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Nanoemulsion Improves the Antifungal Activity of Allylic Thiocyanates against Yeasts and Filamentous Pathogenic Fungi
Author(s) -
Dalla Lana Daiane F.,
Giuliani Laura M.,
Reolon Jéssica B.,
Lopes William,
Vainstein Marilene H.,
Danielli Letícia J.,
Bergamo Vanessa Z.,
Pippi Bruna,
Apel Miriam A.,
Teixeira Mário L.,
de Oliveira Luis F. S.,
Machado Michel M.,
de Andrade Saulo F.,
Sá Marcus M.,
Ferreira Misael,
Munaretto Laiéli S.,
Cruz Letícia,
Silveira Gustavo P.,
Elayne Edilma,
Fuentefria Alexandre M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
chemistryselect
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.437
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 2365-6549
DOI - 10.1002/slct.201802204
Subject(s) - ergosterol , antifungal , allylic rearrangement , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , in vivo , thiocyanate , chorioallantoic membrane , toxicity , biological activity , biology , in vitro , biochemistry , organic chemistry , catalysis
We report the antifungal and antichemotactic activities of a series of allylic thiocyanates with low toxicity. We also show improved antifungal activity of the most promising compound when used in a nanoemulsion (NE). The 4‐chlorophenyl‐substituted allylic thiocyanate (compound 11 ) exhibited a broad spectrum of antifungal activity and showed antichemotactic effects with 100% reduction in leucocyte migration. Minimal inhibitory concentrations ranged from 25 to 50 μg mL −1 , and the mechanism of action was related to complexation with fungal ergosterol. The NE containing compound 11 enhanced the antifungal activity approximately 64‐fold for dermatophytes and 4‐fold for Candida spp.. Compound 11 was not mutagenic and did not cause cell death or significant haemoloysis, although it exhibited mild dose‐dependent DNA damage. It was not an irritant for chorioallantoic membrane of fertile white eggs and exhibited 100% inhibition of fungal growth in an in vivo model of dermatophytosis. Our data indicate that allylic thiocyanates are very promising for the antifungal potential in nanostructured systems, with associated anti‐inflammatory effect.