Full-text resources of PSJD and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


Preferences help
enabled [disable] Abstract
Number of results
2015 | 26 | 104 | 146-152

Article title

Analysis of the content of phenolic compounds in in vitro culture of some edible mushrooms (Basidiomycota)

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN EO

Abstracts

EN
Phenolic compounds, both derivatives of benzoic and cinnammic acid, possess biologically valuable properties: anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anticarcinogenic and others. Studies of the accumulation of these compounds focused mostly on plant material. Rich sources of these compounds are representatives of Basidiomycota taxon. The aim of the study was qualitative and quantitative HPLC analysis of phenolic acids in biomass from in vitro culture of selected edible mushroom species belonging to the phylum Basidiomycota: Agaricus bisporus, Boletus badius, Cantharellus cibarius. The investigations revealed the presence of the following acids: p-hydroxybenzoic, syringic and galic acid. Both the composition and the amount of phenolic acids in biomass of A. bisporus and Boletus badius were diverse. The total amount ranged from 6.07 mg·100 g−1 DW in A. bisporus to 14.78 mg·100 g−1 DW in Boletus badius. Syryngic acid amounts fluctuated in the range of 1.75–9.66 mg·100 g−1 DW, with its maximum in Boletus badius. Gallic acid dominated in the biomass of the same species (5.12 mg·100 g−1 DW). p-Hydroxybenzoic acid was found in biomass from in vitro culture of A. bisporus at levels 0.70 mg/100 g DW. In biomass of in vitro culture of Cantharellus cibarius no phenolic compounds were found before and after hydrolysis. The results of HPLC analyses show that in vitro culture of B. badius and A. bisporus are a good dietary source of phenolic compounds with antioxidant activity.

Discipline

Year

Volume

26

Issue

104

Pages

146-152

Physical description

Contributors

  • Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, ul. Medyczna 9, Kraków 30-688, Poland
  • Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, ul. Medyczna 9, Kraków 30-688, Poland
  • Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, ul. Medyczna 9, Kraków 30-688, Poland
  • Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, ul. Medyczna 9, Kraków 30-688, Poland
  • Department of Pharmaceutical Botany, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, ul. Medyczna 9, Kraków 30-688, Poland
  • Department of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum, Medyczna 9, 30-688 Kraków, Poland

