Shiitake.
Lentinula edodes
Révisé médicalement par Dr. Irvine Russell, M.D.
Lentinula edodes is a saprotrophic fungus belonging to the family Omphalotaceae, native to East Asia, where it thrives on decaying hardwood trees, particularly oak and other broad-leaved species. The fruiting body is characterized by a convex to flat, brown-colored cap ranging from 5 to 25 cm in diameter, with a distinctive scaly texture and white gills. Key pharmacological properties are attributed to its rich composition of bioactive compounds, including the polysaccharide lentinan — an approved adjunct immunotherapy in Japan — and eritadenine, which has demonstrated cholesterol-lowering effects in clinical studies.
#6
Classement de popularité
Extensive
Niveau de recherche
6
Références
3
Composés clés
Lentinan
Board-Certified Physician · Medical Reviewer · Dernière révision 12 février 2026
APERÇU SCIENTIFIQUE.
Niveau de preuve: A
Shiitake a fait l'objet d'études approfondies tant en recherche préclinique que clinique. Plusieurs essais humains ont étudié ses bienfaits potentiels.
Point clé
Shiitake is the only common edible mushroom that contains a pharmaceutical-grade immunological agent approved by a national government — lentinan, administered intravenously in Japanese hospitals as...
Usage traditionnel
Shiitake est utilisé dans les systèmes de médecine traditionnelle depuis des siècles, notamment dans la Médecine Traditionnelle Chinoise (MTC) et d'autres pratiques de guérison asiatiques.
Contexte historique: L'usage traditionnel ne garantit ni l'efficacité ni la sécurité. La recherche moderne est en cours pour valider les allégations traditionnelles.
Shiitake is the only common edible mushroom that contains a pharmaceutical-grade immunological agent approved by a national government — lentinan, administered intravenously in Japanese hospitals as an adjunct to chemotherapy. That a mushroom most people know from stir-fry has produced a rigorously validated pharmaceutical is one of the most interesting convergences of food culture and medicine in modern history. The line between food and medicine, at least with mushrooms, is substantially blurrier than Western categorization typically allows.
What Is Shiitake?
Shiitake (Lentinula edodes) is the world's second most consumed mushroom, cultivated at over 10 million metric tons annually. Native to East Asia, it grows on fallen hardwood — oak, chestnut, beech. The fruiting body is classic: a convex brown cap with scaly texture, cream gills, and firm white stipe. Dried Shiitake concentrate in flavor through conversion of lentinic acid to lenthionine — producing that characteristic smoky, caramel-mushroom aroma.
Shiitake has been cultivated in China for at least 800 years — the first record dates to 1209 AD. What makes it exceptional is that it bridges the food-medicine divide uniquely: a 2015 randomized intervention by Dai et al. found healthy adults who ate 5–10g dried Shiitake daily for four weeks showed significant immune improvements — increased gamma-delta T-cells and reduced inflammatory CRP. No extract, no capsule — just cooked mushrooms as food.
⚡ Key Fact
Shiitake contains eritadenine — a unique amino acid derivative found almost exclusively in this species — that lowers LDL cholesterol by inhibiting SAH hydrolase in the methylation cycle. Animal studies show 25–45% reductions in total cholesterol. No other mushroom contains meaningful eritadenine levels.
The Science: How It Works
Shiitake's pharmacology centers on three compound classes. Lentinan is a beta-1,3-glucan with a specific triple-helix structure that activates macrophages, NK cells, and T-lymphocytes through complement receptor 3 and dectin-1. The triple-helix conformation confers receptor selectivity and potency that straight-chain beta-glucans lack. Eritadenine inhibits SAH hydrolase, disrupting lipid metabolism to reduce LDL cholesterol formation.
The vitamin D story adds another dimension: Shiitake contains ergosterol that dramatically increases when exposed to UV light. A single cup of UV-exposed dried Shiitake provides over 1,000 IU of vitamin D2 — valuable for people in low-sunlight environments. The 2024 Xu et al. study identified five new anti-inflammatory compounds, suggesting the pharmacological profile continues to expand.
Proven Benefits
- ✓Immune Enhancement: The Dai 2015 intervention used whole cooked mushrooms — not extracts — and still showed measurable immune improvements. Increased gamma-delta T-cells, enhanced NK cell activity, and reduced CRP after just 4 weeks.
- ✓Cholesterol & Heart Health: Eritadenine's SAH hydrolase inhibition mechanism is well-characterized with 25–45% LDL reductions in animal models. Regular dietary consumption is associated with improved lipid profiles in observational studies.
- ✓Vitamin D Source: UV-exposed Shiitake delivers 1,000+ IU of vitamin D2 per cup — one of the only non-animal dietary sources. Place gill-side up in sunlight for 30–60 minutes before cooking.
- ✓Anti-Inflammatory: Novel phenolic compounds with NF-κB pathway inhibition — the inflammatory cascade behind cardiovascular disease, arthritis, and metabolic syndrome. Regular dietary consumption provides continuous low-level anti-inflammatory input.
💊 Recommended Dosage
For dietary consumption: 50–100g fresh or 5–10g dried Shiitake daily (per the Dai 2015 trial). For supplements: 1,000–3,000 mg/day of fruiting body extract. Food-first approach is strongly supported — cook thoroughly to avoid Shiitake dermatitis risk. Use the soaking liquid from rehydrating dried mushrooms (it's packed with polysaccharides).
Shiitake ÉLITE.
Meilleurs produits contenant des extraits vérifiés de Lentinula edodes extraits.
Shiitake Posologie
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Shiitake Guides & Articles
Révisé médicalement par
Board-Certified Physician · Medical Reviewer
Board-certified physician affiliated with UC Irvine, the Gavin Herbert Eye Institute, and the UCI School of Medicine. Dr. Russell reviews all mushroom encyclopedia entries for scientific accuracy, ensuring claims are supported by peer-reviewed research.
Last reviewed: 12 février 2026
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