Science | Nature | Cell | View More
Bioactive Products
Antibacterial Compound Library
A unique collection of 184 natural compounds used for Antibacterial research.
Catalog No: Bb192 Antibacterial Compound Library
Screening Details
Size: 1mg/well * 184 Compounds
2mg/well * 184 Compounds
Cat. No. Information
CFN90271 Cyclo(Phe-Pro)

Cyclo(Phe-Pro) inhibition of cholera toxin and toxin-coregulated pilus production correlated with reduced transcription of the virulence regulator tcpPH and was alleviated by overexpression of tcpPH.Cyclo(Phe-Pro) has been shown to inhibit cancer cell growth and induce apoptosis in HT-29 colon cancer cells.
CFN90272 Cyclo(Pro-Gly)

Cyclo(Pro-Gly) is an active metabolite of piracetam-N-phenylacetyl-L-prolylglycine (GWS-111), it shows a greater resistance to an enzymatic effect than natural neuropeptides. Cyclo-(Gly-Pro) shows cytotoxicity at the concentration of 10 umol/L, it inhibits the growth of Bacillus subtilis with the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) value of 0.8, 0.8 g/L.
CFN97723 Isopimaric acid

Isopimaric acid is active against MDR and MRSA strains of S. aureus which are becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics, the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) are 32-64 microg/mL . Isopimaric acid is also possible that an antagonistic interaction with reserpine may render the antibiotics inactive.
CFN90275 Cyclo(Pro-Val)

Cyclo(Pro-Val) shows cyctoxic, moderate antifungal and weak antitumor activities in vitro, it can inhibit the growth of Bacillus subtilis with the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) value of 0.8 g/L. Cyclo(Pro-Val) and cyclo(Pro-Tyr) are toxic to both suspension cells and seedlings of Pinus thunbergii, which may offer some clues to research the mechanism of pine wilt disease caused by pine wood nematode.
CFN90276 Cyclo(Tyr-Pro)

Cyclo(Tyr-Pro) shows antibacterial activity towards several marine bacterial species, it also shows weak antagonistic activity against VEGFR2 -CD. Cyclo(Tyr-Pro) and cyclo(Pro-Val) are toxic to both suspension cells and seedlings of Pinus thunbergii, which may offer some clues to research the mechanism of pine wilt disease caused by pine wood nematode.