| Literature DB >> 27384585 |
Frantisek Malir1, Vladimir Ostry2, Annie Pfohl-Leszkowicz3, Jan Malir4, Jakub Toman5.
Abstract
Since ochratoxin A (OTA) was discovered, it has been ubiquitous as a natural contaminant of moldy food and feed. The multiple toxic effects of OTA are a real threat for human beings and animal health. For example, OTA can cause porcine nephropathy but can also damage poultries. Humans exposed to OTA can develop (notably by inhalation in the development of acute renal failure within 24 h) a range of chronic disorders such as upper urothelial carcinoma. OTA plays the main role in the pathogenesis of some renal diseases including Balkan endemic nephropathy, kidney tumors occurring in certain endemic regions of the Balkan Peninsula, and chronic interstitial nephropathy occurring in Northern African countries and likely in other parts of the world. OTA leads to DNA adduct formation, which is known for its genotoxicity and carcinogenicity. The present article discusses how renal carcinogenicity and nephrotoxicity cause both oxidative stress and direct genotoxicity. Careful analyses of the data show that OTA carcinogenic effects are due to combined direct and indirect mechanisms (e.g., genotoxicity, oxidative stress, epigenetic factors). Altogether this provides strong evidence that OTA carcinogenicity can also occur in humans.Entities:
Keywords: Balkan endemic nephropathy; biomarkers; carcinogenicity; feed; food; microfungi; ochratoxin A; toxicity; urothelial cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27384585 PMCID: PMC4963825 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8070191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1The milestones in ochratoxin A (OTA) research in years 1965–1990.
Figure 2The milestones in OTA research in years 1991–2000.
Figure 3The milestones in OTA research in years 2000–2015.
Aspergillus species as OTA producers in foodstuffs.
| Genera | Section | Species | Foodstuffs (Examples) | Year of Discovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soya bean, nuts, red pepper, cereals, green coffee beans | 1965 | |||
| Coffee beans | 2004 | |||
| Coffee beans | 2004 | |||
| Grapes, red pepper, coffee beans | 1996 | |||
| Grapes | 1996 | |||
| Coffee beans | 2004 | |||
| Grapes, peanuts | 1994 | |||
| Coffee beans | 2004 | |||
| Grapes | 2005 |
Penicillium species as OTA producers in foodstuffs.
| Genera | Subgenus | Series | Species | Foodstuffs (Examples) | Year of Discovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cereals | 1969 | ||||
| Dry ham, salami | 2001 |
Figure 4Structural formula of OTA.
Chemical structures of OTA and its derivatives.
| Metabolites | Abbreviations | MW | R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | R5 | R6 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ochratoxin A | 403 | Phe | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin B | 370 | Phe | H | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin C | 431 | Phe Ethyl ester | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin α | 256 | OH | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin β | 223 | OH | H | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| 4 | 419 | Phe | Cl | H | OH | H | OH | [ | |
| 4 | 419 | Phe | Cl | OH | H | H | OH | [ | |
| 10-hydroxy Ochratoxin A | 419 | Phe | Cl | H | H | OH | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A open lactone | 421 | Phe | Cl | H | H | - | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin B open lactone | 388 | Phe | H | H | H | - | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin α open lactone | 274 | OH | Cl | H | H | - | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin β open lactone | 241 | OH | H | H | H | - | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A quinone | 383 | Phe | O | H | H | H | O | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A hydroquinone | 385 | Phe | OH | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| OTHQ decarboxylated | 366 | Decarboxylated Phe | OH | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Conjugate Ochratoxin A quinone–glutathion | 689 | Phe | O | H | H | H | O | [ | |
| Conjugate Ochratoxin A–acyl hexose | 565 | Phe acyl hexose | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Conjugate Ochratoxin A–acyl pentose | 535 | Phe acyl pentose | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A methyl ester | 417 | Phe methyl ester | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin B methyl ester | 384 | Phe methyl ester | H | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin B ethyl ester | 398 | Phe ethyl ester | H | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| 4 | 433 | Phe methyl ester | Cl | H | OH | H | OH | [ | |
| 10-hydroxy Ochratoxin A methyl ester | 433 | Phe methyl ester | Cl | H | H | OH | OH | [ | |
| Ethylamide Ochratoxin A | 430 | Phe ethyl amide | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A decarboxylated | 359 | Phe decarboxylated | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Ochratoxin A | 417 | Phe | Cl | H | H | H | OCH3 | [ | |
| 403 | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |||
| Ochratoxin α ester methyl | 270 | OCH3 | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ | |
| Tyrosine Ochratoxin A | 419 | Tyrosine | Cl | H | H | H | OH | [ |
Analytical methods for determination of OTA in food, feed, and biological materials.
