Abstract
AbstractA spark of light might unravel antimicrobial activity of colored compounds, which otherwise would have been classified as inactive. While many mushrooms contain such colorful pigments but lack antimicrobial activity, we wondered if a controlled irradiation is needed to unleash their effect. To explore such photoantimicrobial actions in the Kingdom Fungi, an efficient high-throughput-screening (HTS) assay is needed. Here we report on the establishment of a reliable photoantimicrobial assay based on the EUCAST recommendations, which was validated with known photosensitzers (i.e., curcumin, phenalenone, rose bengal, an hypericum extract, and methylene blue). Furthermore, an improved LED-irradiation setup enabling with only 24 LEDs a homogenous irradiation of a 96-well plate is presented. The established HTS-assay was utilized to screen six colorful Cortinarius extracts unrevealing C. xanthophyllus and C. rufo-olivaceus as promising sources for new photoantimicrobials.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory