| Literature DB >> 34071432 |
Harsh Kumar1, Kanchan Bhardwaj2, Ruchi Sharma1, Eugenie Nepovimova3, Natália Cruz-Martins4,5,6, Daljeet Singh Dhanjal7, Reena Singh7, Chirag Chopra7, Rachna Verma2, Kamel A Abd-Elsalam8, Ashwani Tapwal9, Kamil Musilek3, Dinesh Kumar1, Kamil Kuča3,10.
Abstract
Currently, the food and agricultural sectors are concerned about environmental problems caused by raw material waste, and they are looking for strategies to reduce the growing amount of waste disposal. Now, approaches are being explored that could increment and provide value-added products from agricultural waste to contribute to the circular economy and environmental protection. Edible mushrooms have been globally appreciated for their medicinal properties and nutritional value, but during the mushroom production process nearly one-fifth of the mushroom gets wasted. Therefore, improper disposal of mushrooms and untreated residues can cause fungal disease. The residues of edible mushrooms, being rich in sterols, vitamin D2, amino acids, and polysaccharides, among others, makes it underutilized waste. Most of the published literature has primarily focused on the isolation of bioactive components of these edible mushrooms; however, utilization of waste or edible mushrooms themselves, for the production of value-added products, has remained an overlooked area. Waste of edible mushrooms also represents a disposal problem, but they are a rich source of important compounds, owing to their nutritional and functional properties. Researchers have started exploiting edible mushroom by-products/waste for value-added goods with applications in diverse fields. Bioactive compounds obtained from edible mushrooms are being used in media production and skincare formulations. Furthermore, diverse applications from edible mushrooms are also being explored, including the synthesis of biosorbent, biochar, edible films/coating, probiotics, nanoparticles and cosmetic products. The primary intent of this review is to summarize the information related to edible mushrooms and their valorization in developing value-added products with industrial applications.Entities:
Keywords: edible mushrooms; food products; industrial applications; waste valorization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34071432 PMCID: PMC8226799 DOI: 10.3390/jof7060427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Utilization of edible mushrooms and their residues in novel industrial products.
Mushrooms fortified in ready-to-eat (RTE) and ready-to-cook (RTC) foods.
| Edible Mushroom Common Name | Scientific Name | Food Product | Beneficial Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milky white |
| Cookies | Increase in protein, fiber, minerals and β-glucan, phenolic, flavonoids and antioxidants; decrease in starch, reduction in glycemic index | [ |
| Oyster |
| Biscuits | Increase in concentration of protein, dietary fiber, ash and reduction in carbohydrate | [ |
| Shiitake |
| Chips | Improvement in quality attributes (color, sensory evaluation) | [ |
| Oyster |
| Biscuits | Enhancement of nutritional quality | [ |
| White button |
| Ketchup | Increase in ash content, crude fiber, protein, total soluble solids, and reducing sugars; decrease in total sugars | [ |
| Oyster |
| Jam | Increase in total soluble solids, percent acidity and reducing sugar, decrease in pH and non-reducing sugar | [ |
| White button |
| Mushroom tikki and stuffed mushroom | Increase in protein, dietary fiber, antioxidant and phenolic components | [ |
| Oyster |
| Soup | Increase in nutritional value | [ |
| Chestnut |
| Snacks | Manipulation of glycemic | [ |
| Oyster |
| Biscuit | Increase in the mineral content | [ |
| Oyster |
| Vegetable mixture diets | Highly acceptable, nutritious, delicious, ready-to-eat diet | [ |
| Oyster |
| Processed cheese spreads | High moisture, ash and protein content, total viable counts and spore former bacteria was lower in processed cheese supplemented with mushrooms | [ |
| Oyster |