| Method | Year | Biological Material | Limit of Detection (LOD) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLC | 1973 | barley | 12 ng/g | [ |
| TLC | 1973 | other commodities | 3–5 ng/g | [ |
| spectrophotometry | 1976 | barley, pigs kidney, human blood (confirmation by carboxypeptidase A) | 1–4 ng/g | [ |
| HPLC-UVD | 1979 | cereals | 1–5 ng/g | [ |
| HPLC-FLD | 1980 | food and feed | 5 ng/g | [ |
| HPLC-FLD | 1980 | (confirmation by boron trifuoride methanol) | [ | |
| HPLC-FLD | 1981 | feed | 1 ng/g | [ |
| RIA | 1975 | - | 20 ng/g | [ |
| ELISA | 1981 | food, feed, biological fluids | 25 pg/assay | [ |
| LC-MS | 1987 | barley | 0.5 ng/g | [ |
| ion–pair HPLC | 1991 | human plasma | 0.02 ng/mL | [ |
| GC-MS | 1992 | food | <0.1 ng/g | [ |
| HPLC-FLD | 1992 | corn, barley, kidney | 0.2 | [ |
| ELISA | 1993 | human sera | 10 pg/mL | [ |
| IAC coupled with Fluorometer | 1997 | liquid food matrices | pg/mL | [ |
| LC-ESI-MS/MS | 1998 | food (coffee) | 20 pg/on column | [ |
| LC-ESI-MS/MS | 1999 | pig kidney, rye flour | 0.02 ng/g | [ |
| HPLC-FLD Confirmation carboxypeptidase | 2003 | Blood, urine | 0.1 ng/mL (blood); 4 ng/mL (urine) | [ |
| HPLC-FLD Confirmations with carboxypeptidase + LC-MS/MS | 2004 | Breakfast cereal | 0.05 ng/g | [ |
| PFIA | 2004 | barley | 3 ng/mL | [ |
| DNA aptamer | 2008 | wheat | 2 ng/g | [ |
| LC-MS/MS | 2010 | urine | 0.001–0.045 ng/mL | [ |
| ICP-MS | 2010 | wine | 0.003 ng/mL | [ |
| LC-MS/MS | 2012 | urine | OTA: 0.03 ng/mL | [ |
| flow electrochemical aptasensor with aptamer | 2013 | beer | 0.05 ng/mL | [ |
| UHPLC-FLR (LC-ESI-MS/MS) | 2014 | ginger | OTA: 0.1 ng/g; (0.005–0.2 ng/g) | [ |
| LC-MS/MS | 2015 | dried blood spots | 0.2 pg/on column | [ |
| ELISA | 2012 | - | 1.2 ng/g | [ |
| Metal enhanced fluorescence | 2014 | Food/drinks (milk, juice) | 0.5 µg/kg | [ |
| Electroluminescence/Biosensor | 2015 | corn | 0.02 pg/mL | [ |
| Molecular imprinting | 2015 | Beer/wine | 1.7 µg/L | [ |
| PCR | 2015 | wine | 19 nM | [ |
LC-ESI-MS/MS: Column liquid chromatography–electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry; PFIA: Fluorescence polarization immunoassay; aptamers: Artificial short single stranded oligonucleotides, either DNA or RNA; PCR: Polymer chain reaction.
OTA and alert notifications in the EU.
