Evaluation of the Anti-mitotic and Bacteriostatic Activities of the Fruiting Bodies of Pleurotus Ostreatus (Jacq. Ex. Fr) P. Kumm. (Pleurotaceae)

Authors

  • Ozadheoghene Afieroho University of Port Harcourt
  • Elizabeth C. Chukwu University of Port Harcourt
  • Osamuyi H. Festus University of Port Harcourt
  • Chiazor P. Onyia University of Port Harcourt
  • Mikailu Suleiman University of Port Harcourt
  • Olutayo Adedokun University of Port Harcourt

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18034/mjmbr.v6i1.468

Keywords:

Mushroom, anti-proliferation, bacteriostatic, Pleurotus ostreatus, ethnomedicine

Abstract

Edible mushrooms aside being taken as foods, are used in ethnomedicine in the management of various ailments notably tumours and related ailments whose pathophysiology are linked to oxidative stress. This study investigated the anti-mitotic, and antibacterial activities of the aqueous extract of the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus based on ethno-medicine.The Allium cepa anti-mitotic assay model was used for anti-proliferative investigation of the defatted aqueous ethanol extract at concentration range of: 10.00 – 0.08 ng/mL following a two-fold serial dilution approach. Methotrexate (0.25 ng/mL) and portable water were used as reference standard for positive control and negative control respectively. The student t-test was used for statistical analysis (p < 0.05). Antibacterial susceptibility evaluation against clinical isolates of selected pathogenic organisms: Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumonia, Staphylococcus aereus, and Bacillus subtilis was done using the Agar dilution method at 1000 and 10 µg/mL. The aqueous extract showed a dose and time dependent anti-mitotic activity with the three higher doses: 10.00, 5.00 and 2.50 ng/mL exhibiting complete inhibition of mitosis which was comparable to the reference drug methotrexate (0.25 ng/mL) after 96 hours incubation period. Although the aqueous extract was not bacteriocidal at the test concentration, a dose dependent bacteriostatic effect against E. coli, and B. subtilis was observed. The observed anti-mitotic activity of this mushroom validates its ethnomedicinal use in the treatment of tumours and related diseases.

 

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

  • Ozadheoghene Afieroho, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

  • Elizabeth C. Chukwu, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

  • Osamuyi H. Festus, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

  • Chiazor P. Onyia, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

  • Mikailu Suleiman, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

  • Olutayo Adedokun, University of Port Harcourt

    Department of Crop & Soil Sciences, University of Port Harcourt, NIGERIA

References

Afieroho O.E, and Ugoeze K.C. (2014). Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectroscopic (GC-MS) Analysis of n-Hexane Extract of Lentinus tuber-regium (Fr) Fr (Polyporaceae) Syn Pleurotus tuber regium Fr sclerotia. Tropical Journal of Pharmaceutical Research; 13 (11): 1911-1915.

Afieroho O.E, Lawson L, Olutayo M Adedokun, and Emenyonu N. (2013). Antituberculosis and phytochemical investigation of the dichloromethane extract of Pleurotus tuber-regium (Fries) Singer sclerotium. International Research Journal of Pharmacy; 4(1):255-257

Afieroho O.E, Ollornwi K.V, Elechi N, Okwubie L, Okoroafor D, and Abo K.A,. (2013). Free radical scavenging potentials and level of some heavy metals in Pleurotus flabellatus Berk and Broome (Pleurotaceae) The Global Journal of Pharmaceutical Research; 2 (3):1807-1812

Awouafack M.D, McGaw L.J, Gottfried S, Mbouangouere R, Tane P, Spiteller M, and Eloff J.N. (2013). Antimicrobial activity and cytotoxicity of the ethanol extract, fractions and eight compounds isolated from Eriosema robustum (Fabaceae). BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 13:289 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6882-13-289

Chang S, and Philip G.M. (2004). “Pleurotus- A mushroom: Cultivation, nutritional value, medicinal effects, and environmental impact 2nd edition. CRC Press, United States p.315-325.

