Nineteen fungi were tested for their ability to degrade aflatoxin B1 (AFB1). An extracellular enzyme from the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus showed afaltoxin-degradation activity detected by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). An enzyme with this activity was purified by two chromatographies on DEAE-Sepharose and Phenyl-Sepharose. The apparent molecular mass of the purified enzyme was estimated to be 90 kDa by SDS-PAGE. Optimum activities were found in the pH range between 4.0 and 5.0 and at 25 degrees C. Also, degradation activity of several dyes in the presence of H2O2 was tested, resulting in the detection of bromophenol blue-decolorizing activity. Based on these data, we suggest this enzyme is a novel enzyme with aflatoxin-degradation activity. Fluorescence measurements suggest that the enzyme cleaves the lactone ring of aflatoxin.
Extract of Coprinus disseminatus (pers. Fr.) (C. disseminatus) culture broth (EDCB) inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis in the human cervical carcinoma cells at 5 microg/ml. To determine whether the cell death induced by the EDCB recruits caspases or not, one of the exclusive pathways in cell death, we examined caspase-3 activity in this cell death process. The activity of caspase-3 was remarkably increased when the cell was treated with EDCB, and this activity was nullified by Z-VAD-FMK, a well known caspase-3 inhibitor. From these results, we would expect the EDCB to contain substances with the ability to induce apoptosis in the human cervical carcinoma cells. The extent of the EDCB induced apoptosis is cell line-dependent.
The basidiomycete, Pleurotus ostreatus, is one of the most widely cultivated mushrooms, and several related species, P. columbinus, P. pulmonarius, P. florida, etc., are also well known as edible mushrooms. Werecently reported the interspecific protoplast fusion between P. ostreatus and P. salmoneo-stramineus, which are sexually incompatible with each other.1} Thus, the protoplast fusion technique, which can facilitate interspecific hybridi-5) A
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