| Biscuit | Higher moisture, protein, ash content, higher hardness, darker and redder in color | [ |
| Oyster |
| Spreadable processed cheese | Increase in total solids, protein, fibers and carbohydrates | [ |
| Oyster |
| chicken patty | Reduction in fat content, no change in protein and β-glucan | [ |
| White button |
| Pasta | Improved antioxidant activity, increase moisture content, carbohydrates, decreased crude fiber, crude protein, and fat | [ |
| Oyster |
| Cookies | High protein content, low-fat content, high fiber, minerals and vitamin content | [ |
| White button |
| Pasta | Decrease in the extent of starch degradation, increase in total phenolic content and antioxidant capacities | [ |
| White jelly |
| Patty | Oil holding capacity of mushroom has a positive effect on cooking yield of patty as well as senses | [ |
| Oyster |
| Instant noodles | Increase in protein and fiber content | [ |
| White button |
| Beef burgers | Reduction in the fat content of beef burgers | [ |
| Oyster |
| Instant soup premix | Rich in protein, crude fiber, minerals and low in fat, carbohydrate and energy value | [ |
| White button |
| Sponge cake | Increase in apparent viscosity, volume, springiness and cohesiveness values | [ |
| Oyster |
| Biscuit | Reduction in starch pasting viscosities, starch gelatinization enthalpy value, increases in protein, crude fiber and mineral content | [ |
| Shiitake |
| Noodles | Improvement in nutritional profile and reduction in the glycemic index of foods | [ |
| King tuber |
| Cookies | Higher protein, ash, crude fiber, water-soluble vitamins and minerals | [ |
| Oyster |
| Noodles | Lower level of carbohydrate, fat, and sodium | [ |
| King trumpet |
| Sponge cake | Increase in ash and proteincontent | [ |
| White button, Shitake, Porcini |
| Pasta | High firmness and tensile strength | [ |
Mushrooms and their residue-based edible film/coatings.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Product Used | Compounds | Key Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White button |
| Fruit bars | Chitosan | Increased antioxidant capacity, ascorbic acid content, fungal growth prevention and firmness | [ |
| White button |
| Fresh-cut melons | Chitosan | Enhance fruit firmness, inhibit off-flavors and reduce the microbial counts (up to 4 log CFU g−1). | [ |
| Velvet shank |
| ND | Polysaccharide | High tensile strength, barrier property to water vapor and oxygen | [ |
| Shiitake, Velvet shank |
| ND | Insoluble dietary fibers | Highest tensile strength and an effective barrier to water vapor | [ |
| Indian oyster |
| ND | Flour | Significant barrier properties and mechanical strength | [ |
ND—not defined; CFU—colony-forming unit.
Applications of mushrooms as prebiotics.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Probiotic Used | Form of Mushroom Used | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White button |
| Probiotics mixture (Protexin 6 × 107CFU gm−1) | Powder | Lowered total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglyceride concentrations, oxidative stress and dyslipidemia in hypercholesterolemic rats | [ |
| Wood ear/Jew’s ear |
| Extract | Enhancement in the survival rate of probiotics toabout 0.43 and 0.51 log CFU g−1; improved probiotic protection and functional properties of symbiotic yogurt | [ | |
| White button |
|
| Powder | Improvement in the meat quality with the incorporation of mushroom and probiotics in the broiler diet | [ |
| Oyster |
| Powder | Increase in neutrophil count in rats, decrease in lymphocyte count | [ | |
| Oyster |
| PrimaLac ( | Powder | Decrease in abdominal fat on the carcass, increase in HDL concentration in plasma | [ |
| Caterpillar |
|
| Spent mushroom substrate | Increase in the specific growth rate, weight gain, final weight in fish fed supplemented diets | [ |
| Shiitake |
| 1.0 ×108 CFU g−1( | Extract | No weight gain in broiler chickens | [ |
|
|
|
| Powder | Growth stimulation, immunity and disease resistance | [ |
LDL—low-density lipoproteins; HDL—high density lipoproteins.
