Cultivation of Inonotus hispidus on Jujube Wood Waste: Effects on Fruiting Body Biological Characteristics, Nutrients, Active Constituents and Metabolic Profiles
Guangjie Zhang, Shuaichun Huang, Ying Zhang, Dongmei Wu, Yuan Cheng, Hong Li, Changtian Li, Yu Li

TL;DR
Researchers found that jujube wood can be used to grow Inonotus hispidus, a medicinal and edible fungus, offering a sustainable alternative to traditional substrates.
Contribution
This study demonstrates jujube wood as a viable cultivation substrate for Inonotus hispidus, promoting sustainability and resource reuse.
Findings
Strain ZL showed the highest biological efficiency and fastest growth on 48% jujube wood substrate.
Jujube wood-based substrates increased triterpenoids and flavonoids content in fruiting bodies.
Metabolomic analysis revealed strain-specific and substrate-dependent changes in key metabolic pathways.
Abstract
Inonotus hispidus is an important medicinal and edible fungus within the “Sanghuang” category, featuring a broad host range and rapid fruiting body growth. However, its wild resources are currently threatened by overharvesting. Simultaneously, large-scale jujube (Ziziphus jujuba) cultivation generates substantial pruning waste, often burned. This study explored the feasibility of using jujube wood as a cultivation substrate for I. hispidus. Three I. hispidus strains, Z1, Z2, and ZL, were cultivated on substrates with varying proportions of jujube wood replacing cottonseed hulls. The biological efficiency, nutritional components, active compounds, and free amino acid profiles of the resulting fruiting bodies were analyzed. Non-targeted metabolomics was used to investigate global metabolic changes. Results indicated that all strains successfully colonized the jujube-based substrates and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsZiziphus Jujuba Studies and Applications · Plant biochemistry and biosynthesis · Polysaccharides and Plant Cell Walls
