| Literature DB >> 25505823 |
Elsayed A Elsayed1, Hesham El Enshasy2, Mohammad A M Wadaan3, Ramlan Aziz4.
Abstract
For centuries, macrofungi have been used as food and medicine in different parts of the world. This is mainly attributed to their nutritional value as a potential source of carbohydrates, proteins, amino acids, and minerals. In addition, they also include many bioactive metabolites which make mushrooms and truffles common components in folk medicine, especially in Africa, the Middle East, China, and Japan. The reported medicinal effects of mushrooms include anti-inflammatory effects, with anti-inflammatory compounds of mushrooms comprising a highly diversified group in terms of their chemical structure. They include polysaccharides, terpenoids, phenolic compounds, and many other low molecular weight molecules. The aims of this review are to report the different types of bioactive metabolites and their relevant producers, as well as the different mechanisms of action of mushroom compounds as potent anti-inflammatory agents.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25505823 PMCID: PMC4258329 DOI: 10.1155/2014/805841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Anti-inflammatory compounds of mushrooms.
| Mushroom species | Biomaterial source | Extracting solvent | Bioactive compound | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| WM | 1 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| WM | 3 | Pyrogallol, hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives, flavonoids. | [ |
| FB | 4 | Polysaccharide (fucogalactan) | [ | |
|
| WM | 2 | Polysaccharide (proteoglucan) | [ |
|
| FB | 3 | Fatty acids | [ |
|
| FB | 2 | Agrocybin | [ |
|
| FB | 3 | Phenolic compound (Grifolinones A, B) | [ |
|
| FB | 2, 3, 4 | Crude extract | [ |
|
| WM | 3 | polysaccharides, | [ |
|
| WM | 3 | Pyrogallol, flavonoids, polysaccharides | [ |
|
| WM | 2 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| SC/FB | 4 | Crude extract | [ |
|
| FB | 3 | Crude extract | [ |
|
| FB | 3 | Polysaccharides (Glucans) | [ |
|
| SC | 5 | Diterpenoid | [ |
|
| SC | 5 | Diterpenoid | [ |
|
| FB | N.M. | Benzophenones (daldinals A-C) | [ |
|
| FB | 4 | Syringaldehyde, syringic acid | [ |
|
| WM | 4 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| SC | 4 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| SC | 5, 6 | Agaricoglycerides | [ |
| SC | 3, 5, | Ergosterol (1-oleoyl-2-linoleoyl-3-palmitoylglycerol) | [ | |
|
| FB | 4 | Triterpene | [ |
| FB | 4 | Lucidenic acid, ganoderic acid | [ | |
|
| FB | 4 | Polysaccharides ( | [ |
| FB | 2, 4, 5 | Crude extract | [ | |
|
| FB | 8, 5 | Ergosterols, lanosterol, inotodiol, trametenolic acid | [ |
| FB | 3 | Crude extract | [ | |
| FB | 4 | Crude extract | [ | |
|
| WM | 3 | Pyrogallol, flavonoids | [ |
|
| FB | 2, 4 | Polysaccharides: (1→3), (1→6)- | [ |
|
| FB | 2 | Heterogalactan (fucomannogalactan) with main chain of (1→6)-linked | [ |
|
| SC | 4 | Crude extract | [ |
|
| FB | 3 | Polysaccharides: (1–3) and (1–6) | [ |
|
| FB | 9 | Polysaccharides (proteoglycan) | [ |
| FB | 4, 7, 9 | Crude extract | [ | |
|
| WM | 4, 6, 10 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| FB | N.M. | Polysaccharides (1→3), (1→6)-linked | [ |
| FB | 2, 4 | Polysaccharides (Glucan) | [ | |
|
| SC | 4 | Polysaccharides | [ |
|
| SC/FB | 4 | Crude polysaccharide extract | [ |
WM, whole mushroom; SC, submerged culture; FB, fruiting bodies.
Solvent: N.M., not mentioned; 1, chloroform; 2, water; 3, methanol; 4, ethanol; 5, ethyl acetate; 6, acetone; 7, n-hexane; 8, petroleum ether; 9, n-butanol; 10, acetyl ether.
Figure 1Molecular structure of β-(1→3)-D-glucans (a) and α-(1→3)-D-glucans (b).
Examples of biological studies performed with anti-inflammatory compounds from mushrooms.