| Date of Case | Country | Foodstuffs | OTA (ng/g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16/01/2015 | Finland | Pumpkin seeds from China | 19 |
| 22/01/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Spain | 124 |
| 03/03/2015 | Belgium | Wheat from Canada | 17 |
| 13/03/2015 | Netherlands | Pumpkin seeds from China | 29 |
| 13/03/2015 | France | Dried figs from Spain | 183 |
| 24/03/2015 | France | Wheat from Canada | 18 |
| 27/03/2015 | Switzerland | Ground mace from Sri Lanka | 42.5 |
| 12/05/2015 | France | Buckwheat flour from France | 40 |
| 04/06/2015 | Ireland | Liquorice root from Turkey | 433.5 |
| 10/06/2015 | Poland | Raisins from Turkey | 19.3 |
| 15/07/2015 | Slovak Republic | Raisins from Chile | 11.8 |
| 10/08/2015 | France | Rye flour from France | 12.9 |
| 12/08/2015 | Finland | Pumpkin seeds from China | 20000 |
| 13/08/2015 | Luxembourg | Dried red chili peppers from Thailand | 30.8 |
| 01/09/2015 | Romania | Sultanas from Turkey | 15.6 |
| 02/09/2015 | Belgium | Rye malt from France | 13.8 |
| 02/09/2015 | Belgium | Rye malt from France | 25.7 |
| 02/09/2015 | Belgium | Rye malt from France | 38.6 |
| 25/09/2015 | Croatia | Black pepper from Vietnam | 155 |
| 21/10/2015 | Malta | Soft oaty bars from Switzerland | 1.4 |
| 02/12/2015 | Belgium | Dried figs from Turkey | 14.4 |
| 08/12/2015 | Latvia | Chili from China | 40 |
| 11/12/2015 | Cyprus | Dried sultana raisins from Greece | 18.5 |
| 23/12/2015 | Belgium | Dried figs from Turkey | 27.8 |
Alert notifications are sent whenever a foodstuff presenting a serious health risk to humans is identified at the internal market and whenever the rapid action of the competent authorities is required.
OTA and border rejections.
| Date of Case | Country | Foodstuffs | OTA (ng/g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22/01/2015 | Poland | Raisins from Uzbekistan | 21.1 |
| 26/01/2015 | Netherlands | Dried figs from Turkey | 24 |
| 11/02/2015 | Germany | Raisins from Afghanistan | 11.8 |
| 19/02/2015 | Latvia | Raisins from Afghanistan | 61 |
| 26/02/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Turkey | 17.4 |
| 13/03/2015 | Hungary | Raisins from Uzbekistan | 24.3 |
| 30/06/2015 | Croatia | Mixed spices from Kuwait | 45 |
| 21/07/2015 | United Kingdom | Red pepper powder from Ethiopia | 92.5 |
| 13/08/2015 | The Netherlands | Pistachios from the United States | 74 |
| 31/08/2015 | Germany | Berbere spice mix from Ethiopia | 85.3 |
| 07/09/2015 | The Netherlands | Red chili powder from India | 69 |
| 28/10/2015 | Poland | Red chili powder from India | 32.6 |
| 16/12/2015 | Germany | Red pepper spice mix from Ethiopia | 69.9 |
Border rejections concern food and feed consignments that have been tested and rejected at the external borders of the EU.
OTA and the EU Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed (RASFF) information.
| Date of Case | Country | Foodstuffs | OTA (ng/g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13/01/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Turkey | 69.9 |
| 16/01/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Turkey | 45 |
| 16/02/2015 | Germany | Sun dried figs from Turkey | 86 |
| 17/02/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Turkey | 32 |
| 02/06/2015 | Germany | Spice mix and paprika from Ethiopia | 139 |
| 24/07/2015 | Denmark | Organic raisins from Australia | 28 |
| 23/12/2015 | Germany | Dried figs from Turkey | 10.8 |
Food that is only present in the notifying EU Member State is worth noting.
Nephrotoxicity of OTA.