Edger G, Eden G, Wissig E (1976). Pleurotus ostreatus – breeding potentials of a new cultivated mushroom. Theoritical and Applied Genetics 47: 155-163.

Eloff J.N. (2004). Quantification the bioactivity of plant extracts during screening and bioassay guided fractionation. Phytomedicine, 11:370–371.

Ghaly I.S, Ahmed E.S., Booles H.F., Farang I, and Nada S.D. (2011). Evaluvation of antihyperglycemic action of oyster mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus) and its effect on DNA damage, chromosome aberrations and sperm abnormalities in streptozotocin- induced diabetic rats. Global Veterinaria 7:532-544

Grant W.F. (1982). Chromosone aberration assay in Allium. Mutation Research 99:273-291 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-1110(82)90046-X

Houghton P.J, Raman A, (1999). Laboratory handbook for the fractionation of natural extracts.Chapman and Hall, London, p155-187.

Jin-Yi W, Chi-Hung C, Wen-Huei C, King-Thom C, Yi-wen L, Fung-Jou L, and Ching-Hsein C. (2011). Anti-cancer effects of protein extracts from Calvatia lilacina, Pleurotous ostreatus and Volvariella volvacea. Evid based complement Alternat Med, Article ID 982368, 10 pages doi:10.1093/ecam/neq057 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ecam/neq057

Kuete V. (2010). Potential of Cameroonian plants and derived products against microbial infections: a review. Planta Med, 76:1479–1491.

Piraino F, Brandt C.R. (1999). Isolation and partial characterisation of an antiviral, RC-183 from the edible mushroom (Roites caperata). Antivira Review 43(2):67-67 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0166-3542(99)00035-2

Ríos J.L, Recio M.C. (2005). Medicinal plants and antimicrobial activity. J Ethnopharmacol, 100:80–84.

Rolston K.V (2009). New antimicrobial agents for the treatment of bacterial infections in cancer patients. Hematol Oncol. 27(3):107-14

Rop, O., Mlcek, J., Jurikova, T. (2009). Beta-glucans in higher fungi and their health effects. Nutrition Reviews, 67, 624-631. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-4887.2009.00230.x

Sanjib B, and Pallab K.H (2012). Evaluation of the antimitotic and genotoxic effects of the triterpenoid enriched extract from Trichosanthes dioca root. American-Eurasian Journal of Toxicology 4(1):20-23

Shweta S, Deoro S.L, Khadabadi S.S, and Deokate U.A. (2007). Evaluation of antimitotic and anticancer activity of the crude extracts of Pterospermum acerifolium Wild. Leaves (Sterculiaceae). Nigerian Journal of Natural Products and Medicine 11:75-78

Tosun F, Kizilay CA, Sener B, Vural M, and Palittapongarnpim P. (2004). Antimycobacterial screening of some Turkish plants. Journal of Ethnopharmacology; 95(2-3):273-275 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jep.2004.07.011

Vamanu E. (2012). In Vitro antimicrobial and antioxidant activities of ethanolic extract of lyophilized mycelium of Pleurotus ostreatus. Molecules 17: 3653-3671.

Wandati T.W, Kenji G.M, and Onguso J.M. (2013). Phytochemical in edible wild mushrooms from selected areas in Kenya. Journal of Food Research; 2(3):137-144

-- 0 --

Downloads

Published

2019-06-30

Issue

Section

Peer-reviewed Article

How to Cite

Afieroho, O. ., Chukwu, E. C. ., Festus, O. H. ., Onyia, C. P. ., Suleiman, M. ., & Adedokun, O. . (2019). Evaluation of the Anti-mitotic and Bacteriostatic Activities of the Fruiting Bodies of Pleurotus Ostreatus (Jacq. Ex. Fr) P. Kumm. (Pleurotaceae). Malaysian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, 6(1), 39-44. https://doi.org/10.18034/mjmbr.v6i1.468

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>