ReviewOpen Access
A review of ethnobotany, phytochemistry, antimicrobial pharmacology and toxicology of Nigella sativa L.
Authors
Author Affiliations
International Islamic University Malaysia, Mawlana Bhashani Science and Technology University, University of Malaya, Monash University Malaysia, ...
Published InBiomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
Year2021
Citations87
Abstract
Nigella sativa L. is one of the most extensively used traditional medicinal plants. This widely studied plant is known to display diverse pharmacological actions, including antimicrobial activities. Current literature has documented its multi-target mode of antimicrobial actions. N. sativa or its bioactive compounds, such as thymoquinone, can induce oxidative stress, cell apoptosis (by producing reactive oxygen species), increase membrane permeability, inhibit efflux pumps, and impose strong biocidal actions. Despite its well-documented antimicrobial efficacy in the experimental model, to the best of our knowledge its antimicrobial mechanisms highlighting the multi-targeting properties have yet to be well discussed. Is N. sativa or thymoquinone a valuable lead compound for therapeutic development for infectious diseases? Are N. sativa's bioactive compounds potential antimicrobial agents or…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.