| Year | Nephrotoxicity Testing | References |
|---|---|---|
| 1972 | Balkan endemic nephropathy (BEN) has been suggested to be the result of fungal poisoning. The role of OTA in mycotoxicosis—BEN in humans and porcine nephropathy. | [ |
| 1972 | In view of the similarities between BEN and OTA induced porcine nephropathy, it has been suggested that OTA may be involved in the etiology of BEN. | [ |
| 1978 | OTA is potentially nephrotoxic in all species tested with the exception of adult ruminants. | [ |
| 1987 | Findings of higher OTA levels in the serum of patients suffering from BEN, which is a subtype of tubulointerstitial nephritis, led to hypotheses about the association between the nephrotoxicity of OTA and the BEN and also the incidence of renal system tumors in the population of these Balkan regions. | [ |
| 1991 | Nephropathy is primarily related to the mobilization of intracellular calcium. | [ |
| 1992 | In terms of human pathologies, OTA is suspected to be the main etiological agent responsible for BEN and associated urinary tract tumors (UTT) in humans. | [ |
| 1993 | Experimental studies on the nephrotoxicity of OTA both in vitro and in vivo have shown that OTA disturbs the intracellular metabolic processes (with subsequent apoptosis of the renal cells), renal hemodynamics, and—significantly and perhaps preponderantly—the functions of the proximal tubules (even after subchronic exposition). OTA causes the decrease of glomerular filtration and tubular resorption and affects all parts of the nephron and kidneys in toto. | [ |
| 1993 | A case of acute nephrotoxicity in humans. | [ |
| 1999 | OTA induces apoptosis in cultured human proximal tubule cells. | [ |
| 2002–2005 | The kidney is the main target of OTA toxicity in all animal species tested. | [ |
| 2002–2005 | OTA has been also implicated in the etiology of BEN, a chronic degenerative kidney disease, in kidney tumors in humans in certain regions of the Balkan Peninsula, and in chronic interstitial nephropathy (CIN) in Tunisia and other North African countries. | [ |
| 2005 | Exposure to low OTA doses is responsible for nephrotoxicity; at nanomolar concentrations, OTA leads to specific changes of function and phenotype in renal cells. | [ |
| 2007–2010 | Very low OTA concentrations administered for a prolonged time (up to 14 days) influence the cellular fate (cellular hypertrophy) in human proximal tubule; furthermore, they act not only in the target organ, e.g., in the kidney, but also in as yet unsuspected cells, such as fibroblasts; the same damage will likely occur in chronic exposure. | [ |
| 2013 | Nephrotoxicity is a consequence of acute, sub-acute, and also chronic exposure to OTA. | [ |
| 2014 | OTA inhibits the nuclear factor, erythroid 2-like 2 (Nrf2) oxidative stress response pathway. Nrf2 overexpression confers a survival advantage and is often associated with cancer cell survival. | [ |
| 2015 | Dietary exposure to OTA represents a serious health issue including, e.g., human endemic nephropathies. | [ |
OTA carcinogenicity and genotoxicity.
| Year | Nephrotoxicity testing | References |
|---|---|---|
| 1978 | OTA induces renal and hepatic tumors in mice. | [ |
| 1984 | OTA is carcinogenic for mice. | [ |
| 1984 | CIT increases OTA carcinogenicity. | [ |
| 1987 | OTA carcinogenicity to humans: OTA classified in Group 3 (not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans). | [ |
| 1989 | Male rats are more susceptible to renal tumors than female rats (NTP study). | [ |
| 1989 | The genotoxicity of ochratoxin A is reviewed. | [ |
| 1991 | OTA-DNA adducts: For the first time, OTA-DNA adducts are found in the kidney, liver, and spleen of mice. | [ |
| 1993 | OTA is re-classified as a possibly carcinogenic to humans based on a great amount of evidence of carcinogenity in several animal studies of 2B in 1993. | [ |
| 1993 | OTA-DNA adducts: Other studies take place in mice and rat tissues after acute and subchronic exposure, and in urinary tract tumors (UTT) of Bulgarian subjects. | [ |
