Antimicrobial properties of sinigrin and its hydrolysis products
1998
Shofran, B.G. | Purrington, S.T. | Breidt, F. | Fleming, H.P.
Sinigrin, a thioglucoside of Cruciferae plants, may be enzymatically hydrolyzed to yield up to four distinct aglycones when the plants are injured or mechanically disrupted. These aglycones, allyl isothiocyanate (AITC), allyl cyanide (AC), 1-cyano-2,3-epithiopropane (CETP), and allyl thiocyanate (ATC), were tested for their minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) in broth to 9 species of bacteria and 8 species of yeasts. Sinigrin, AC, and CETP at 1,000 ppm were not inhibitory to any of the bacteria or yeasts tested. The inhibitory activity of ATC was uncertain due to its gradual conversion to AITC. AITC had an MIC of 50 to 1,000 ppm for bacteria and 1 to 4 ppm for nonxerotolerant yeasts, and, against xerotolerant yeasts at 50 ppm, it retarded but did not prevent growth.
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