| Literature DB >> 29195984 |
Yu Jin Park1, Eun Sung Jung1, Digar Singh1, Da Eun Lee1, Seunghwan Kim2, Young Wook Lee3, Jeong-Gu Kim4, Choong Hwan Lee5.
Abstract
The beech mushrooms have customarily been revered by oriental societies for their nutritional and health benefits. We explored the mass spectrometry (MS) based spatial metabolomic variations between parts (cap and stipe) of two beech mushroom strains (brown and white). The principal component analysis (PCA) revealed their distinct primary (cap and stipe: PC1, 25.5%; strains: PC2, 12.5%) and secondary (cap and stipe: PC1, 10.3%; strains: PC2, 7.6%) metabolite patterns. The caps were rich in amino acids, fatty acids, and N-acetylglucosamine with higher protein and nitrogen contents. The stipes had abundant β-glucans, malic acid, and fructose. The discriminant secondary metabolites, especially, hypsiziprenols were higher in caps from brown strains. A fatty acid derivative, azelaic acid, was abundant in white strains (cap>stipe). We established a positive correlation for the cytotoxic activities of hypsiziprenols against ACHN cells. These spatial inter-strain metabolomic distinctions are potentially helpful for mushroom selection and improvement.Entities:
Keywords: Beech mushrooms; Cytotoxic activity; GC-TOF-MS; Hypsiziprenol; Metabolite profiling; UHPLC-MS/MS
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29195984 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2017.09.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Res Int ISSN: 0963-9969 Impact factor: 6.475