RESUMO
Objective: To develop a simple, cost-effective, and efficient medium by using sugarcane bagasse (SB) as abase material to replace the conventional Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium.Materials and Methods: Water extracts of SB along with some macronutrients and plant growth regulators weregelled with 0.7% agar-agar powder. Nodal segments of Gentiana kurroo were used as explants and inoculatedin the medium and placed in a growth chamber under standard conditions of light and temperature. Out of thetested combinations of plant growth regulators, 0.5 mg/l each of kinetin (KN) and 6-Benzylaminopurine (BAP)showed the excellent shoot multiplication and proliferation rate on the bagasse medium with the same potentialas on the MS medium with an average of 5–6 shoots/explant. In vitro rooting was obtained on half strength MSmedium supplemented with IBA (0.5 mg/l) with an average length of 7–8 cm and 20–25 roots/explant. Theplants were hardened in a mixture of clay loam and farmyard manure in 1:1(w/w) with 70%–80% survival ratewithout any phenotypic aberrations.Conclusion: The results from the present investigation indicate that SB can be used as a cost-effective substituteof MS medium for in vitro propagation of G. kurroo.
RESUMO
ABSTRACT The present study was aimed to evaluate the in vitro antileishmanial activity of four different concentrations of natamycin and nystatin by using MTT 3-(4.5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2.5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide reduction assay. In vitro antileishmanial activity revealed that the IC50 of natamycin (80.49 μg/ml) and nystatin (105.7 μg/ml) was less than that of sodium stibogluconate (127.9 μg/ml), and more than amphotericin B (18.91 μg/ml).