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Antitumor activity of mushroom polysaccharides: a review.
Food Funct. 2012 Nov; 3(11):1118-30.FF

Abstract

Mushrooms were considered as a special delicacy by early civilizations and valued as a credible source of nutrients including considerable amounts of dietary fiber, minerals, and vitamins (in particularly, vitamin D). Mushrooms are also recognized as functional foods for their bioactive compounds offer huge beneficial impacts on human health. One of those potent bioactives is β-glucan, comprising a backbone of glucose residues linked by β-(1→3)-glycosidic bonds with attached β-(1→6) branch points, which exhibits antitumor and immunostimulating properties. The commercial pharmaceutical products from this polysaccharide source, such as schizophyllan, lentinan, grifolan, PSP (polysaccharide-peptide complex) and PSK (polysaccharide-protein complex), have shown evident clinical results. The immunomodulating action of mushroom polysaccharides is to stimulate natural killer cells, T-cells, B-cells, neutrophils, and macrophage dependent immune system responses via differing receptors involving dectin-1, the toll-like receptor-2 (a class of proteins that play a role in the immune system), scavengers and lactosylceramides. β-Glucans with various structures present distinct affinities toward these receptors to trigger different host responses. Basically, their antitumor abilities are influenced by the molecular mass, branching configuration, conformation, and chemical modification of the polysaccharides. This review aims to integrate the information regarding nutritional, chemical and biological aspects of polysaccharides in mushrooms, which will possibly be employed to elucidate the correlation between their structural features and biological functions.

Authors+Show Affiliations

School of Chemical Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22865023

Citation

Ren, Lu, et al. "Antitumor Activity of Mushroom Polysaccharides: a Review." Food & Function, vol. 3, no. 11, 2012, pp. 1118-30.
Ren L, Perera C, Hemar Y. Antitumor activity of mushroom polysaccharides: a review. Food Funct. 2012;3(11):1118-30.
Ren, L., Perera, C., & Hemar, Y. (2012). Antitumor activity of mushroom polysaccharides: a review. Food & Function, 3(11), 1118-30. https://doi.org/10.1039/c2fo10279j
Ren L, Perera C, Hemar Y. Antitumor Activity of Mushroom Polysaccharides: a Review. Food Funct. 2012;3(11):1118-30. PubMed PMID: 22865023.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Antitumor activity of mushroom polysaccharides: a review. AU - Ren,Lu, AU - Perera,Conrad, AU - Hemar,Yacine, PY - 2012/8/7/entrez PY - 2012/8/7/pubmed PY - 2013/3/26/medline SP - 1118 EP - 30 JF - Food & function JO - Food Funct VL - 3 IS - 11 N2 - Mushrooms were considered as a special delicacy by early civilizations and valued as a credible source of nutrients including considerable amounts of dietary fiber, minerals, and vitamins (in particularly, vitamin D). Mushrooms are also recognized as functional foods for their bioactive compounds offer huge beneficial impacts on human health. One of those potent bioactives is β-glucan, comprising a backbone of glucose residues linked by β-(1→3)-glycosidic bonds with attached β-(1→6) branch points, which exhibits antitumor and immunostimulating properties. The commercial pharmaceutical products from this polysaccharide source, such as schizophyllan, lentinan, grifolan, PSP (polysaccharide-peptide complex) and PSK (polysaccharide-protein complex), have shown evident clinical results. The immunomodulating action of mushroom polysaccharides is to stimulate natural killer cells, T-cells, B-cells, neutrophils, and macrophage dependent immune system responses via differing receptors involving dectin-1, the toll-like receptor-2 (a class of proteins that play a role in the immune system), scavengers and lactosylceramides. β-Glucans with various structures present distinct affinities toward these receptors to trigger different host responses. Basically, their antitumor abilities are influenced by the molecular mass, branching configuration, conformation, and chemical modification of the polysaccharides. This review aims to integrate the information regarding nutritional, chemical and biological aspects of polysaccharides in mushrooms, which will possibly be employed to elucidate the correlation between their structural features and biological functions. SN - 2042-650X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22865023/Antitumor_activity_of_mushroom_polysaccharides:_a_review_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c2fo10279j DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -