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Development of crossbreeding high-yield-potential strains for commercial cultivation in the medicinal mushroom Wolfiporia cocos (Higher Basidiomycetes)

Journal of Natural Medicines, 2016
Wolfiporia cocos is a well-known medicinal mushroom, and its dried sclerotia has been widely used as a traditional medicine in China, Japan, and other Asian countries for centuries. However, long-term asexual reproduction of the breeding system in W. cocos results in a current universal degeneration of cultivated strains. To develop a W. cocos breeding
Xiaozhao, Xiang   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Fruit body formation and intra-species DNA polymorphism in Japanese Wolfiporia cocos strains

Journal of Natural Medicines, 2022
Poria, the dried sclerotium of Wolfiporia cocos, is a medicinal mushroom that is widely used in traditional Japanese medicine. The fruit body of W. cocos is rarely found in the natural environment in Japan, therefore an optimized technique for fruit body formation is essential for producing new strains through crossbreeding and for biological research.
Masashi, Kitamura   +4 more
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The Traditional Usages, Chemical Components and Pharmacological Activities of Wolfiporia cocos: A Review

The American Journal of Chinese Medicine, 2022
As an endemic species,Wolfiporia cocos (F.A. Wolf) Ryvarden & Gilb. is widely distributed, such as in China, Korea, Japan, and North America, which have had a dual-purpose resource for medicines and food for over 2000 years. The applications of W. cocos were used to treat diseases including edema, insomnia, spleen deficiency, and vomiting.
Lian, Li   +2 more
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The Phosphatome of Medicinal and Edible Fungus Wolfiporia cocos

Current Microbiology, 2017
Wolfiporia cocos is an important medicinal and edible fungus that grows in association with pine trees, and its dried sclerotium has been used as a traditional medicine in China for centuries. However, the commercial production of W. cocos sclerotia is currently limited by shortages in pine wood resources.
Wenjun Zhu   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

New Lanostane-Type Triterpenes with Anti-Inflammatory Activity from the Epidermis of Wolfiporia cocos

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2022
A chemical study on the epidermis of cultivated edible mushroom Wolfiporia cocos resulted in the isolation and identification of 46 lanostane triterpenoids, containing 17 new compounds (1-17). An experimental determination of their anti-inflammatory activity showed that poricoic acid GM (39) most strongly inhibited NO production in LPS-induced RAW264.7
Te-Ri-Gen Bao   +8 more
openaire   +2 more sources

De novo assembly and transcriptome analysis of sclerotial development in Wolfiporia cocos

Gene, 2016
Wolfiporia cocos Ryvarden et Gilbertson, a well-known medicinal fungus in the Basidiomycetes, is widely distributed in East Asia. Its dried sclerotium, which is known as Fuling in China, has been used as a traditional crude drug in Chinese traditional medicine for thousand years.
Yayun, Wu   +8 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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