Application of ergosterol as a maitake mushroom intake biomarker.
- 2025-07
- Annals of clinical biochemistry 63(1)
- PubMed: 40562565
- DOI: 10.1177/00045632251357138
Study Design
- Type
- Clinical Trial
- Population
- 50 healthy participants (24 maitake, 26 placebo)
- Methods
- Participants consumed maitake mushroom bread or normal bread for 18 weeks; serum ergosterol measured by LC-MS/MS with diene derivatization.
- Duration
- 18 weeks
- Funding
- Unclear
BackgroundDyslipidemia is a lifestyle-related disease; therefore, cholesterol biosynthesis inhibitors in foods can be easily ingested on a daily basis and are effective in aiding treatment and prevention. To assess the impact of this diet on health, it is of the essential thing that food intake can be properly measured, and it is important to find biomarkers of food intake. Previously, we reported that ergosterol, which is present in mushrooms, inhibits cholesterol biosynthesis. In this study, we measured serum ergosterol levels in healthy participants who consumed maitake mushroom bread to confirm actual ingestion of maitake mushrooms.MethodsSerum samples from healthy participants who consumed maitake mushroom bread (n = 24) or normal bread without maitake mushroom (placebo, n = 26) were analysed for ergosterol levels using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry with diene derivatization.ResultsIn the placebo group, there was no significant difference in ergosterol concentrations between baseline (before consumption) and 18 weeks. In contrast, the ergosterol concentration was 5-fold higher at 18 weeks than at baseline in the maitake mushroom bread-intake group.ConclusionMaitake mushroom bread intake for 18 weeks significantly increased serum ergosterol levels in healthy participants, suggesting that ergosterol is useful as a biomarker of mushroom intake.
Research Insights
| Supplement | Dose | Health Outcome | Effect Type | Effect Size | Source |
|---|