Comparative study of antioxidant activity and antiproliferative effect of hot water and ethanol extracts from the mushroom Chaga (Inonotus obliquus)
Honghai Hu,1 Zhenya Zhang,1 Zhongfang Lei,2•* Yingnan Yang,1 and Norio Sugiural
Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba 305-8572, Japan’
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China2
The medicinal mushroom Chaga (Inototus obliquus) is a traditional and widely used multi-functional fungus. Hot water (50 °C, 70 °C, and 80 °C) and ethanol crude extracts of I. obliquus were investigated for their antioxidant activity with superoxide dismutase (SOD) and (1,1-diphenyl-2-picryhydrazyl) (DPPH) radical-scavenging activity assays. We also investigated the antiproliferative effects and ability of the extracts to induce apoptosis in human colon cancer DLD-1 cells. Among the four extracts, the ethanol extract (EE) exhibited the strongest SOD-like activity and antiproliferative effect on DLD-1 cells, and exposure to the EE resulted in the induction of apoptosis, whereas no apoptosis was observed in DLD-1 cells exposed to the hot water extracts (HWEs). HWE at 70 °C (HWE70) exhibited the strongest DPPH radical-scavenging activity (EC5O, 126 μg/ml), whereas the EE showed the weakest activity (EC50, 224 μg/m1). The different biological activities among the four extracts may be attributed to differences in their chemical composition, partially supported by polysaccharide, protein and phenolic content, and the H-NMR spectra.