Phytochemical Profiles and Antimicrobial Activity of Selected Populus spp. Bud Extracts

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Abstract

Buds of poplar trees (Populus species) are often covered with sticky, usually polyphenol-rich, exudates. Moreover, accessible data showed that some Populus bud extracts may be excellent antibacterial agents, especially against Gram-positive bacteria. Due to the fragmentary nature of the data found, we conducted a systematic screening study. The antimicrobial activity of two extract types (semi-polar—ethanolic and polar—ethanolic-water (50/50; V/V)) from 27 bud samples of different poplar taxons were compared. Antimicrobial assays were performed against Gram-positive (five strains) and Gram-negative (six strains) bacteria as well as fungi (three strains) and covered the determination of minimal inhibitory, bactericidal, and fungicidal concentrations. The composition of extracts was later investigated by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with ultraviolet detection (UHPLC-DAD) and with electrospray-quadrupole-time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-ESI-qTOF-MS). As a result, most of the extracts exhibited good (MIC ≤ 62.5 µg/mL) or moderate (62.5

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Okińczyc, P., Widelski, J., Nowak, K., Radwan, S., Włodarczyk, M., Kuś, P. M., … Korona-Głowniak, I. (2024). Phytochemical Profiles and Antimicrobial Activity of Selected Populus spp. Bud Extracts. Molecules, 29(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules29020437

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