References

  • 1. Vermerris, W.; Nicholson, R. Phenolic compounds and their effects on human health Phenolic compound biochemistry. Springer, 2006, 235-255.
  • 2. Scalbert, A.; Manach, C.; Morand, C.; Remesy, C.; Jimenez, J. Dietary polyphenols and the prevention of diseases. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr, 2005, 45, 287-306.
  • 3. Singh, M.; Arseneault, M.; Sanderson, T.; Murthy, V.; Ramassamy, C. Challenges for research on polyphenols from foods in Alzheimer’s disease:bioavability, metabolism and cellular and molecular mechanism J. Agric. Food Chem. 2008, 56, 4855-4873.
  • 4. Muszyńska, B.; Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Ekiert, H. Phenolic acids in selected edible Basidomycota species: Armillaria mellea, Boletus badius, Boletus edulis, Cantharellus cibarius, Lactarius deliciosus, and Pleurotus ostreatus. Acta Sci. Pol. 2013, 12, 107-116.
  • 5. Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Muszyńska, B.; Motyl, P.; Ekiert, H.; Pasko, P. Phenolic compounds and antioxidant activity in some species of polyporoid mushrooms from Poland. Int J Med Mushroom, 2012, 14, 385-393.
  • 6. Barros, L.; Dueñas, M.; Ferreira, ICRF.; Baptista, P.; Santos-Buelga, C. Phenolic acids determination by HPLC–DAD–ESI/MS in sixteen different Portuguese wild mushrooms species. Food Chem Toxicol, 2009, 47, 1076–1079.
  • 7. Palacios, I.; Lozano, M.; Moro, C.; D’Arrigo, M.; Rostagno, M. A.; Martínez, J. A.; García-Lafuente, A.; Guillamó, E.; Villares, A. Antioxidant properties of phenolic compounds occurring in edible mushrooms. Food Chem, 2011, 128, 674-678.
  • 8. Koyalamudi, S.R.; Jeong, S.C.; Song, C.H.; Cho, K.Y.; Pang, G. Vitamin D2 formation and bioavailability from Agaricus bisporus button mushrooms treated with ultraviolet irradiation. J Agr Food Chem, 2008, 57: 3351–3355
  • 9. Valentão, P.; Andrade, P. B.; Rangel, J.; Ribeiro, B.; Silva, B. M.; Baptista, P.; Seabra, R. M.; Effect of the Conservation Procedure on the Contents of Phenolic Compounds and Organic Acids in Chanterelle (Cantharellus cibarius) Mushroom. J Agric Food Chem. 2005, 53, 4925 – 4931.
  • 10. Barros, L, Cruz, T., Baptista, P., Estevinho, L.M., Ferreira, ICFR.Wild and commercial mushrooms as source of nutrients and nutraceuticals. Food Chem Toxicol, 2008, 46: 2742 – 2747
  • 11. Li H. Antioxidant and Anti-Inflamatory Activities of Methanol Extracts of Tremella fuciformis and Its Major Phenolic Acids. J Food Scien, 2014, 79, C460-C468.
  • 12. Muszyńska, B.; Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Ekiert, H. Analysis of indole compounds in methanolic extracts from the fruiting bodies of Cantharellus cibarius (the Chanterelle) and from the mycelium of this species cultured in vitro. J Food Science Technol, 2013, 50, 1233-1237.
  • 13. Reis, F. S.; et al. Antioxidant properties and phenolic profile of the most widely appreciated cultivated mushrooms: A comparative study between in vivo and in vitro samples. Food Chem Toxicol, 2012, 50, 1201-1207.
  • 14. Kalaras, M.D., Beelman, R.B., Holick, M.F., Elias, R.J.,. Generation of potentially bioactive ergosterol- derived products following pulsed ultraviolet light exposure of mushrooms (Agaricus bisporus). Food Chem, 2012, 135, 396–401
  • 15. Ey, J., Schömi, E., Taubert, D., Dietary sources and antioxidant effects of ergothioneine. J Agr Food Chem, 2007, 55, 6466–74.
  • 16. Knudsen, H.; and Vesterholt, J. Funga Nordica: agaricoid, boletoid and cyphelloid genera. Copenhagen, Nordsvamp, 2008
  • 17. Oddoux L. (ed.). Recherches sur les mycéliums secondaires des Homobasidiés en culture pure. Imprimerie de Trevoux, Lyon., 1957.
  • 18. Ellnain-Wojtaszek, M.; Zgórka, G. Highperformance liquid chromatography and thin-leyer chromatography of phenolic acids from Gingko biloba L. leaves collected within vegetative period J Liq Chrom Rel Tech, 1999, 22, 1459-71.
  • 19. Muszyńska, B.; Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Ekiert, H. Indole compounds in fruiting bodies of some selected Macromycetes species and in their mycelia cultured in vitro. Pharmazie, 2009, 64, 479-480.
  • 20. Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Ekiert, H.; Muszyńska, B. Analysis of indole compounds from the fruiting bodies and the culture mycelia of Sarcodon imbricatus. Mycoscience 2013, 55, 164-167.
  • 21. Muszyńska, B.; Sułkowska-Ziaja, K.; Ekiert, H. An antioxidant in fruiting bodies and in mycelia from in vitro cultures of Calocera viscosa (Basidiomycota) – preliminary results. Acta Pol Pharm Drug Res, 2012, 69, 135-138.

Document Type

article

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.psjd-51da4493-941f-493e-93c5-f7002a5a77b7
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.