In Vitro Antibacterial activity of hexane, Chloroform and methanolic extracts of different parts of Acronychia pedunculata grown in Sri Lanka
R.D. Nimantha Karunathilaka, Athige Rajith Niloshan Silva, Chathuranga Bharathee Ranaweera, D.M.R.K. Dissanayake, N.R.M. Nelumdeniya, Ranjith Pathirana, W. D. Ratnasooriya

TL;DR
This study investigates the in vitro antibacterial effects of various solvent extracts from different parts of Acronychia pedunculata, revealing notable activity against Gram-positive bacteria, especially with flower extracts, and providing novel insights for Sri Lankan specimens.
Contribution
It is the first to report the antibacterial activity of different solvent extracts from various parts of Acronychia pedunculata grown in Sri Lanka.
Findings
Flower extracts showed strong activity against S. aureus and B. cereus.
Methanol flower extract had the highest inhibition zone of 13.8mm.
No activity was observed against Gram-negative bacteria P. aeruginosa and E. coli.
Abstract
This study accessed the antibacterial potential in vitro of hexane, chloroform and methanol extracts made from leaves, stem bark, flowers, seeds or roots of Sri Lankan grown Acronychia pedunculata plant against two Gram positive bacteria, Staphylococus aureus (ATCC 25923) and Bacilus cereus (ATCC 11778), and two Gram negative bacteria, Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 9027) and Escherichia coli (ATCC 35218), using agar disc diffusion bioassay technique. The results showed that none the of the extracts provoked an antibacterial action against the two Gram negative bacteria P. aeruginosa and E. coli. Conversely, compared to reference drug, Gentamicin, varying magnitudes of antibacterial activity (concentration: 300 mg/disc) ranging from zero to mild to moderate to strong antibacterial activity was evident with the three solvent systems made from different parts of the plant against the two…
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Taxonomy
MethodsDiffusion
