper (C. frutescens), had selective inhibition and inactivation activities, in decreasing order, to salmonella, fecal coliforms, enterococcus and staphylococcus. The remaining ones, cambuci pepper (C. baccatum) and yellow, green and red sweet peppers (C. annuum) had no activity. The validity of the ethnographic tool in the exploration of antibacterial protection factors from plants, as well as the influence of inhibition/inactivation in the bacteriological diagnosis predictability, is discussed.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Bacterial Physiological Phenomena , Capsicum , Foodborne Diseases , In Vitro Techniques , Pimenta/toxicity , Bacteriological Techniques , Toxicity Tests
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