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Evaluation of Antibacterial, Antifungal, and Antioxidant Activities of Safflower Natural Dyes during Flowering
Author(s) -
Nidhal Salem,
Kamel Msaâda,
Salem Elkahoui,
Giuseppe Mangano,
Sana Azaeiz,
Imen Ben Slimen,
Sarra Kefi,
Giorgio Pintore,
Férid Limam,
Brahim Marzouk
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biomed research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 2314-6141
pISSN - 2314-6133
DOI - 10.1155/2014/762397
Subject(s) - carthamus , fructification , dpph , abts , antioxidant , antifungal , biology , food science , antimicrobial , botany , horticulture , chemistry , traditional medicine , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , medicine
Two Carthamus tinctorius varieties (Jawhara and 104) were studied in order to investigate their natural dyes contents and biological activities. Obtained results showed that quinochalcone contents and antioxidant activities varied considerably as function of flowering stages. So flowers at fructification stage contained the highest carthamin content with the strongest antioxidant capacity with all assays (FRAP, DPPH, and chelating power methods). In parallel, we showed a decrease in the content of precarthamin. The quantitative variation of these molecules could be due to colour change of C. tinctorius flowers. Correlation analysis indicated that the ABTS method showed the highest correlation coefficients with carthamin and precarthamin contents, that is, 0.886 and 0.973, respectively. Concerning the regional effect, the contents of precarthamin and carthamin varied significantly ( P < 0.05) at studied regions with the optimum production given by samples of Beja (902.41  μ g/g DW and 42.05  μ g/g DW, respectively, at flowering stage). During flowering, the antimicrobial activity of these two natural dyes increased where the maximum inhibitory effect mentioned with carthamin mainly against E. coli (iz = 25.89 mm) at fructification stage. Therefore, the increased frequency of resistance to commonly used antibiotics leads to the search for new effective natural drugs at food and pharmaceutical industries.

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