| 1993-2009 | OTA-DNA adducts are also detected in tissues of humans presumably exposed to OTA in several countries (Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia, Germany, Belgium, France, Tunisia). | [ |
| 1998-2002 | DNA adduction following chronic exposure (carcinogenic study) of rats to OTA first described; sex differences and dual mechanism—oxidative pathways and DNA adduction—are observed | [ |
| 1998 | OTA-DNA adducts are observed in mother and progeny of mice fed OTA nine months after birth male mice develop cancer. | [ |
| 2000–2001 | In vitro formation of dG-OTA adduct. | [ |
| 2001–2002 | Other studies with radiolabeled OTA were unable to detect any DNA binding of OTA, but explanation of this discrepancy is given in depth by Pfohl-Leszkowicz and Castegnaro in 2005 [
| [ |
| 2003 | OTA-DNA adduct in pigs subchronically exposed to low doses of OTA. Relation with biotransformation. | [ |
| 2002–2010 | OTA may be involved in testicular cancer. | [ |
| 2003–2008 | CIT increases genotoxicity of OTA and modifies the metabolism of rats exposed to low doses for three weeks. | [ |
| 2004 | Evidence for covalent DNA adduction by OTA following chronic exposure to OTA in rats (and subacute exposure in pigs). | [ |
| 2004 | Another research group, using the highly sensitive accelerator of the mass spectrometry technique, does not detect DNA adducts after the administration of 14 | [ |
| 2004 | In 2004, a review of the NTP experimental rat tumor data for OTA also places OTA in the category of “chemicals inducing renal tumors through direct interaction of the parent compound or metabolite with renal DNA” based on histopathological evidence. | [ |
| 2004–2010 | The long-term OTA studies confirm the incidence of tumors in rats; in male rats, these tumors are related to OTA dose | [ |
| 2004–2012 | OTA is a direct genotoxic forming covalent DNA adducts in the kidney OTA can indeed react with DNA via a phenolic radical resulting in C8-deoxyguanosine adduct (synthetized and chemical identified by mass spectrum). | [ |
| 2006 | Confirmation of OTA genotoxicity via measurement of comet in rat kidneys. | [ |
| 2007 | Chronic exposure to low OTA doses can be much more damaging than acute exposure to a high dose. | [ |
| 2007 | DNA diploidy in rat tumors is associated to genetic damage. | [ |
| 2007 | OTA induces an increase of mutation at two loci—hypoxantine-guanine phophoribosyl transferase (HPRT) and thymidine kinase (TK). | [ |
| 2008 | DNA adduct cannot be confirmed, but the explanation is given by Pfohl-Leszkowicz et al. (2009) [ | [ |
| 2008 | Correlation between biotransformation of OTA and direct covalent binding on DNA. | [ |
| 2009 | It is found that the kidney DNA adduct pattern of BEN patients is similar to the kidney DNA adduct pattern of pigs living in the same farm and pigs co-exposed to OTA, fumonisins, and citrinin. | [ |
| 2009 | A different proposal of mechanism for OTA-mediated renal carcinogenesis and threshold model for its risk assessment. | [ |
| 2009–2010 | Identification by LC-MS/MS of these DNA adduct in rat tissues. | [ |
| 2010 | OTA is carcinogenic for poultry. | [ |
| 2011 | Induction of mutation only in medulla of rat kidney exposed to carcinogenic dose. | [ |
| 2012 | Relation structure activity studies clearly indicate that OTHQ (ochratoxin hydroxyquinone) is responsible of direct genotoxicity, whereas some others are cytotoxic. | [ |
| 2012 | OTA is activated to a species that is a directly genotoxic mutagen. OTHQ in presence of cysteine is also mutagenic. | [ |
| A new approach to cancer represents miRNA. | [ | |
| 2013 | The induction of miR-132 and miR-200c by OTA elevates reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and profibrotic (profibrotic transforming growth factors β, TGFβ) expression. | [ |
| 2014 | OTA has the potential to initiate or support the development of fibrotic kidney diseases by involving post-transcriptional regulation mechanisms comprising miR-29b. OTA reduces the impact of miR-29b and thus enhances collagen protein expression. | [ |
| 2014 | A low dose of OTA induces micronuclei, and OTA delays the DNA repair kinetics. | [ |
| 2014 | OTA increases proliferating cell nuclear antigen after 13 weeks in kidney and kidney damages. Limited oxidative stress. | [ |
| 2015 | Dietary exposure to OTA represents a serious health issue, including urinary tract tumors in humans. | [ |
An overview of chronologically published data on OTA in blood samples from healthy persons.
| Country | Collecting Period | n+ (%) | OTA min–max (μg/L) | OTA Mean (μg/L) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Former Yugoslavia | 1980 | 7.8 | max. 8.0 | 5.4 | [ |
| Germany | 1977–1985 | 56.5 | 0.1–14.4 | 0.6 | [ |
| Bulgaria | 1984,1986, 1989–1990 | 10 | - | 12.0 | [ |
| Poland | 1983–1985 | 7.2 | 1–40 | 0.28 | [ |
| Former Yugoslavia | 1981–1989 | 0-3.7 | max. 50.0 | - | [ |
| Germany | 1988 | 68 | 0.1–8.4 | 0.75 | [ |
| Sweden | 1989 | 12.8 | 0.3–7.0 | 0.20 | [ |
| Czechoslovakia | 1990 | 21 | 0.5–12.0 | 0.37 | [ |
| Denmark | 1990 | 54.2 | 0.1–13.2 | 1.8 | [ |
| France | - | - | 0.1–6.0 (rural); 0.1–1.3 (urban) | - | [ |
| Czechoslovakia | 1990–1991 | 40 | 0.5–19.4 | 0.63 | [ |
| France | 1991–1992 | 18.1 | 0.1-161 | 0.4 | [ |
| Italy | 1992 | 100 | 0.1–2.0 | 0.53 | [ |
| Switzerland | 1992–1993 | 100 | 0.06–6.02 | ca. 0.4 | [ |
| Hungary | 1995 | 51 | 0.2–12.9 | - | [ |
| Italy | 1994–1996 | 97 | 0.1–57.2 | 0.56 | [ |
| Hungary | 1995 | 82 | 0.2–10.0 | - | [ |
| Czech Republic | 1994–2002 | 94.2 | 0.1–13.7 | 0.24 | [ |
| Spain | 1996–1998 | 53.3 | 0.5–4.0 | 0.71 | [ |
| Spain | 1996–1997 | 72 | 0.21–6.96 | 0.63 | [ |
| Hungary | 1997 | 77 | 0.1–1.4 | - | [ |
| Croatia | 1997–1998 | 59.4 | max. 15.9 | 0.30 | [ |
| Sweden | 1997 | 100 | 0.01–0.48 | 0.21 | [ |
| Norway | 1998 | 100 | 0.05–0.42 | 0.18 | [ |
| Germany | 1999 | 98.1 | 0.06–2.03 | 0.27 | [ |
| UK | 2000 | 100 | 0.4–3.11 | 1.09 | [ |
| Norway | - | - | 0.02–5.53 | 0.40 | [ |
| Bulgaria | - | 100 | max. 8.4 | 1.59 | [ |
| Portugal | 2001–2002 | 100 | 0.14–2.49 | - | [ |
| Poland | 2005 | 100 | 0.1–0.4 | 0.37 | [ |
| Germany | 2005–2006 | 100 | 0.05–0.75 | 0.75 | [ |
| Czech Republic | 2005 | 83.7 | 0.1–2.3 | 0.21 | [ |
| Spain | 2008 | 100 | 0.15–5.71 | 1.09 | [ |
| Spain | 2008 | 98.6 | 0.11–8.68 | 0.86 | [ |
| Germany | 2008 | 100 | 0.19–0.29 | 0.25 | [ |
| Spain | - | 100 | 0.06–10.92 | 0.8 | [ |
| Italy | - | 99.1 | 0.03–2.92 | 0.23 | [ |
| Czech Republic | 2012 | 96 | 0.1–0.35 | 0.15 | [ |
| Czech Republic | 2012 | - | 0.37–1.13 | 0.17 | [ |
| Algeria | - | 66.9 | max. 9.0 | 2.8 | [ |
| Tunisia | - | 62 | max. 3.2 | 1.22 | [ |
| - | 66 | max. 2.3 | 1.1 | [ | |
| Egypt | - | 2.9 | max. 0.91 | 0.08 | [ |
| Sierra Leone | 1996 | 33 | max. 18.2 | - | [ |
| Morocco | 2000 | 60 | 0.08–6.59 | 0.2 | [ |
| 1991–2000 | 62-82 | 0.1–5.5 | 2.0 | [ | |
| 1996, 1998 | 100 | 0.1–8.06 | 0.53 | [ | |
| - | 71 | max. 7.5 | 2.6 | [ | |
| Ivory Coast | 2001, 2004 | 34.9 | max. 11.62 | 0.58 | [ |
| Tunisia | - | 28 | 0.12–3.4 | 0.49 | [ |
| Tunisia | - | 52.3 | 0.11–6.1 | 0.77 | [ |
| Tunisia | 2007–2009 | 49 | 1.7–8.5 | 3.3 | [ |
| Tunisia | - | 34 | 0.12–1.5 | 0.22 | [ |
| Japan | 1992-1996 | 85 | max. 0.28 | 0.07 | [ |
| Lebanon | 2001-2002 | 33 | max. 1.24 | 0.31 | [ |
| Pakistan | - | 97 | max. 1.24 | 0.31 | [ |
| Turkey | - | - | max. 1.43 | 0.44 | [ |
| Turkey | 2008–winter | 76.7 | 0.03–0.89 | 0.14 | |
| 2007–summer | 97.5 | 0.03–1.50 | 0.31 | [ | |
| Bangladesh | - | 100 | 0.2–6.63 | 0.85 | [ |
| Turkey | –summer | 100 | 0.03–1.55 | 0.31 | |
| –winter | 83.3 | 0.05–1.12 | 0.5 | [ | |
| Canada | 1991 | 38.3 | max. 9.0 | 1.29 | [ |
| Canada | 1994* | 100 | max. 2.37 | 0.88 | [ |
| Chile | 2004 | 54 | 0.4–2.75 | 0.44 | |
| (2 regions) | 91 | 0.4–2.12 | 0.77 | [ | |
| Costa Rica | - | 95 | max. 1.91 | 0.62 | [ |
| Argentina | 2004–2005 | 63.8 | 0.19–47.6 | 0.15 | |
| (2 regions) | 0.19–74.8 | 0.43 | [ |
Abbreviations: n+ (%): percentage of positive samples; *study included persons working at grain storage facilities; rural, urban (population).
