| Literature DB >> 24912706 |
Bing-Zhao Zhang1, Kari T Inngjerdingen2, Yuan-Feng Zou2, Frode Rise3, Terje E Michaelsen4, Pei-Sheng Yan5, Berit S Paulsen2.
Abstract
Exo-polysaccharides were purified and characterized from the fermentation broth of Hypsizigus marmoreus, a popular edible mushroom consumed in Asia. Among them, B-I-I and B-II-I exhibited potent complement fixating activity, meanwhile, B-N-I, B-I-I, B-II-I and B-II-II exhibited significant macrophage stimulating activity. Molecular weights of the four exo-polysaccharides were determined to be 6.3, 120, 150 and 11 kDa respectively. Molecular characterisation showed that B-N-I is basically an α-1→4 glucan, with branches on C6; B-I-I is a heavily branched α-mannan with 1→2 linked main chain. B-II-I and B-II-II, have a backbone of rhamno-galacturonan with 1→2 linked l-rhamnose interspersed with 1→4 linked galacturonic acid. Structure-activity relationship analysis indicated that monosaccharide compositions, molecular weight, certain structural units (rhamno-galacturonan type I and arabinogalactan type II) are the principal factors responsible for potent complement fixating and macrophage-stimulating activities. Their immunomodulating activities may, at least partly, explain the health benefits of the mushroom.Entities:
Keywords: Complement fixating; Hypsizigus marmoreus; Macrophage stimulating; Molecular structures; Polysaccharides
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24912706 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2014.04.092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514