4.0 Article

Recent trends in submerged cultivation of mushrooms and their application as a source of nutraceuticals and food additives

Journal

FUTURE FOODS
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fufo.2021.100086

Keywords

Macrofungi; Mycelia; Food industry; Bioreactor; Metabolite; Bioproduct

Funding

  1. European Regional Devel-opment Fund of the European Union
  2. Greek national funds through the Operational Program Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship, and Inno-vation [T2EDK-02830]

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Submerged cultivation of mushroom strains has become a popular method for producing bioactive compounds. By controlling culture conditions in bioreactors, high biomass content and a variety of bioactive compounds can be safely harvested for use in the food industry, showing potential for FDA and EFSA approvals for mushroom-related food products.
Nowadays, mushroom bioactive compounds production by submerged cultivation has attracted great interest. Controlling culture conditions in bioreactors makes submerged cultivation more reliable than fruiting body one. Recent research has shown that many edible mushroom strains could be cultivated in submerged liquid culture producing high biomass content and a variety of bioactive compounds such as proteins, enzymes, lipids, and carbohydrates in a safe way for using them in the food industry. Focusing on the last 5 year-research, in this re-view, a detailed description of submerged cultivation processes used will be presented, while different bioactive compounds derived from edible mushrooms will be recorded. Moreover, the use of bioreactors and the applica-tion of different culture conditions like temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, inoculum, and agitation in a scale-up process, leading to the exploitation of mushrooms mycelia as vegan protein sources, nutraceuticals, food supple-ments, and food flavor agents by the food industry, will be highlighted and discussed. The ability to enhance the concentration of amino acids responsible for umami taste or estimate the desired concentration of substances that cause inedibility could lead to safe and high-quality biomass and bioactive compounds. This would impel FDA and EFSA to approve more food products related to mushrooms, which is of great importance, especially for the food industry.

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