| Literature DB >> 34945547 |
Krishan Kumar1, Rahul Mehra2, Raquel P F Guiné3, Maria João Lima3, Naveen Kumar2, Ravinder Kaushik4, Naseer Ahmed1, Ajar Nath Yadav1, Harish Kumar2.
Abstract
Mushrooms are well-known functional foods due to the presence of a huge quantity of nutraceutical components. These are well recognized for their nutritional importance such as high protein, low fat, and low energy contents. These are rich in minerals such as iron, phosphorus, as well as in vitamins like riboflavin, thiamine, ergosterol, niacin, and ascorbic acid. They also contain bioactive constituents like secondary metabolites (terpenoids, acids, alkaloids, sesquiterpenes, polyphenolic compounds, lactones, sterols, nucleotide analogues, vitamins, and metal chelating agents) and polysaccharides chiefly β-glucans and glycoproteins. Due to the occurrence of biologically active substances, mushrooms can serve as hepatoprotective, immune-potentiating, anti-cancer, anti-viral, and hypocholesterolemic agents. They have great potential to prevent cardiovascular diseases due to their low fat and high fiber contents, as well as being foremost sources of natural antioxidants useful in reducing oxidative damages. However, mushrooms remained underutilized, despite their wide nutritional and bioactive potential. Novel green techniques are being explored for the extraction of bioactive components from edible mushrooms. The current review is intended to deliberate the nutraceutical potential of mushrooms, therapeutic properties, bioactive compounds, health benefits, and processing aspects of edible mushrooms for maintenance, and promotion of a healthy lifestyle.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive components; edible mushrooms; health benefits; nutraceutical’s potentials
Year: 2021 PMID: 34945547 PMCID: PMC8700757 DOI: 10.3390/foods10122996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Bioactive compounds of edible mushrooms and their health benefits.
| Mushroom | Bioactive Compounds | Health Benefits | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pyrogallol, hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives, flavonoids, | Anti-inflammatory, enhanced insulin secretion, anti-ageing property | [ | |
| Glucan, acidic polysaccharides | Immunomodulatory, anti-tumour, anti-inflammatory, lowers cholesterol and triglycerides, hypoglycaemic activity, immune tonic, and beneficial in coronary heart disease | [ | |
| Peptidoglycan, polysaccharides, flammulin, FVP (flammulina polysaccharide-protein), proflamin (glycoprotein), a prolamin (active sugar protein) | Anti-inflammatory, antiviral, anti-tumour, antioxidant, activity, immuno-modulatory, anti-ageing property, anti-viral action | [ | |
| Ganoderic acids, ganodermanontriol, ganoderiol, polysaccharides, germanium, triterpenoids, nucleotides and nucleosides, β-glucan | Anti-metastatic, anti-tumour, anti-viral, anti-HIV, immunomodulatory, antibiotic properties, liver protection, prevents cholesterol synthesis | [ | |
| Lentinan, glucan, mannoglucan, fucomannogalactan, lentin (protein), catechinflavonoids, eritadenine | Immunomodulatory, anti-tumour, anti-inflammatory, anti-fungal, antioxidant, anti-bacterial, antifungal, antioxidant, hypolipidemic activity | [ | |
| Cordycepin | treat lung infection, hypo-glycemic activity, cellular health properties, antidepressant activity | [ | |
| β-glucans | Antioxidant, anti-microbial | [ | |
| Functional proteins (ubiquinone-9, ubiquitin-like peptide, nebrodeolysin, and glycoprotein), proteoglycans pleuran (β-1, 3-glucan with galactose, and mannose), glucans, proteoglycan, laccase, pleurostrin (peptide) | Immunomodulatory, hyperglycemia, anti-tumour, antioxidant, anti-viral, | [ | |
| Lectins, polysaccharides | Decrease blood glucose improves insulin secretion and ovulation | [ | |
| Polysaccharides such as β (1,3)-glucopyranosyl, and Polysaccharides (1,3), (1,6)-linked β-glucan | Anti-inflammatory | [ | |
| Fip-vvo | Immunomodulatory | [ | |
| Hericenones and erinacines | Neuritogenic effects | [ |
Figure 1Bioactive components reported in different edible mushrooms.
Figure 2Edible mushrooms, bioactive components, and health benefits.
