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Chemical characterisation and speciation of organic selenium in cultivated selenium-enriched Agaricus bisporus.
Food Chem. 2013 Dec 15; 141(4):3681-7.FC

Abstract

The selenium concentration in Agaricus bisporus cultivated in growth compost irrigated with sodium selenite solution increased by 28- and 43-fold compared to the control mushroom irrigated solely with water. Selenium contents of mushroom proteins increased from 13.8 to 60.1 and 14.1 to 137 μgSe/g in caps and stalks from control and selenised mushrooms, respectively. Selenocystine (SeCys; detected as [SeCys]2 dimer), selenomethionine (SeMet), and methyl-selenocysteine (MeSeCys) were separated, identified and quantified by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionisation-mass spectrometry from water solubilised and acetone precipitated proteins, and significant increases were observed for the selenised mushrooms. The maximum selenoamino acids concentration in caps and stalks of control/selenised mushrooms was 4.16/9.65 μg/g dried weight (DW) for SeCys, 0.08/0.58 μg/g DW for SeMet, and 0.031/0.10 μg/g DW for MeSeCys, respectively. The most notable result was the much higher levels of SeCys accumulated by A. bisporus compared to SeMet and MeSeCys, for both control and selenised A. bisporus.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Agriculture & Food Systems, Melbourne School of Land & Environment, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23993536

Citation

Maseko, Tebo, et al. "Chemical Characterisation and Speciation of Organic Selenium in Cultivated Selenium-enriched Agaricus Bisporus." Food Chemistry, vol. 141, no. 4, 2013, pp. 3681-7.
Maseko T, Callahan DL, Dunshea FR, et al. Chemical characterisation and speciation of organic selenium in cultivated selenium-enriched Agaricus bisporus. Food Chem. 2013;141(4):3681-7.
Maseko, T., Callahan, D. L., Dunshea, F. R., Doronila, A., Kolev, S. D., & Ng, K. (2013). Chemical characterisation and speciation of organic selenium in cultivated selenium-enriched Agaricus bisporus. Food Chemistry, 141(4), 3681-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2013.06.027
Maseko T, et al. Chemical Characterisation and Speciation of Organic Selenium in Cultivated Selenium-enriched Agaricus Bisporus. Food Chem. 2013 Dec 15;141(4):3681-7. PubMed PMID: 23993536.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Chemical characterisation and speciation of organic selenium in cultivated selenium-enriched Agaricus bisporus. AU - Maseko,Tebo, AU - Callahan,Damien L, AU - Dunshea,Frank R, AU - Doronila,Augustine, AU - Kolev,Spas D, AU - Ng,Ken, Y1 - 2013/06/15/ PY - 2013/01/17/received PY - 2013/05/02/revised PY - 2013/06/06/accepted PY - 2013/9/3/entrez PY - 2013/9/3/pubmed PY - 2014/3/29/medline KW - Agaricus bisporus KW - Methyl-selenocysteine KW - Selenium-enriched mushrooms KW - Selenocysteine KW - Selenomethionine KW - Selenoproteins SP - 3681 EP - 7 JF - Food chemistry JO - Food Chem VL - 141 IS - 4 N2 - The selenium concentration in Agaricus bisporus cultivated in growth compost irrigated with sodium selenite solution increased by 28- and 43-fold compared to the control mushroom irrigated solely with water. Selenium contents of mushroom proteins increased from 13.8 to 60.1 and 14.1 to 137 μgSe/g in caps and stalks from control and selenised mushrooms, respectively. Selenocystine (SeCys; detected as [SeCys]2 dimer), selenomethionine (SeMet), and methyl-selenocysteine (MeSeCys) were separated, identified and quantified by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionisation-mass spectrometry from water solubilised and acetone precipitated proteins, and significant increases were observed for the selenised mushrooms. The maximum selenoamino acids concentration in caps and stalks of control/selenised mushrooms was 4.16/9.65 μg/g dried weight (DW) for SeCys, 0.08/0.58 μg/g DW for SeMet, and 0.031/0.10 μg/g DW for MeSeCys, respectively. The most notable result was the much higher levels of SeCys accumulated by A. bisporus compared to SeMet and MeSeCys, for both control and selenised A. bisporus. SN - 1873-7072 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/23993536/Chemical_characterisation_and_speciation_of_organic_selenium_in_cultivated_selenium_enriched_Agaricus_bisporus_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -