Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India

Meghalaya, (in India), in the region of the mega-biodiversity hotspots, is home to a plethora of wild mushrooms. The present study concerns the exploration of the order Agaricales, which includes rare gilled mushrooms considered endangered under IUCN A4c criteria, due to the declining habitat. Elect...

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Main Authors: Madhusmita Borthakur, Arun Bahadur Gurung, Atanu Bhattacharjee, S. R. Joshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-02-01
Series:Mycobiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/12298093.2020.1723388
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spelling doaj-f939d101c6c74a639c486e742ffb3bcd2020-11-25T03:07:38ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMycobiology1229-80932092-93232020-02-010011210.1080/12298093.2020.17233881723388Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from IndiaMadhusmita Borthakur0Arun Bahadur Gurung1Atanu Bhattacharjee2S. R. Joshi3North-Eastern Hill UniversityNorth-Eastern Hill UniversityNorth-Eastern Hill UniversityNorth-Eastern Hill UniversityMeghalaya, (in India), in the region of the mega-biodiversity hotspots, is home to a plethora of wild mushrooms. The present study concerns the exploration of the order Agaricales, which includes rare gilled mushrooms considered endangered under IUCN A4c criteria, due to the declining habitat. Electron microscopy of the gill sections revealed an abundance of clamp connections, hyphal cell walls, cystidia, and basidia. This rare species which belongs to the family Cyphellaceae, exhibits morphological and molecular differences from the Cyphella spp. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that it formed a clade under the genus Campanophyllum of the order Agaricales, confirmed by both Neighbor Joining (NJ) and Bayesian phylogenetic analysis. Being nutritionally potent along with its efficient antioxidant value, the fungal extract shows significant rise of two-fold in the antimicrobial activity along with the commercial antibiotics. The compound, Phenol, 2, 4-bis (1, 1-Dimethylethyl) (2, 4-DTBP) showed in ample range in the fungal extract along with aliphatic hydrocarbons, terpene, alcohol and volatile organic compounds on further characterization in GCMS. The present study indicates the endangered Campanophyllum proboscideum could be a rich source of natural antioxidants and an effective pharmaceutical agent.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/12298093.2020.1723388campanophyllummicroscopicmolecularphylogenynutritional
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Madhusmita Borthakur
Arun Bahadur Gurung
Atanu Bhattacharjee
S. R. Joshi
spellingShingle Madhusmita Borthakur
Arun Bahadur Gurung
Atanu Bhattacharjee
S. R. Joshi
Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
Mycobiology
campanophyllum
microscopic
molecular
phylogeny
nutritional
author_facet Madhusmita Borthakur
Arun Bahadur Gurung
Atanu Bhattacharjee
S. R. Joshi
author_sort Madhusmita Borthakur
title Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
title_short Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
title_full Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
title_fullStr Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Bioactive Metabolites of the Endangered Mexican Lost Fungi Campanophyllum – A Report from India
title_sort analysis of the bioactive metabolites of the endangered mexican lost fungi campanophyllum – a report from india
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Mycobiology
issn 1229-8093
2092-9323
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Meghalaya, (in India), in the region of the mega-biodiversity hotspots, is home to a plethora of wild mushrooms. The present study concerns the exploration of the order Agaricales, which includes rare gilled mushrooms considered endangered under IUCN A4c criteria, due to the declining habitat. Electron microscopy of the gill sections revealed an abundance of clamp connections, hyphal cell walls, cystidia, and basidia. This rare species which belongs to the family Cyphellaceae, exhibits morphological and molecular differences from the Cyphella spp. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that it formed a clade under the genus Campanophyllum of the order Agaricales, confirmed by both Neighbor Joining (NJ) and Bayesian phylogenetic analysis. Being nutritionally potent along with its efficient antioxidant value, the fungal extract shows significant rise of two-fold in the antimicrobial activity along with the commercial antibiotics. The compound, Phenol, 2, 4-bis (1, 1-Dimethylethyl) (2, 4-DTBP) showed in ample range in the fungal extract along with aliphatic hydrocarbons, terpene, alcohol and volatile organic compounds on further characterization in GCMS. The present study indicates the endangered Campanophyllum proboscideum could be a rich source of natural antioxidants and an effective pharmaceutical agent.
topic campanophyllum
microscopic
molecular
phylogeny
nutritional
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/12298093.2020.1723388
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