The results of OTA in human morning urine from different populations.
| Country | n | n+ % | Mean (ng/L) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Croatia | 35 | 94 | 239.0 | [ |
| Hungary | 88 | 61 | 13.0 | [ |
| Portugal | 60 | 70 | 27.0 | [ |
| Portugal | 30 | 43 | 19.0 | [ |
| Portugal | 43 | 72.1 | 26.0 | [ |
| Croatia | 45 | 43 | 17.0 | [ |
| Croatia | 45 | 18 | 7.0 | [ |
| Portugal | 155 | 92 | 18.0 | [ |
| Turkey | 233 | 90 | 14.3 * | [ |
| Germany | 13 | 100 | 70.0 | [ |
| South Korea | 12 | 100 | 31.0 | [ |
| Spain | 72 | 12.5 | 237.0 | [ |
| Spain | 27 | no stated | - | [ |
| Italy | 10 | 100 | - | [ |
| Sri Lanka | 31 | 93.5 | 20.0 ** | [ |
| Portugal | 95 | 87.4 | 22.0 (winter) | [ |
| Portugal | 95 | 81.1 | 16.0 (summer) | [ |
| Croatia | 40 | 78.0 | 90.0 (before enzyme treatment) | [ |
| Croatia | 40 | 58.0 | 130.0 after enzyme treatment) | [ |
| Cameroon | 175 | 63 | 280.0 | [ |
| Cameroon | 145: HIV positive | 17 | 80.0 | [ |
| 30: HIV: sero-negative | 10 | 60.0 | ||
| South Africa | 53 | 98 | 41.0 | [ |
| Cameroon | 220 | 32 | 200.0 | [ |
| Italy | 52 | 100 | 144.0 | [ |
| Chile | 39 | 30–433 *** 30–124 **** | [ | |
| Portugal | 472 | 86.4 | 19.0 ***** | [ |
| Germany | 30 | 15 | 40.0 | [ |
| Haiti | 47 | 33 | 109.0 | [ |
| Bangladesh | 72 | 76 | 203.0 | [ |
Abbreviations: n: numbers of samples; n+ %: percentage of positive samples; * ng/g creatinine; ** GM: geometric mean; *** range in newborns consuming colostrums; **** range of samples collected between 4 and 6 months of infants’ life; ***** mean in ng/kg.
Data on OTA in human milk worldwide.
| Country | n | n+ (%) | Range Positive Samples (ng/L) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 36 | 11 | 17–30 | [ |
| Italy | 50 | 18 | 1,200–6,600 | [ |
| Sweden | 40 | 58 | 10–40 | [ |
| Hungary | 92 | 41 | 200–7,200 | [ |
| Switzerland | 40 | 10 | 5–14 | [ |
| Italy | 111 | 20 | 100–12,000 | [ |
| Italy | 4 | 75 | 8-540 | [ |
| Norway | 115 | 33 | 10–130 | [ |
| Norway | 80 | 21 | 10–182 | [ |
| Italy | 231 | 86 | 10–57 | [ |
| Poland | 13 | 38 | 6–17 | [ |
| Italy | 82 | 74 | 5–405 | [ |
| Slovakia | 76 | 30 | 2–60 | [ |
| Italy | 57 | 78.9 | 1–75 | [ |
| Germany | 90 | 60 | 10–100 | [ |
| Sierra Leone | 113 | 35 | 200–337,000 | [ |
| Egypt | 120 | 36 | 5,000–45,000 | [ |
| Egypt | 50 | 72 | 1,890 ± 980 * | [ |
| 100 | 2 | 3,000–3,600 | [ | |
| Turkey | 75 | 100 | 620–13,111 | [ |
| Iran | 136 | 2.7 | 90–140 | [ |
| Iran | 87 | 84 | 1.6–60 | [ |
| Brazil | 50 | 4 | 10–20 | [ |
| Chile | 11 | 100 | 44–184 | [ |
| Brazil | 224 | 0 | [ | |
| Chile | 50 | 80 | 10–186 | [ |
| Brazil | 100 | 66 | 0.3–21 | [ |
*: no ranges were provided.
