Use of Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae, Basidiomycota) as Radioprotector
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Language | Local Name | Other Characteristics |
---|---|---|
Spanish | Pipa | - |
Catalan | Paella, pipa. | - |
Chinese (Pinyin) | 靈芝 (Lingzhi) is first collected during the Eastern Han Dynasty (AD 25–220). Lingzhi is composed of 靈 (ling) which means “spirit”, supernatural, soul, miracle, sacred, divine; and 芝 (zhi) is a word that it does not have an exact translation in non-eastern languages and refers to a set of varied objects such as plants, fungi, mushrooms, and seeds. | In China some Ganoderma species are differentiated as 赤芝 (chizhi), “Red mushroom”; or G. lucidum and 紫芝 (zizhi), “Purple mushroom”. Other Chinese names are 瑞芝 (ruizhi), “Propitious mushroom”; 神 芝 (shenzhi), “Divine mushroom”; 木 靈芝 (mulingzhi), refers to tree or wood; 仙草 (xiancao), “Plant of immortality or immortal”; and 靈芝 草 (lingzhicao) or 芝 草 (zhicao), “Mushroom plant”. |
English | Glossy ganoderma, shiny polyporus. | - |
French | Polypore luisant, ganoderme luisant. | - |
German | Lackporling, glänzender lackporling. | - |
Japanese | Reishi (霊 芝). | Other literary terms for this mushroom are zuisō (瑞草), “Propitious plant”; and sensō (仙草), “Plant of immortality”. A name used is mannentake (万年 茸), “10,000-year-old mushroom”. Written Japanese uses shi or shiba (芝) for grass and uses take o kinoko (茸) for “mushroom.” |
Korean | Yeong Ji or Yung Gee (영지, 靈芝). It is also called Seon-cho (선초, 仙草), Gil-sang-beo-seot (길상 버섯, 吉祥 茸), Yeong ji cho (영지 초, 靈芝 草) or Jeok hee (적지, 赤芝). | It is named according to their colors: Ja-ji (자지, 紫芝), if it is purple; Heuk-ji (흑지, 黑 芝), black; Cheong-ji (청지, 靑 芝), blue or green; Baek-ji (백지, 白 芝), white; Hwang-ji (황지, 黃 芝), yellow. |
Vietnamese | Linh chi | Often used with (nấm Linh Chi), which is the equivalent of G. lucidum or reishi mushroom |
Cell | Radiation Type and Dose (Gy) | Dose/Concentration | Main Outcomes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Leukocytes | γ-ray, 50 | 50 μg/mL aqueous extract of G. lucidum | β-glucan protected DNA against radiation-induced single-strand breaks; reduced the increase in % tail DNA, tail length, tail moment and olive tail moment. | [22] |
Human peripheral blood lymphocytes | γ-ray, 0, 1, 2, and 4 | 50 and 100 μg/mL β-glucan of G. lucidum | Reduction of comet parameters, such as the % tail DNA, tail length, tail moment and olive tail moment. | [23] |
Human peripheral blood lymphocytes | γ-ray, 2 | 10, 50, and 100 μg/mL aqueous extract of G. lucidum | Reduction of the % tail DNA, tail length, tail moment and olive tail moment. | [20] |
Subject (Weight) | Radiation Type and Dose (Gy) | Dose/Concentration | Main Outcomes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
ICR old male mice, 6 to 7 weeks old | X-ray, 500 or 650 cGy | Hydro-alcoholic extract of G. lucidum | Recovered the body weights and increased the recovery of hemograms of radio-irradiation. However, the differences of the radioprotective effect between the X-ray irradiated groups with G. lucidum pre- and post-treated were not significant. | [24] |
Male Swiss albino mice, 8–10 weeks old (20–25 g) | γ-ray, at 350 Gy | 50 μg/mL aqueous extract of G. lucidum | β-glucan of G. lucidum prevented 98% of lipid peroxidation. | [22] |
Male Swiss albino mice, 8–10 weeks old (20–25 g) | γ-ray, 10 | 250 and 500 µg/kg body weight of aqueous extract of G. lucidum | At a dose of 500 µg/kg body weight, the polysaccharides were most effective in protecting animals from radiation induced loss of lethality. Furthermore, the decrease in micronuclei induction was dose dependent. | [25] |
Swiss albino mice, 6–8 weeks old (24–28 g) | γ-ray, 4 | 10 and 20 mg/kg body weight of aqueous extract of G. lucidum | The depleted level of GSH in the jejuna mucosa was restored significantly by the aqueous extract of G. lucidum. | [26] |
Swiss albino mice, 6–8 weeks old (26–30 g) | γ-ray, 4 | 10 and 20 mg/kg body weight of aqueous extract of G. lucidum | Reduction of the serum MDA levels compared to the irradiated group. Tissue GSH was maintained at normal levels after administration of polysaccharides. | [27] |
Swiss albino mice, 6–8 weeks old (28–32 g) | γ-ray, 4 and 8 | 250 and 500 µg/kg body weight of β-glucan of G. lucidum | Significant reduction in the number of aberrant cells and different types of aberration, including polyploidy and cells with pulverization, were observed in both β-glucan administration. | [28] |
Swiss albino mice, 8–10 weeks old (22–25 g) | γ-ray, 4 | 200 µg/kg body weight of aqueous extract of G. lucidum | Protection to normal tissues against gamma radiation-induced DNA damage, whereas in sparing tumor tissues, the extract offered no protection against radiation-induced cellular DNA damage. | [29] |
