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Unveiling Biological Activities of Marine Fungi: The Effect of Sea Salt

Applied Sciences 2021 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Micael F. M. Gonçalves, Ana Paço, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Paço, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Paço, Artur Alves Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Ana Paço, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Luís F. Escada, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Manuela S. F. Albuquerque, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Manuela S. F. Albuquerque, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Carlos A. Pinto, Jorge A. Saraiva, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Jorge A. Saraiva, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Artur Alves Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Jorge A. Saraiva, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Sofia Duarte, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Micael F. M. Gonçalves, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Ana Cristina Esteves, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Artur Alves Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Teresa Rocha‐Santos, Artur Alves

Summary

Marine fungi isolated from Portuguese coastal waters were grown in media supplemented with sea salt to mimic their natural environment, with salt addition altering secondary metabolite profiles and increasing production of antifungal and antibacterial compounds in several strains, suggesting that culture conditions mimicking marine salinity are important for bioprospecting marine fungal bioactivity.

There is an urgent need for new substances to overcome current challenges in the health sciences. Marine fungi are known producers of numerous compounds, but the manipulation of growth conditions for optimal compound production can be laborious and time-consuming. In Portugal, despite its very long coastline, there are only a few studies on marine fungi. From a collection of Portuguese marine fungi, we screened for antimicrobial, antioxidant, enzymatic, and cytotoxic activities. Mycelia aqueous extracts, obtained by high pressure-assisted extraction, and methanolic extracts of culture media showed high antioxidant, antimicrobial, and cytotoxic activities. The mycelium extracts of Cladosporium rubrum showed higher antioxidant potential compared to extracts from other fungi. Mycelia and culture media extracts of Aspergillus affinis and Penicillium lusitanum inhibited the growth of Staphylococcus aureus, Kocuria rhizophila, Enterococcus faecalis, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, including multiresistant strains. Penicillium lusitanum and Trichoderma aestuarinum inhibited the growth of clinical strains of Candida albicans, C. glabrata, C. parapsilosis, and C. tropicalis. All extracts from culture media were cytotoxic to Vero cells. Sea salt induced alterations in the mycelium’s chemical composition, leading to different activity profiles.

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