Mushrooms and their residue-based media.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Media Composition | Purpose/Utilization | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Velvet shank |
| Spent mushroom substrate, perlite, and vermiculite | Growing media for tomato and cucumber seedlings | [ |
| White button, Oyster |
| Spent mushroom substrate, and Sphagnum peat | Growing media for tomato, courgette and pepper | [ |
| Velvet shank |
| Spent mushroom substrate, and chicken manure compost | Growing media for honeydew melon | [ |
| Velvet shank |
| Spent mushroom substrate, calcium carbonate, wheat bran, and yeast extract and inorganic salts | Production media for | [ |
| Oyster |
| Spent mushroom substrate | Production media for lignocellulolytic enzymes | [ |
| Oyster |
| Spent mushroom substrate | Production media for | [ |
| Oyster |
| Spent mushroom substrate, paddy straw, and soybean cake | Biopesticide ( | [ |
| ND | ND | Spent mushroom substrate and peat moss | Growing media for Chinese kale | [ |
| ND | ND | Spent mushroom substrate, perlite, and vermiculite | Growing media for lettuce seedlings | [ |
| ND | ND | Spent mushroom substrate, polished rice, full-fat soybean, and rice bran | Production media for arachidonic acid by | [ |
| ND | ND | Spent mushroom substrate, and poultry cooked bones | Production media for solubilizationphosphate by | [ |
ND—not defined.
Mushroom-derived biosorbents and their applications.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Drying Temperature/Time | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oyster |
| RT/24 h | Showed 100% removal of Fe2+ from the water sample | [ |
| White button |
| 80 °C/24 h | Successfully biosorbed Reactive Blue 49 dye (1.85 × 10−4 mol g−1) from water | [ |
| Oyster |
| 40 °C/24 h | Showed greater adsorption against Pb2+(85.91 mg g−1) in water | [ |
| Oyster |
| 60 °C/24 h | Biosorbed 3.8 mg g−1 of Cd2+ | [ |
| Oyster, Black morels | RT/4 days | Adsorbed methylene blue (82.81 and 38.47 mg g−1) and for malachite green (64.13 and 39.28 mg g−1) | [ | |
| Velvet shank |
| 60 °C/24 h | Maximum removal capacity against copper ions was 15.56 mg g−1 | [ |
| Shiitake |
| Freeze-dried/24 h | Maximum absorption against Congo red was 217.86 mg g−1 | [ |
| Oyster |
| 78 °C/48 h | Showed maximum biosorption against uranium ion (19.95 mg g−1) | [ |
| Oyster |
| 80 °C/ND | Showed maximum biosorption against Ni2+ (20.71 mg g−1) | [ |
| King trumpet |
| 60 °C/24 h | Showed maximum biosorption against Pb2+ (3.30 mg g−1) | [ |
| Lingzhi |
| 60 °C/72 h | Maximum biosorption against malachite green (40.65 mg g−1), safranine T (33.00 mg g−1), and methylene (22.37 mg g−1) | [ |
| King trumpet |
| 60 °C/24 h | Removed 88.38% of NO3− | [ |
RT—room temperature; ND—not defined.
Applications of biochar derived from mushrooms and their residues.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Process and Conditions Required for Biochar Formation | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oyster, Shiitake | Pyrolysis at 700 °C for 2 h | Adsorbed 326mg g−1 and 398mg g−1 of lead Pb(II) from the water | [ | |
| Lingzhi |
| Pyrolysis at 650 °C for 2 h | Showed maximal adsorption against Pb2+ (262.76 mg g−1) and Cd2+ (75.82 mg g−1) | [ |
| White button |
| Pyrolysis at 750 °C for 3 h | Showed maximal adsorption against Cu2+(65.2 mg g−1), Cd2+(76.3 mg g−1), and Zn2+(44.4 mg g−1) in water | [ |
| ND | ND | Pyrolysis at 300 °C for 90 min | Showed maximal adsorption against Pb2+ (21.0 mg g−1), Cu2+(18.8 mg g−1), Cd2+(11.2 mg g−1) and Ni2+(9.8 mg g−1) in water | [ |
| ND | ND | Pyrolysis at 450 °C for 4 h | Showed maximal adsorption against crystal violet (1057mg g−1) in wastewater | [ |
| ND | ND | Pyrolysis at 500 °C for 2 h | Showed maximal adsorption against fluoride (36.5 mg g−1) in water | [ |
ND—not defined.
