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Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1272567

ABSTRACT

Abstract:The objective of this study was to evaluate free radical scavenging capacity of crude extracts from forest basidiomycetous fungi; domestic zygomycetous fungi and marine ascomycetous fungi. Lethal concentration values that kill 50 of the brine shrimps (LC50) were determined from 19 fungal extracts using brine shrimp test (BST). The LC50 values of fungal extract ranged between 0.28- 40?g/ml. The basidiomycetous ( Lactarius volemoides check for this species in other resources ) was the most toxic fungi with LC50 of 0.28?g/ml while ascomycete Pichia guilliermondii check for this species in other resources showed the least toxicity with LC50 of 40?g/ml. The concentrations of eleven fungal extracts were further evaluated on their ability to scavenge free radical using 1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (?;?-diphenyl-?-picrylhydrazyl) (DPPH) as a dye reagent for spectrophotometric assay at 517nm. The extract concentrations that decreased the initial DPPH radical by 50 (EC50) were determined. The EC50 values ranged from 19-60.4?g/ml ascorbic acid equivalents. Extracts from an edible but undomesticated basidiomycetous fungus isolated from Miombo forest and identified as Termitomyces microcarpus check for this species in other resources showed the highest scavenging effect with EC50 at 19?g/ml while that from ascomycete Candida tropicalis check for this species in other resources showed the least EC50 at 60.4?g/ml. These results draw attention to wild undomesticated Miombo fungi as potential source of nutritional supplements worth further investigation


Subject(s)
Artemia , Candida tropicalis , Fungi , Spin Trapping , Trees
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