IDENTIFICATION OF COMPONENTS IN KAZAKHSTAN HONEYS THAT CORRELATE WITH ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITY AGAINST WOUND AND SKIN INFECTING MICROORGANISMS
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Authors
McLoone, Pauline
Zhumbayeva, Aizhan
Yunussova, Sofiya
Kaliyev, Yerkhat
Yevstafeva, Ludmila
Verrall, Susan
Sungurtas, Julie
Austin, Ceri
Allwood, J. Will
McDougall, Gordon J.
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BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies
Abstract
Background: Antimicrobial drug resistance is a major public health threat that can render infections including
wound and skin infections untreatable. The discovery of new antimicrobials is critical. Approaches to discover novel
antimicrobial therapies have included investigating the antimicrobial activity of natural sources such as honey. In this
study, the anti-microbial activity and chemical composition of 12 honeys from Kazakhstan and medical grade manuka
honey were investigated.
Methods: Agar well diffusion and broth culture assays were used to determine anti-microbial activity against a
range of skin and wound infecting micro-organisms. Folin-Ciocalteu method was used to determine the total phenol
content of the honeys and non-targeted liquid chromatography analysis was performed to identify components that
correlated with antimicrobial activity.
Results: In the well diffusion assay, the most susceptible micro-organisms were a clinical isolate of Methicillin
resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Enterococcus faecalis (ATCC 19433). Buckwheat & multi-floral honey from
Kazakhstan demonstrated the highest antimicrobial activity against these two micro-organisms. Kazakhstan honeys
with a buckwheat floral source, and manuka honey had the highest total phenol content. Non-targeted liquid chromatography
analysis identified components that correlated with anti-microbial activity as hydroxyphenyl acetic acid,
p-coumaric acid, (1H)–quinolinone, and abscisic acid.
Conclusions: The Kazakhstan honeys selected in this study demonstrated antimicrobial activity against wound and
skin infecting micro-organisms. Compounds identified as correlating with antimicrobial activity could be considered
as potential bioactive agents for the treatment of wound and skin infections.
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McLoone, P., Zhumbayeva, A., Yunussova, S., Kaliyev, Y., Yevstafeva, L., Verrall, S., Sungurtas, J., Austin, C., Allwood, J. W., & McDougall, G. J. (2021). Identification of components in Kazakhstan honeys that correlate with antimicrobial activity against wound and skin infecting microorganisms. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies, 21(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12906-021-03466-0
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