Effect of a Vietnamese <i>Cinnamomum cassia</i> essential oil and its major component <i>trans</i>-cinnamaldehyde on the cell viability, membrane integrity, membrane fluidity, and proton motive force of <i>Listeria innocua</i>
Nga-Thi-Thanh Trinh, Emilie Dumas, Mai Le Thanh, Pascal Degraeve, Chedia Ben Amara, Adem Gharsallaoui +1 more
Canadian Journal of Microbiology
Abstract
The antibacterial mechanism of a Cinnamomum cassia essential oil from Vietnam and of its main component (trans-cinnamaldehyde, 90% (m/m) of C. cassia essential oil) against a Listeria innocua strain was investigated to estimate their potential for food preservation. In the presence of C. cassia essential oil or trans-cinnamaldehyde at their minimal bactericidal concentration (2700 μg·mL(-1)), L. innocua cells fluoresced green after staining with Syto9® and propidium iodide, as observed by epifluorescence microscopy, suggesting that the perturbation of membrane did not cause large pore formation and cell lysis but may have introduced the presence of viable but nonculturable bacteria. Moreover, the fluidity, potential, and intracellular pH of the cytoplasmic membrane were perturbed in the presence of the essential oil or trans-cinnamaldehyde. However, these membrane perturbations were less severe in the presence of trans-cinnamaldehyde than in the presence of multicomponent C. cassia essential oil. This indicates that in addition to trans-cinnamaldehyde, other minor C. cassia essential oil components play a major role in its antibacterial activity against L. innocua cells.
Extracted Claims
9 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
trans-cinnamaldehyde perturbs membrane
“In the presence of C. cassia essential oil or trans-cinnamaldehyde at their minimal bactericidal concentration (2700 μg·mL(-1)), L. innocua cells fluoresced green after staining with Syto9® and propid...”
Cinnamomum cassia essential oil perturbs membrane fluidity
“Moreover, the fluidity, potential, and intracellular pH of the cytoplasmic membrane were perturbed in the presence of the essential oil or trans-cinnamaldehyde”
minor C. cassia essential oil components play a major role antibacterial activity
“This indicates that in addition to trans-cinnamaldehyde, other minor C. cassia essential oil components play a major role in its antibacterial activity against L. innocua cells”