The possible biotechnological use of edible mushroom bioproducts for controlling plant and animal parasitic nematodes
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The present paper reviewed publications on the nematocidal activity of edible mushrooms (EM) and their potential use as
sustainable tools for the control of parasitic nematodes affecting agriculture and livestock industry. Nematodes are organisms
living in the soil and animals’ guts where they may live as parasites severely affecting economically important crops and farm
animals, thus causing economic losses to worldwide agriculture. Traditionally, parasitic nematodes have been controlled using
commercial pesticides and anthelmintic (AH) drugs. Over the years, nematodes developed resistance to the AH drugs, reducing
the usefulness of many commercial drugs. Also, the use of pesticides/anthelmintic drugs to control nematodes can have
important negative impacts on the environment. Different EM have been not only used as food but also studied as alternative
methods for controlling several diseases including parasitic nematodes. The present paper reviewed publications from the last
decades about the nematocidal activity of EM and assessed their potential use as sustainable tools for the control of nematodes
affecting agriculture and livestock industry. A reduced number of reports on the effect of EM against nematodes were found,
and an even smaller number of reports regarding the potential AH activity of chemical compounds isolated from EM products
were found. However, those studies have produced promising results that certainly deserve further investigation. It is concluded
that EM, their fractions and extracts, and some compounds contained in them may have biotechnological application for the
control of animal and plant parasitic nematodes.
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CASTAÑEDA-RAMÍREZ, Gloria Sarahi et al. The possible biotechnological use of edible mushroom bioproducts for controlling plant and animal parasitic nematodes. Biomed Research International, New York, v. 2020, e6078917, 2020. DOI: 10.1155/2020/6078917. Disponível em: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1155/2020/6078917. Acesso em: 17 jun. 2025.