Detalhes do Documento

Comparative analysis of polysaccharide and nutritional composition of biological and industrial-scale cultivated pleurotus ostreatus mushrooms for functional food and nutraceutical applications

Autor(es): Araújo-Rodrigues, Helena ; Amorim, Manuela ; Freitas, Victor de ; Relvas, João B. ; Tavaria, Freni K. ; Pintado, Manuela

Data: 2025

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.14/54486

Origem: Veritati - Repositório Institucional da Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Assunto(s): Carbohydrate chemical and structural analysis; Carbohydrates and proteins MW; Cultivation comparison; Fatty acid profile; Free and total amino acid profile; Minerals composition; Nutritional profile; Pleurotus ostreatus


Descrição

This study chemically characterized three Pleurotus ostreatus fruiting bodies cultivated in the Iberian Peninsula under different conditions (biological and industrial), with emphasis on polysaccharide analysis. Comprehensive comparative data on cultivation-dependent nutritional variations will potentially improve their nutritional and therapeutic applications. Industrial mushrooms (POC and POA) contained significantly higher carbohydrate content (74%), while the biologically cultivated mushroom (POL) exhibited more protein (22.6%), fat (4.2%), and ashes (8.0%). Monosaccharide analysis showed glucose dominance (28.7–45.5%), with mannose, galactose, xylose, and arabinose also present. Trehalose was the primary free sugar (4.8–14.9%). The (1→3)(1→6)-β-glucans varied significantly across samples (POL: 20.5%; POC: 29.3%; POA: 34.3%). Nuclear magnetic resonance analysis suggested complex polysaccharide arrangements. Water-soluble carbohydrates and proteins showed molecular weight distributions of 0.18–21 kDa and 0.20–75 kDa, respectively. All mushrooms were rich in essential amino acids, phosphorus (2.79–3.07%), potassium (0.56–0.68%), linoleic acid (0.82–1.14%), and oleic acid (0.22–0.31%). Fourier transform infrared confirmed a mushroom-specific biochemical profile. These findings corroborate the high nutritional value of POL, POC, and POA, with a significant contribution to the daily requirements of fiber, protein, and minerals (phosphorus, potassium, magnesium, iron, zinc, copper, and selenium), making them suitable for functional foods and nutraceuticals with cultivation-dependent nutritional profiles.

Tipo de Documento Artigo de investigação
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Veritati
Licença CC
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