Figure 5The milestones in evolution of legal regulation of OTA in years 1965–2015.
The first maximum levels of OTA in foodstuffs under Regulation 466/2001 as amended by Regulation 472/2002.
| Foodstuffs | Maximum levels (ng/g) |
|---|---|
| Cereals (including rice and buckwheat) and derived cereal products | 5 |
| Raw cereal grains (including raw rice and buckwheat) | 5 |
| All products derived from cereals (including processed cereal products and cereal grains intended for direct human consumption) | 3 |
| Dried vine fruit (currants, raisins and sultanas) | 10 |
| Green and roasted coffee and coffee products, wine, beer, grape juice, cocoa and cocoa products, and spices | - |
Maximum levels of OTA in foodstuffs under Regulation 1881/2006 as in force.
| Code | Foodstuffs | Maximum Levels (ng/g) |
|---|---|---|
| 2.2.1 | Unprocessed cereals | 5.0 |
| 2.2.2. | All products derived from unprocessed cereals, including processed cereal products and cereals intended for direct human consumption with the exception of foodstuffs listed in 2.2.9, 2.2.10, and 2.2.13 | 3.0 |
| 2.2.3 | Dried vine fruit (currants, raisins, and sultanas) | 10.0 |
| 2.2.4 | Roasted coffee beans and ground roasted coffee, excluding soluble coffee | 5.0 |
| 2.2.5 | Soluble coffee (instant coffee) | 10.0 |
| 2.2.6 | Wine (including sparkling wine, excluding liqueur wine and wine with an alcoholic strength of not less than 15 vol %) and fruit wine | 2.0 |
| 2.2.7 | Aromatized wine, aromatized wine-based drinks, and aromatized wine-product cocktails | 2.0 |
| 2.2.8 | Grape juice, concentrated grape juice as reconstituted, grape nectar, grape must and concentrated grape must as reconstituted, intended for direct human consumption | 2.0 |
| 2.2.9 | Processed cereal-based foods and baby foods for infants and young children | 0.50 |
| 2.2.10 | Dietary foods for special medical purposes intended specifically for infants | 0.50 |
| 2.2.11. | Spices, including dried spices | |
| 15 | ||
| 20 | ||
| Mixtures of spices containing one of the abovementioned spices | 15 | |
| 2.2.12. | Liquorice ( | |
| 2.2.12.1. | Liquorice root, ingredient for herbal infusion | 20 |
| 2.2.12.2. | Liquorice extract for use in food in particular beverages and confectionary | 80 |
| 2.2.13. | Wheat gluten not sold directly to the consumer | 8.0 |
Guidance values for OTA under Commission Recommendation 2006/576/EC as in force.
| Feed | Guidance Value in mg/kg Relative to Feedstuffs with a Moisture Content of 12% |
|---|---|
| Feed materials *—Cereals and cereal products ** | 0.25 |
| Complementary and complete feedstuffs | |
| —Complementary and complete feedstuffs for pigs | 0.05 |
| —Complementary and complete feedstuffs for poultry | 0.1 |
* Particular attention must be paid to cereals and cereals products fed directly to the animals that their use in a daily ration should not lead to the animal being exposed to a higher level of these mycotoxins than the corresponding levels of exposure where only the complete feedstuffs are used in a daily ration. ** The term “Cereals and cereal products” includes not only the feed materials listed under Heading 1, “Cereal grains, their products and by-products,” of the non-exclusive list of main feed materials referred to in Part B of the Annex to Council Directive 96/25/EC of 29 April 1996 on the circulation and use of feed materials (OJ L 125, 23.5.1996, p. 35), but also other feed materials derived from cereals in particular cereal forages and roughages.
Figure 6Summary of biochemical effects of OTA. Explanations: OTA: Ochratoxin A; OTHQ: Hydroxyl quinone ochratoxin; OTB: Dechlorinated ochratoxin; LIPOX: Lipoperoxidation; Nox: Nitrogen oxide; ROS: Reactive oxygen species.
Figure 7Metabolic activation of ochratoxin leading to DNA adducts. OTA: Ochratoxin A; OTHQ: Hydroxyl quinone ochratoxin; OTQ: Quinone ochratoxin; OTB: Dechlorinated ochratoxin; GSH: Reduced glutathione; GS: Oxidized glutathione; dG-OTA: Guanine OTA adduct.