SYNERGISTIC ACTIVITY OF ANTIBIOTICS AND BIOACTIVE PLANT EXTRACTS AGAINST PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
Navroop Kaur*, Deepali Vashisth, Jaya Malik, Mohit Chaudhary, MS Laxmi, Rupal Chauhan, Abhishek Tomer, Premnidhi Yadav, Gayatri Sharma, Saumyata Sahay, Lajmi Porwal, Tisha Gupta, Anjali Chaturvedi, Aaditya Satsangi, Anjali Sharma, Mohammed Tafs
ABSTRACT
Antibiotics provide the main basis for the therapy of microbial (bacterial and fungal) infections. Since the discovery of these antibiotics and their uses as chemotherapeutic agents there was a belief in the medical fraternity that this would lead to the eventual eradication of infectious diseases. There is a continuous and urgent need to discover new antimicrobial compounds with diverse chemical structures and novel mechanisms of action because there has been an alarming increase in the incidence of new and re-emerging infectious diseases. Another big concern is the development of resistance to the antibiotics in current clinical use. In recent years, drug resistance to human pathogenic bacteria has been commonly reported from all over the world. In the present scenario of emergence of multiple drug resistance to human pathogenic organisms, this has necessitated a search for new antimicrobial substances from other sources including plants. Higher plants produce hundreds to thousands of diverse chemical compounds with different biological activities. The antimicrobial compounds produced by plants are active against plant and human pathogenic microorganisms. It is expected that plant extracts showing target sites other than those used by antibiotics will be active against drug-resistant microbial pathogens.
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