Fitoterapia
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Fruits from Apium graveolens (Celery) are used traditionally in Persian and European medicine for the treatment of uncomplicated urinary tract infections. No data are available on A. graveolens extract on the interplay between uropathogenic E. coli and the eukaryotic host cells and on quorum sensing of the bacteria. The present study aimed to characterize an antiadhesive and anti quorum sensing effect of a characterized A. graveolens extract by specific in vitro assays and to correlate these effects with in vivo data obtained by an animal infection model. ⋯ CSE exerts a dose dependent antiadhesive activity against UPEC strains NU14 and UTI89. CSE inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner bacterial quorum sensing. 4- and 7-day pretreatment of animals with CSE transurethrally infected with UPEC NU14, significantly reduced the bacterial load in bladder tissue. CSE is assessed as an antiadhesive extract for which the traditional use in phytotherapy for UTI is justified.