Mushroom-derived nanoparticles and their applications.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Types of Nanoparticles Synthesized | Reaction Temperature/Time | Morphology | Size | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White button |
| Copper | RT/24 h | Spherical | 2–10 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Brown oyster |
| Gold | 29 °C/24 h | ND | ND | Antioxidant activity using DPPH, and ABTS | [ |
| Oyster |
| Gold | 70 °C/1.5 h | Spherical | 2–14 nm | Anti-cancer activity against cancer cell lines A-549 (Human lung carcinoma), K-562 (Human chronic myelogenous leukemia bone marrow), HeLa (Human cervix) and MDA-MB (Human adenocarcinoma mammary gland) | [ |
| Oyster |
| Gold | 29 °C/24 h | Spherical | 22.9 nm | Antioxidant activity using DPPH, and ABTS | [ |
| Oyster |
| Gold | RT/12 h | Spherical | 16–18 nm | Anti-cancer activity against cancer cell lines HCT-116 (colon cancer) | [ |
| King tuber |
| Selenium | RT/24 h | Spherical | 91–102 nm | Anti-cancer activity against gastric adenocarcinoma AGS | [ |
| Oyster |
| Silver | 25 °C/48 h | Spherical | 17.5 nm | Anti-cancer activity against cancer cell lines HepG2 (human liver) and MCF-7 (breast) | [ |
| Lingzhi |
| Silver | ND/ND | Spherical | 15–22 nm | Antioxidant activity using DPPH; Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Matsutake |
| Silver | RT/30 min | Spherical | 10–70 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Milky white, Oyster, White button, Lingzhi | Silver | RT/12 h | Spherical | 80–100 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Pink oyster |
| Titanium oxide | RT/20 min | Spherical | 31 nm | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Pink oyster |
| Zinc oxide | RT/24 h | Sphere | 74.36 nm | Antioxidant activity using DPPH, ABTS, and H2O2; larval toxicity against | [ |
RT—room temperature; ND—not defined; DPPH-2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl-hydrate; ABTS-2,2’-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid).
Mushrooms as a carbon source for preparing carbon dots.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Production Conditions | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oyster | Hydrothermal/120 °C/4 h | Selective sensitivity for Pb2+; Antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Velvet shank |
| Hydrothermal/250 °C/4 h | Sensed Cr6+ with a limit of detection 0.73 µM and volatile organic compounds | [ |
| Oyster | Hydrothermal/200 °C/25 h | Sensed nitroarenes in water samples | [ | |
| Paddy straw |
| Hydrothermal/200 °C/25 h | Sensed Pb2 with limit of detection 12 nM and for Fe3+ 16 nM | [ |
| ND | ND | Hydrothermal/200 °C/6 h | Sensed hyaluronic acid and hyaluronidase | [ |
ND—not defined.
Mushroom-based skincare formulations.
| Edible Mushrooms Common Name | Scientific Name | Product Base | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White button, Oyster, Shiitake | Cream | Anti-inflammatory; anti-tyrosinase; antioxidant and antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Lingzhi |
| Cream | Anti-tyrosinase; antioxidant and antibacterial activity | [ |
| Oyster |
| Cream | Skin fairness | [ |
| Oyster |
| Gel | Anti-tyrosinase; antioxidant activity | [ |
| Snow |
| Gel | Hand sanitizer | [ |
| White button, Oyster | Cream | Anti-tyrosinase; antioxidant and antibacterial activity | [ |