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Antifungal properties of Mimusops elengiseeds against paddy seed-borne fungi and selected pathogenic fungi 152-158
Malaysian Journal of Microbiology ; : 152-158, 2018.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-732371
ABSTRACT
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Aims:

The ever-revolving fungi strains and environmental and health concerns due to current practice of synthetic pesticide in agricultural fields have encourages more ventures into bio-pesticides research. Mimusops elengi, a widely available endogenous plant intropical countries and most parts of this plant have been proven to possess medicinal and antimicrobial potential. In this study, M.elengiseeds crude extracts are tested for their antifungal activities on paddy seed-borne and pathogenic fungi.Methodology and

results:

The dried and grinded M.elengiseeds are macerated separately using water, methanol, ethyl acetate, dichloromethane and petroleum ether as extraction medium. Crude extract of each solvent wasused on paddy seed surface treatment to determine their antifungal inhibition potential on seed-borne fungi and paddy grain germination. Synthetic fungicide mancozeb and thiram are also tested as comparisons to the performance of plant extracts. Water andmethanol extracts exerted the best fungal inhibiting and grain germination results from the five crude extracts tested and qualitative phytochemical screening reveals both extracts contained the most number of phytoconstituents including saponin, flavonoids, alkaloids, tannins and phenolic. Water extract, methanol extracts and synthetic fungicides are then subjected to in-vitro bioassay to observe their effect on mycelial growth of several fungi strains pathogenic to paddy namely, Fusarium fujikuroi,Curvularia aeria,C.lunata andC.eragrostidis.Water and methanol extracts showed a very similar trend of inhibition on all four fungi strains tested with best percentage of inhibition on mycelia growth of C.eragrostidisfollowed by C. aeria, C. lunataand least effective on F.fujikuroi. Further separation of crude extract need to be done to isolate the specific acting compounds contributing to fungal growth inhibition.Conclusion, significance and impact of studyBoth water and methanol extracts of the seeds contain promising antifungal properties on seed borne fungi which is as good as the synthetic fungicides compared in this study. A broad range of active phytochemical properties it possesses may be the contributing factor for the fungal growth inhibition. This preliminary screening could narrow down the potential of this seed extracts as natural antifungal agents and the acting active compounds.

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Qualitative research Language: English Journal: Malaysian Journal of Microbiology Year: 2018 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Qualitative research Language: English Journal: Malaysian Journal of Microbiology Year: 2018 Type: Article