Effects of different processing techniques on the nutritional composition of mushrooms.
| Mushrooms | Methods of Processing/Storage | Effect on Nutritional Composition | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Freezing at −25 °C, canning and salting for 6 months | The protein content was reduced to 24.3 percent, 22.2 percent, 16.54 percent, in canning, freezing, and salting respectively; decrease in free amino acids (cysteine, tyrosine, glutamine, alanine) in all treatments. | [ |
| Blanching at 95–100 °C for 15 min | Decreased levels of minerals | [ | |
| Stored at 12 °C for 12 days | The decrease in sugar content, fructose, and mannitol; increase in free amino acids from 77.92 to 140.57 g/kg | [ | |
|
| Freezing, drying, and gamma irradiation | Higher DPPH scavenging activity was reported in dried samples while freeze and irradiated samples showed higher reducing power | [ |
|
| Oven-dried at 60 °C till a constant weight obtained, | The protein content decreased and carbohydrates get enhanced during oven drying. It was also observed that protein, fat, and carbohydrate contents get reduced during blanching and brining | [ |
| Freezer storage for 12 months | The decrease in some amino acids such as alanine, glycine, histidine, threonine serine, and methionine) | [ | |
| Microwave processing and frying | Reduction in the amount of Fe, Zn, Mn, Ca, and Cu during microwave processing and increase in Iron content during frying | [ | |
| Drying, freezing, and cooking | Antioxidant activities and nutrient concentrations of cooked samples was lower than either of dried or frozen mushroom samples | [ | |
|
| Heat treatment | There was a significant increase in DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging activities by 2.2-fold and 2.0-fold, respectively as compared to the raw sample | [ |
|
| Frying, microwave heating, boiling, drying | Frying increased proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates, microwave heating increased the proteins and carbohydrates content while boiling only increased the carbohydrate content and decreased the phenolic contents, drying increased the proteins, carbohydrates, and total phenolic components | [ |
| Boiling, microwaving, grilling, and deep-frying | Significant loss of ash, carbohydrates and protein contents, during frying but increase in energy as well as fat contents. Further, boiling enhanced the total glucan contents decreased the antioxidant activity significant especially after frying and, boiling as compared to microwaved and grilled mushrooms | [ |
Effect of irradiation treatments on the composition of edible mushrooms.
| Edible Fungi | Treatment Conditions | Major Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh shiitake mushrooms, oyster mushroom, button mushroom, and abalone mushroom | Ultra Violet-A (wavelength 315 to 400 nm) Ultra Violet-B (wavelength 290 to 315 nm) Ultra Violet-C (wavelength 190 to 290 nm) for 1 h | Increased amounts of vitamin D2 content | [ |
| Six species from genus | Ultra Violet-B for 2 h | Increase in Vitamin D2 content and antioxidant activity | [ |
|
| γ-Irradiation (0.5 and 1 kGy) | The freezing and over-drying were attenuated by irradiation treatment | [ |
|
| Pulsed irradiation (19 to 700 nm; 60 pulses) | Increase in vitamin D2 and bone density of PM mice with increased osteoblast and lower osteoclast cells | [ |
|
| γ-Irradiation (1 kGy) | Increase in phenolic compounds and antioxidant activity of mushroom | [ |
|
| γ-irradiation | Increased total phenolic components and phenylalanine ammonia-lyase activity | [ |
| γ-Irradiation (1, 3, and 5 kGy) | Irradiation significantly reduced the concentration of guanosine 5′-diphosphate (22%) and adenosine 5′-monophosphate (AMP) (46%). | [ | |
|
| 60Co γ-Irradiation | Irradiation treatment increased phenolic content, flavonoids, and antioxidant activity of dried mushroom | [ |
| Mushrooms were illuminated with UV-B with a light intensity of 310–320 nm and 11.5 W/m2 for 60 min at 20 °C | The accumulation of vitamin D2 > 100 μg. The concentration of Photo-products such as lumisterol, tachysterol, and pre-vitamin D2 increased concurrently. | [ | |
| γ-Irradiation | The increased antioxidant potential, hygienic quality and extended shelf-life | [ | |
| γ-Irradiation | Irradiation with 1 to 6 kGy as physical stress factors increased protein, carbohydrates, and glucans | [ | |
| UV-B radiation | Increase in vitamin D2 content in irradiated mycelia of golden and pink oyster mushrooms as 0.28–5.93 and 66.03–81.71 μg/g, respectively. | [ | |
|
| Photo-irradiation | Extracellular synthesis of silver nanoparticles from aqueous extract of the mushroom | [ |
| Synthesis of biofunctionalized gold nanoparticles | [ |
Value-added products from edible mushrooms.
| Mushroom | Products | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Value-added products (biscuits, soups, pickles, jam, snacks) | [ |
| Butter biscuits, biscuits | [ | |
| Cake | [ | |
| Bread | [ | |
| Potato Puddings | [ | |
| Seasoning | [ | |
|
| Soup powder | [ |
| Drying | [ | |
| Pickle | [ | |
| Chutney | [ | |
| Biscuits | [ | |
| Ketchup | [ | |
| Meat analogue | [ | |
|
| Biscuits | [ |
| Bread | [ | |
| Muffin | [ | |
| Seasoning | [ | |
| Brown sauce | [ | |
|
| Functional bread | [ |
| Drink (Beer, Yakju) | [ | |
|
| Bread | [ |
|
| Flat bread, rice-porridge and conventional cake | [ |
| Biscuits | [ | |
|
| Sponge cake | [ |