Symptom → Plant Sources
Turkey tail (Trametes versicolor) as a tool for helping with Immune support
The target of the present review is to draw attention to many critically important unsolved problems in the future development of medicinal mushroom science in the twenty-first century. Special attention is paid to mushroom polysaccharides. Many, if not all, higher Basidiomycetes mushrooms contain biologically active polysaccharides in fruit bodies, cultured mycelium, and cultured broth. The data on mushroom polysaccharides are summarized for approximately 700 species of higher Hetero- and Homobasidiomycetes. The chemical structure of polysaccharides and its connection to antitumor activity, including possible ways of chemical modification, experimental testing and clinical use of antitumor or immunostimulating polysaccharides, and possible mechanisms of their biological action, are discussed. Numerous bioactive polysaccharides or polysaccharide-protein complexes from medicinal mushrooms are described that appear to enhance innate and cell-mediated immune responses and exhibit antitumor activities in animals and humans. Stimulation of host immune defense systems by bioactive polymers from medicinal mushrooms has significant effects on the maturation, differentiation, and proliferation of many kinds of immune cells in the host. Many of these mushroom polymers were reported previously to have immunotherapeutic properties by facilitating growth inhibition and destruction of tumor cells. While the mechanism of their antitumor actions is still not completely understood, stimulation and modulation of key host immune responses by these mushroom polymers appears central. Particularly and most importantly for modern medicine are polysaccharides with antitumor and immunostimulating properties. Several of the mushroom polysaccharide compounds have proceeded through phases I, II, and III clinical trials and are used extensively and successfully in Asia to treat various cancers and other diseases. A total of 126 medicinal functions are thought to be produced by medicinal mushrooms and fungi including antitumor, immunomodulating, antioxidant, radical scavenging, cardiovascular, antihypercholesterolemia, antiviral, antibacterial, antiparasitic, antifungal, detoxification, hepatoprotective, and antidiabetic effects.
Data from multiple epidemiologic and clinical studies on immune effects of conventional cancer treatment and the clinical benefits of polysaccharide immune therapy suggest that immune function has a role in breast cancer prevention. Immune therapy utilizing the polysaccharide constituents of Trametes versicolor (Tv) as concurrent adjuvant cancer therapy may be warranted as part of a comprehensive cancer treatment and secondary prevention strategy.
Coriolus versicolor (CV) is a medicinal mushroom widely prescribed for the prophylaxis and treatment of cancer and infection in China. In recent years, it has been extensively demonstrated both preclinically and clinically that aqueous extracts obtained from CV display a wide array of biological activities, including stimulatory effects on different immune cells and inhibition of cancer growth. The growing popularity of aqueous CV extracts as an adjunct medical modality to conventional cancer therapies has generated substantial commercial interest in developing these extracts into consistent and efficacious oral proprietary products. While very limited information is available on the physical, chemical, and pharmacodynamic properties of the active principles present in these extracts, there has been sufficient scientific evidence to support the feasibility of developing at least some of these constituents into an evidence-based immunodulatory agent. In this article, the background, traditional usage, pharmacological activities, clinical effects, adverse reactions, active constituents, and regulatory aspects of CV are reviewed. Presented also in this review are the current uses and administration, potential drug interactions, and contraindication of aqueous extracts prepared from CV.
3 sources supporting Turkey tail for Immune support. Includes scientific publications, books, monographs and traditional-use references.
Mechanistic basis
This use is associated with the plant's immunomodulator / immune support action. Further evidence for that pharmacology:
This Cochrane review of seven randomised controlled trials (1569 participants) found low-certainty evidence of a small improvement in five-year survival with adjunctive Coriolus (Trametes) versicolor extract (PSK) during colorectal cancer treatment, with uncertain effects on chemotherapy adverse effects.
This review scrutinises the in vitro, in vivo and clinical evidence for Trametes versicolor (Coriolus versicolor) polysaccharides PSP and PSK as adjuvant cancer therapy, covering their direct cytotoxic and immunostimulatory effects, key targets and pharmacological efficacy.
This systematic review of 28 studies found that PSK from Coriolus versicolor (Trametes versicolor) may improve immune function, reduce tumour-associated symptoms and extend survival in lung cancer patients, via immunomodulation and direct tumour-inhibiting actions.
In a double-blind placebo-controlled randomised trial of 68 patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, 28 days of polysaccharide peptide (PSP) from Coriolus versicolor significantly improved leukocyte and neutrophil counts, serum IgG and IgM and reduced withdrawal due to disease progression, with no adverse reactions.
This review summarises research on the protein-bound polysaccharide PSP from Coriolus versicolor (Trametes versicolor), a biological response modifier that increases interferon-gamma and interleukin-2 production and T-cell proliferation, shows antiproliferative and antitumour activity, and alleviates symptoms in cancer patients undergoing radio/chemotherapy.
Protein-bound polysaccharides from Coriolus versicolor (Trametes versicolor) induced a TNF-alpha-dependent decrease in MCF-7 breast cancer cell growth while augmenting proliferation of blood lymphocytes with IL-6 and IL-1beta upregulation, demonstrating differential immunomodulatory and anticancer effects.
Polysaccharide peptide (PSP) from Coriolus versicolor (Trametes versicolor) modified the course of LPS-induced fever in rats in an interleukin-6-related fashion, illustrating its immunomodulatory activity on cytokine-mediated responses.
This review of medicinal mushrooms including Turkey Tail (Trametes versicolor) describes their (1,3)(1,6)-beta-D-glucans, triterpenes and phenolics and their anticancer, antioxidant, antidiabetic and immunomodulatory effects relevant to functional-food applications.