| Bioactive compound/mushroom species | Assay model | Results/mechanism of action | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polysaccharides | |||
|
| (i) Mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) stimulated with PMA + A23187 | (i) Inhibition of IL-6 production, downregulation of phosphorylation of Akt, inhibition of | [ |
| (i) Male Swiss mice (acetic acid induced inflammation) | (i) Dose-dependent anti-inflammatory response, inhibition of leukocyte migration (82%), IC50 of 1.19 (0.74–1.92) mg/kg, 3 mg/kg i.p. glucan injection reduced 85% of writhes | [ | |
|
| (ii) Mice (3.5% dextran sulfate sodium, DSS in drinking water for 14 days, with 20 mg fruiting body or mycelia extract/mouse/day) | (ii) Fruiting body and mycelia extracts suppressed inflammatory reactions | [ |
| (iii) Acetic acid induced colitis in rats (2% pleuran, or 0.44% hydrogel for 4 weeks) | (iii) Reduction in macroscopic damage score by 51 and 67% for pleuran diet and hydrogel, respectively; reduction in the activity of myeloperoxidase and neutrophil infiltration | [ | |
| (iv) Murine macrophage RAW264.7 cells, female Balb/C mice | (iv) Suppression of LPS-induced dependent activation of TNF- | [ | |
|
| (i) Male Swiss mice treated with 10, 30, and 50 mg/kg with mushroom glucan | (i) 50 mg/kg glucan reduced inflammatory infiltrate produced by thioglycolate-induced peritonitis by 75.5%, reduced NO level, IL-1ra, IL-10, and IFN- | [ |
|
| (i) Swiss mice, formalin-induced nociception, 30 mg/kg i.p. of fruiting body extract (soluble, insoluble, and modified) | (i) Inhibition of neurogenic pain by 36, 47, and 58% for soluble, insoluble, and modified glucans, respectively | [ |
|
| (i) Male Swiss mice, formalin-induced licking | (i) Inhibition of neurogenic and inflammatory phases, antinociceptive effect with IC50 of 36.0 (25.8–50.3 mg/kg) | [ |
|
| (i) Male Swiss mice, acetic acid induced inflammation, 3–100 mg/kg i.p. fruiting body concentrate | (i) Inhibition of induced nociception with IC50 of 13.8 (7.8–23.5) mg/kg, 97% inhibition at 100 mg/kg | [ |
|
| (i) Carrageenan-induced paw edema in male Sprague-Dawley rats, murine macrophage RAW 264.7 cells | (i) Dose-dependent inhibition of NO, intracellular O2
− production | [ |
|
| (i) Acetic acid induced writhing in male ICR mice, formalin test, xylene, and carrageenan induced ear edema | (i) Inhibition of ear swelling by 61.8, 79.0, and 81.6% for treatment with dry matter of the culture broth (1000 mg/kg), crude saponin extract (200 mg/kg), or crude polysaccharide extract (200 mg/kg), respectively | [ |
|
| (i) Croton oil induced ear edema and acetic acid induced writhing in male ICR mice | (i) Extract treatment with 1 mg/ear gave 45 and 41.5% inhibition in ear plug weight and thickness, respectively, oral administration of extract (100–400 mg/kg) inhibited writhing number (35.9–68.9%) | [ |
|
| (i) Xylene induced ear edema, adult Swiss mice and Sprague-Dawley rats, formaldehyde, egg albumin, and carrageenan induced paw edema in rats and mice | (i) Extract (5 mg/ear) inhibited ear edema, suppression of egg albumin, carrageenan and formaldehyde-induced paw edema at 100–400 mg/kg i.p., 10.96–43.75% inhibition of granuloma tissue growth, no production of gastric lesions in rats | [ |
|
| (i) Male Wistar rats, fed 100–300 mg/kg mushroom for 30 days | (i) Decreased levels of CD4+ CD8+, MPO, and ICAM-1, with increased level in IL-10 in serum | [ |
|
| |||
| Terpenoids | |||
|
| (i) Mouse monocyte-macrophage RAW 264.7 cells, NO assay | (i) Cyathins D-H 3 and 5, neosarcodonin, and 11-O-acetylcyatha-triol inhibited NO production with an IC50 value of 2.75, 1.47, 12.0, and 10.73 | [ |
|
| (i) Mouse monocyte-macrophage RAW 264.7 cells, NO assay | (i) Inhibition of NO production with an IC50 of 15.5, 52.3, and 16.8 | [ |
|
| (i) LPS-stimulated murine macrophage RAW 264.7 cells, NO assay | (i) Inhibition of TNF- | [ |
| (ii) Acetic acid induced ear edema in female ICR and SENCAR mice | (ii) Significant inhibition of inflammation (1 | [ | |
| (i) Reduced nitrate levels by an average of 50%, dose-dependent inhibition of IL-1 | [ | ||
|
|
| (ii) Trametenolic acid, ergosterol peroxide, 3 | [ |
| (iii) Methanolic extract inhibited production of NO, prostaglandin E2, and TNF- | [ | ||
|
| |||
| Peptides | |||
|
| (i) Acetic acid induced inflammation in mice | (i) Decreased level of TNF- | [ |
|
| |||
| Phenolics | |||
|
| (i) LPS-stimulated RAW 364.7 macrophage cells, nitrite, and cytokine assays | (i) 0.5 mg/mL mushroom extract inhibited NO production and expression of iNOS, IL-1 | [ |
|
| (i) LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophage cells | (i) Daldinals suppressed NO production with IC50 values ranging between 4.6 and 15.2 | [ |
|
| (i) LPS-stimulated mouse macrophage RAW 264.7 cells | (i) Grifolins inhibited NO production with IC50 values ranging between 22.9 and 29 | [ |
|
| |||
| Syringaldehyde and syringic acid | |||
|
| (i) Mouse macrophage RAW 264.7 cells | (i) Crude ethanolic extract (50 | [ |
|
| |||
| Agaricoglycerides | |||
|
| (i) Acetic acid- and formalin-induced inflammation in Wister rats, treatment with orally fed extracts (100–500 mg/kg/day) | (i) 500 mg/kg/day inhibited induced upregulation of NF- | [ |
Figure 2Examples of some terpenoid bioactive compounds isolated from edible mushrooms.
Figure 3Structures of different ganoderic acids and derivative isolated from G. lucidum.
Figure 4Structures of different sterol compounds isolated from I. obliquus.
Figure 5Chemical structures of (a) daldinal and (b) pyrogallol.
Figure 6Grifolin and neogrifolins isolated from Albatrellus mushrooms.
Figure 7Structure of anti-inflammatory compounds isolated from edible truffles.