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Eduard Bardají

Researcher at University of Girona

Publications -  22
Citations -  535

Eduard Bardají is an academic researcher from University of Girona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Antimicrobial peptides & Solid-phase synthesis. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications receiving 469 citations.

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A library of linear undecapeptides with bactericidal activity against phytopathogenic bacteria.

TL;DR: The peptide H-KKLFKKILKYL-NH(2) (BP100) showed efficacies in flowers of 63-76% at 100 microM, being more potent than BP76 and only less effective than streptomycin, currently used for fire blight control.
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Synthetic antimicrobial peptides as agricultural pesticides for plant-disease control.

TL;DR: Suitable compounds have been submitted to acute toxicity testing in higher organisms and exhibited a low toxicity profile in a mouse model, and anti‐infective activity has been evaluated in plant–pathogen model systems.
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Sporicidal activity of synthetic antifungal undecapeptides and control of Penicillium rot of apples.

TL;DR: The antifungal activity of cecropin A(2-8)-melittin(6-9) hybrid undecapeptides, previously reported as active against plant pathogenic bacteria, was studied and a significant inverse linear relationship was observed between survival and fluorescence, indicating membrane disruption.
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Prediction of antibacterial activity from physicochemical properties of antimicrobial peptides.

TL;DR: This work fully develops an interaction model of antimicrobial peptides with biological membranes and arrives at a relationship that provides antibacterial activity prediction from two biophysical parameters: the affinity of the peptide to the membrane and the critical bound peptides to lipid ratio.
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Derivatives of the antimicrobial peptide BP100 for expression in plant systems.

TL;DR: A strategy for the modification of the antimicrobial undecapeptide BP100 was reported that allowed the identification of analogues that can be expressed in plants and exhibit optimum biological properties, and these findings may contribute to the design of peptides to be expression in plants.