| Literature DB >> 34200833 |
Emanuel Vamanu1, Laura Dorina Dinu1, Diana Roxana Pelinescu2, Florentina Gatea3.
Abstract
Edible mushrooms are functional foods and valuable but less exploited sources of biologically active compounds. Herbal teas are a range of products widely used due to the therapeutic properties that have been demonstrated by traditional medicine and a supplement in conventional therapies. Their interaction with the human microbiota is an aspect that must be researched, the therapeutic properties depending on the interaction with the microbiota and the consequent fermentative activity. Modulation processes result from the activity of, for example, phenolic acids, which are a major component and which have already demonstrated activity in combating oxidative stress. The aim of this mini-review is to highlight the essential aspects of modulating the microbiota using edible mushrooms and herbal teas. Although the phenolic pattern is different for edible mushrooms and herbal teas, certain non-phenolic compounds (polysaccharides and/or caffeine) are important in alleviating chronic diseases. These specific functional compounds have modulatory properties against oxidative stress, demonstrating health-beneficial effects in vitro and/or In vivo. Moreover, recent advances in improving human health via gut microbiota are presented. Plant-derived miRNAs from mushrooms and herbal teas were highlighted as a potential strategy for new therapeutic effects.Entities:
Keywords: SCFAs; antioxidant; miRNAs; pattern; polyphenols
Year: 2021 PMID: 34200833 PMCID: PMC8230450 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9061262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Impact of mushrooms consumption on gut microbiota pattern.
| Mushrooms | Gut Bacteria Increased | Gut Bacteria Depleted | Human/ | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Animal | [ | |
| Firmicutes, Proteobacteria ( | Animal | [ | ||
| - | Human | [ | ||
| - | In vitro study using human faeces | [ | ||
| Animal | [ |
Effect of polysaccharides from various mushrooms on gut microbiota.
| Mushrooms | Bioactive Compounds | Type of Study | Gut Bacteria Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human gut microbiota | LEDS-2 increase microbial communities LEDS-3 causes an increase in the abundance of | [ | ||
| Mushrooms dried powder after in vitro digestion with α-amylase, pepsin, and pancreatin. The main bioactive compounds are carbohydrates and proteins. | Human gut microbiota | They led to an increase in the abundance of groups of Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria and inhibited the growth of Fusobacteria and | [ | |
| Promoted the growth | ||||
| Promoted the growth of Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Fusobacteria, inhibited the growth of Proteobacteria and | ||||
| Positively influences Actinobacteria, Fusobacteria, and Firmicutes and inhibit the growth of Bacteroidetes and | ||||
| Polysaccharides, alcoholic extracts, and whole extracts alcoholic extracts, and whole extracts | Rats with | Reduce the amount of lipopolysaccharide toxins, increase the abundance of | [ | |
| Polysaccharide extract | Human gut microbiota | Reduce the | [ | |
| Mushrooms dried powder after in vitro digestion with α-amylase, pepsin, and pancreatin | Human gut microbiota | Increase abundance of | [ | |
| Increase the relative abundance | ||||
| Polysaccharides | High-fat diet mice | Increase | [ | |
| Polysaccharide total extract (two fractions were characterized, | Sprague Dawley rats | Causes an increase in the abundance of | [ | |
| Polysaccharide fraction | HFD | The relative abundances of | [ | |
|
| Soluble polysaccharide fraction | HFD mice | Supplementation causes changes only at the genus level, an increase of | [ |
Most common herbal teas and health effects.
| Herbals | Beneficial Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Anti-inflammatory, antispasmodic, antioxidative activity, antiplatelet activity | [ | |
| Antimicrobial and antiviral activity, analgesic and anesthetic effects, immunomodulatory activity | [ | |
| Antimicrobials activity, anti-inflammatory, antiviral, antioxidant, antitumoral activity, Cholesterol- and Lipid-Lowering Properties | [ | |
| Antioxidant, hepatoprotective, anti-diabetic, analgesic, | [ | |
| Antimicrobial activity, anti-inflammatory | [ |
Tea bioactive compounds and their effects on gut microbiota.
| Tea | Bioactive Compounds | Type of Study | Gut Bacteria Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kudingcha (KDC) from | Neochlorogenic acid, chlorogenic acid, cryptochlorogenic acid, dicaffeoylquinic acids isomers, quercetin with different glycosides triterpenoid saponins, polysaccharides, monosaccharides, proteins, simple organic acid. | HFD mice | Administration of KDC led to a reduction in abundance of | [ |
| Fuzhuanbrick | Gallic acid, catechins, free amino acids, alkaloids and volatile components. | Administration of the tea reduces the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and has led to the increased of relative abundance in | ||
| KDC and FBT | Led to an decreased of | |||
| Green tea | Standardized green tea extract: catechins (49.9%), including | Mice under UV stress | 7-day supplementation of green tea extract Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and increased levels of | [ |
| HFD mice | After 16 weeks of LRE administration, the ratio of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio increased. | [ | ||
| Solidago v. Infusion extract Mainly caffeoylquinic acid derivatives (caffeic acid, p-coumaric acid, chlorogenic acid, neochlorogenic acid, cryptochlorogenic acid) flavonoids (quercetin rhamnohexoside, rutin, isoquercetin, kaempferol) and some phenylpropanoids. | Human and swine gut microbiota in vitro study | In human and swine cultures gut microbiota takes place hydrolysis of caffeoylquinic acid derivatives and deglycosylation of | [ | |
| Hot-water extract. | Regular chow diet fed C57BL/6J mice study | Hot water extract administration has shaped gut microbiota by increasing Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes ( | [ | |
| Water extract of | Adult male C57BL | The administration of CPF led to an increase of microbial diversity, reduction in the relative abundance of | [ | |
| Water extract, phloroglucinol, swainonine, trigonelline, coumalic acid, Coumarin, scopolamine, 7,8-Dihydroxy-4-methylcoumarin, chlorogenic acid, berberine, psoralen, apigenin, caffeic acid, γ-Terpinene, rutin, 4-methylumbelliferone, scopoletin, kaempferol-3-O-rutinoside, α-Pinene, daidzein, bergapten, glycitein, cytosine, α-Linolenic acid, ferulic acid, palmitoleic acid, linoleic acid, stearic acid, trans-vaccenic acid, arachidonic acid. | HFD mice | The microbial diversity was improved. | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract, Danshensu, protocatechualdehyden, caffeic acid, rutin, isoquercitrin, astragalin, rosmarinic acid, lithospermic acid, salvianolic acid B, salvianolic acid A, and salvianolic acid C | C57BL/6J diabetic mice | Decrease of | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract, rutin, Quercetin-3-O-β-D-glucuronide | Male KM diabetic mice | The extract reverses dysbiosis induced by diabet, increases levels of | [ | |
| Decaffeinated green tea (GT) and black tea (BT) | Ethanolic extracts of green tea (GTP) and black tea (BTP), gallic acid, epigallocatechin gallate, epicatechin gallate, epigallocatechin, epicatechin | Male mouse C57BL | 6J mice (strain JAX 000664), | [ |
Figure 1The action of herbal teas and mushrooms consumption effects on gut microbiota bioactivities. The figure was drawn using bioRender Premium Edition (https://app.biorender.com/; accessed on 10 May 2021).