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Suppression of brown blotch disease by tolaasin inhibitory factors
Author(s) -
Yeong-Bae Yun,
Min-Hee Kim,
Ji-Hye Han,
Young-Kee Kim
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of applied biological chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.229
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 2234-7941
pISSN - 1976-0442
DOI - 10.3839/jabc.2017.029
Subject(s) - chemistry , mushroom , oyster , toxin , cytotoxicity , membrane , biochemistry , food science , biology , fishery , in vitro
Tolaasin, a 1.9 kDa peptide toxin, is produced by Pseudomonas tolaasii and causes the brown blotch disease of cultivated oyster mushroom. It forms pores on the membrane and thus destroys cellular membrane structure, seriously reducing the productivity of mushroom cultivation. The mechanism of tolaasininduced cytotoxicity is not known in detail. However, it has been reported to form a pore structure in the cytoplasmic membrane through the molecular multimerization. Therefore, food additives which can interact with tolaasin molecules may inhibit the pore formation by hydrophobic interactions with tolaasin molecules. In this study, various food additive materials have been identified as inhibitors of the tolaasin activity and named tolaasin-inhibitory factors (TIF). Most of TIFs are emulsifying agents for food processing procedures. Among various TIFs, polyglycerol and sucrose esters of fatty acids blocked effectively the cytotoxicity of tolaasins at the concentrations 10-10 M. These TIFs also successfully suppressed the blotch disease development in the shelf cultivation of oyster

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