dc.description.abstract |
Sri Lankan wild mushrooms are almost unexplored for their bioactive properties and wild edible
mushrooms are rarely consumed by locals due to the lack of awareness of their nutritional
values. Thus, seven indigenous macrofungi were investigated for their nutritional quality and
66 macrofungi species from the dry zone were studied for their antimicrobial activities.
Nutritional properties were investigated using AOAC and chromatographic analysis methods.
Antimicrobial activity was tested according to the disc diffusion method and poisoned food
technique. Bioassays guided separation was performed for the isolation of natural compounds.
Structure elucidation of the isolated compounds was carried out using the mass spectroscopic
data and one and two-dimensional NMR data.
Indigenous edible mushrooms showed distinct proximate nutritional profiles. They were rich in
essential amino acids and unsaturated fatty acids. Linoleic acid (PUFA), oleic acid (MUFA)
and palmitic acid (SFA) were present as major fatty acids while glutamic acid, arginine and
glycine were detected as major amino acids in studied mushrooms. Sri Lankan indigenous
mushrooms, Termitomyces eurrhizus, Termitomyces heimii and Termitomyces microcarpus can
be potentially used to enrich the nutritional quality of food consumed by Sri Lankan rural
communities, due to their superior nutritional values including high protein and low
carbohydrate contents. Investigation of antimicrobial properties revealed that Serpula sp.,
Anthracophyllum lateritium, Fomes sp., Coriolopsis byrsina (isolate from Dambulla) and
Hymenochaete rubiginosa (isolate from Minneriya and Kawudulla) possess antibacterial
activity (against Gram-positive bacteria) while Flavodon flavus, Coriolopsis aspera,
Coriolopsis caperata, Trichaptum byssogenum and Xylaria polymorpha possess antifungal
activity. Bioassay-guided fractionation of a mycelium culture of P. tricoloma resulted in two
known ergostane type compounds 3p,5a-dihydroxy-(22E,24R)-ergosta-7,22-dien-6-one and
3p,5a,9a-trihydroxy-(22E,24R)-ergosta-7,22-dien-6-one. Further, three novel metabolites
serpulanine A to C were isolated from an extract of a Serpula sp from Bibila area. Serpulanine
A has shown total class I/II HDAC enzyme inhibitory activity in A9 murine metastasis cells
with IC50 at 7pM. Serpulanine B hasn’t shown considerable inhibition of HDAC6 and HDAC9
enzymes under in-vitro conditions compared to positive control TSA. The presence of an oxime
group at the alpha position with respect to a terminal hydroxamic acid moiety as in serpulanine
A hasn’t been reported in natural products earlier. Hence, further studies are permitted to study
the therapeutic potential of serpulanine A as potential metal ion chelating agents and as zincbinding
groups for the of inhibition of matrix metalloproteinases. |
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