4.7 Article

Value added immunoregulatory polysaccharides of Hericium erinaceus and their effect on the gut microbiota

Journal

CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
Volume 262, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2021.117668

Keywords

Hericium erinaceus polysaccharides; Immunoregulatory activity; Gut microbiota; 16S sequencing; KEGG pathway

Funding

  1. 13.5 National Key point Research and Invention Program [2017YFD0400603]
  2. Research and Industrialization with Key Technologies for High Value Processing and Safety Control of Agricultural Products [SF2017-6-4]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31871717]
  4. project SusMAPWaste, SMIS from Operational Program Competitiveness 2014-2020 [SMIS 104323, 89/09.09.2016]
  5. European Regional Development Fund

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Hericium erinaceus polysaccharides (HEPs) were found to significantly alter the diversity and abundance of gut microbiota by increasing the relative abundance of beneficial bacteria and decreasing harmful bacteria. HEPs also exhibited immunomodulatory activity by promoting the production of various immune factors and activating specific signaling pathways, suggesting their potential as functional ingredients or foods for promoting health.
Hericium erinaceus polysaccharides (HEPs) were isolated from the fruiting bodies of H. erinaceus with 53.36 % total carbohydrates and 32.56 % uronic acid. To examine whether HEPs can alter the diversity and the abundance of gut microbiota, adult mice and middle-aged and old mice were fed with HEPs for 28 days. Based on the result of 16S sequencing of gut microbiota it was found that the relative abundances of Lachnospiraceae and Akkermansiaceae significantly increased, while the relative abundance of Rikenellaceae and Bacteroidaceae appeared to decrease. Bacterial solutions from different murine intestinal segments and feces were collected to ferment HEPs in vitro. It was found that HEPs remarkably promoted the production of NO, IL-6, IL-10, INF-? and TNF-?. Moreover, HEPs significantly increased phosphorylation of signaling molecules, indicating that the immunomodulatory activity was completed via NF-KB, MAPK and PI3K/Akt pathways. Collectively, HEPs have potential to be developed as functional ingredients or foods to promote health.

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