Male Swiss albino mice, 6–8 weeks old (22–25 g) | γ-ray, 8 | 100 mg/kg body weight of hydro-alcoholic extract of G. lucidum | Considerable protection of DNA in blood leucocytes, bone marrow cells, brain cells, and intestine cells. The protection of brain tissue DNA from radiation-induced damage indicates that extract, or its biological active components, do not cross blood brain barrier. Extract administration bestowed survival advantage for mice following whole-body lethal ionizing radiation exposure. | [30] |
ICR female mice, 6–8 weeks old (18–22 g) | γ-ray, 3 and 6 | 13.4, 26.6, and 40.0 mg/kg of aqueous extract of G. lucidum | Aqueous extract of G. lucidum did not reduce the impact of radiation on WBC levels, but 26.6 and 40 mg/kg of aqueous extract of G. lucidum treatment demonstrated that MDA levels were significantly decreased, the SOD activity was restored to near normal levels, the micronuclei frequency was reduced, and the nucleated cell count in bone marrow was significantly increased by aqueous extract of G. lucidum treatment in a dose-dependent manner. | [31] |
Adult female Swiss albino mice (22–25 g) with tumor inoculation * | γ-ray, 3 × 2 Gy at two days interval to attain a total dose of 6 Gy | 100 mg/kg body weight of FGL | Elevation in the concentration of MDA accompanied by a decrease in SOD activity and GSH content in liver tissues. A remarkable increase was observed in AFP and IL-2 concentration in serum. | [32] |
Male Swiss albino mice (23–27) | γ-ray, 2.5 | 50 and 100 mg/kg body weight of total triterpenes of G. lucidum | The treatment with 100 mg/kg body weight of total triterpenes effectively reduced the percentage of MNPCE nearly to normal levels. | [20] |
Male Swiss albino mice (23–27 g) | γ-ray, 2 | 25, 50, and 100 µg total triterpenes of G. lucidum | Effective in preventing DNA laddering and DNA damage; reduced apoptotic cells and the formation of intracellular ROS. Furthermore, endogenous antioxidant enzyme activity was enhanced in the splenic lymphocytes following irradiation. | [33] |
BALB/c nude mice, 5 to 6 weeks old (18–22 g) | X-ray, 16 or 20 Gy | GLSO@P188/PEG400 nanosystem (NS) | This NS could reverse X-ray-induced cardio dysfunction, improve long-term renovation processes, and attenuate chronic cardiac fibrosis and necrosis from X-rays. | [34] |
Cell/DNA | Radiation Type and Dose (Gy) | Dose/Concentration | Main Outcomes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Plasmid pBR322 DNA | γ-ray, 25 | 1, 5, 10, 25 and 50 μg total triterpenes of G. lucidum | Reduction in the open circular form in a dose-dependent manner which obtained a retention of 98.87% of the supercoiled form with 50 μg total triterpenes. | [20] |
Plasmid pBR322 DNA | γ-ray, 50 | 50 μg/mL aqueous extract of G. lucidum | Protection to the plasmid DNA to an extent of 89.53%. | [22] |
Rat cardiomyocytes (H9C2 cells) | X-ray, 2, 8, 16 Gy | GLSO@P188/PEG400 nanosystem (NS) | Any post-treated strategy after X-ray irradiation (repair strategy) exhibited relatively inefficient effects, compared with pre-treated strategies on H9C2 cells from X-rays. The ideal strategy of pre-treated GLSO@P188/PEG400 NS before irradiation for 4–8 h showed an efficient protection effect on H9C2 cells from X-rays (16 Gy), leading to an increase of cell viability of 101.4%–112.3% | [34] |
M13mpl9 RF DNA | X-ray, 10, 20 and 30 Gy | Hot-water extract of G. lucidum | Protection against hydroxyl radical-induced DNA strand breaks | [35] |
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González, A.; Atienza, V.; Montoro, A.; Soriano, J.M. Use of Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae, Basidiomycota) as Radioprotector. Nutrients 2020, 12, 1143. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12041143
González A, Atienza V, Montoro A, Soriano JM. Use of Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae, Basidiomycota) as Radioprotector. Nutrients. 2020; 12(4):1143. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12041143
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález, Aránzazu, Violeta Atienza, Alegría Montoro, and Jose M. Soriano. 2020. "Use of Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae, Basidiomycota) as Radioprotector" Nutrients 12, no. 4: 1143. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12041143
APA StyleGonzález, A., Atienza, V., Montoro, A., & Soriano, J. M. (2020). Use of Ganoderma lucidum (Ganodermataceae, Basidiomycota) as Radioprotector. Nutrients, 12(4), 1143. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12041143